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IMDbPro

A Nau dos Insensatos

Título original: Ship of Fools
  • 1965
  • Approved
  • 2 h 29 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,0/10
7,5 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
A Nau dos Insensatos (1965)
Home Video Trailer from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Reproduzir trailer3:32
1 vídeo
86 fotos
DramaGuerraRomance

Um grupo variado de passageiros de um navio com destino à Alemanha de pouco antes da Segunda Guerra representa um microcosmo da sociedade dos início dos anos 30.Um grupo variado de passageiros de um navio com destino à Alemanha de pouco antes da Segunda Guerra representa um microcosmo da sociedade dos início dos anos 30.Um grupo variado de passageiros de um navio com destino à Alemanha de pouco antes da Segunda Guerra representa um microcosmo da sociedade dos início dos anos 30.

  • Direção
    • Stanley Kramer
  • Roteiristas
    • Katherine Anne Porter
    • Abby Mann
  • Artistas
    • Vivien Leigh
    • Simone Signoret
    • José Ferrer
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,0/10
    7,5 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Stanley Kramer
    • Roteiristas
      • Katherine Anne Porter
      • Abby Mann
    • Artistas
      • Vivien Leigh
      • Simone Signoret
      • José Ferrer
    • 94Avaliações de usuários
    • 30Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Ganhou 2 Oscars
      • 5 vitórias e 13 indicações no total

    Vídeos1

    Ship of Fools
    Trailer 3:32
    Ship of Fools

    Fotos86

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    Elenco principal55

    Editar
    Vivien Leigh
    Vivien Leigh
    • Mary Treadwell
    Simone Signoret
    Simone Signoret
    • La Condesa
    José Ferrer
    José Ferrer
    • Siegfried Rieber
    • (as Jose Ferrer)
    Lee Marvin
    Lee Marvin
    • Bill Tenny
    Oskar Werner
    Oskar Werner
    • Dr. Wilhelm Schumann
    Elizabeth Ashley
    Elizabeth Ashley
    • Jenny Brown
    George Segal
    George Segal
    • David Scott
    José Greco
    José Greco
    • Pepe
    • (as Jose Greco)
    Michael Dunn
    Michael Dunn
    • Karl Glocken
    Charles Korvin
    Charles Korvin
    • Kapitän Thiele
    Heinz Rühmann
    Heinz Rühmann
    • Julius Löwenthal
    • (as Heinz Ruehmann)
    Lilia Skala
    Lilia Skala
    • Frau Hutten
    BarBara Luna
    BarBara Luna
    • Amparo
    Christiane Schmidtmer
    Christiane Schmidtmer
    • Lizzi Spöckenkieker
    Alf Kjellin
    Alf Kjellin
    • Herr Freytag
    Werner Klemperer
    Werner Klemperer
    • Hübner - 3. Offizier
    John Wengraf
    John Wengraf
    • Graf
    Olga Fabian
    Olga Fabian
    • Frau Schmitt
    • Direção
      • Stanley Kramer
    • Roteiristas
      • Katherine Anne Porter
      • Abby Mann
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários94

    7,07.4K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    Doylenf

    Weaker than the novel...but still absorbing...

    A strange, rather offbeat morality tale from Katherine Anne Porter's bulky novel, SHIP OF FOOLS manages to hold interest even though the characters are never fully realized and the full potential of the novel isn't to be found in the screenplay.

    It's best described as a multi-episode GRAND HOTEL at sea, episodic with the love story between Simone Signoret and Oskar Werner at the core and easily the best acted piece, despite the soap-opera overtones. Vivien Leigh's bitter American widow is somewhat theatrical--but comes to life finally in the scene where she uses her shoe to beat Lee Marvin when he makes drunken advances to her. She looks somewhat worn and fragile (which the role requires) and this was her last film only two years before her death.

    Porter's novel made diabolic use of the twin children who are almost missing from the screenplay. George Segal and Elizabeth Ashley are wasted in lesser roles as young romantics. Michael Dunn is sly and altogether winning as the dwarf who opens and closes the film with his narrative. Charles Korvin is excellent as the ship's Captain who is constantly giving advice to Oskar Werner who stubbornly refuses to listen to his well meaning friend.

    If the story interests you, try reading the novel--much more complex, much richer in characters and atmosphere. The film is overlong, has some dull stretches and has a meager score by Ernest Gold that is oddly silent during some of the most emotional moments. A good old-fashioned musical score by someone like Max Steiner would have helped immeasurably in getting over the dull spots.

    Summing up: too preachy when dealing with anti-semitism and lacks the punch of the novel.
    9gbrumburgh

    A grand, glossy excursion, with a flavorful international cast keeping the weighty boat afloat.

    One of my favorite indulges over the years has been "Ship of Fools," a 1965 glossy, episodic entertainment done strictly grand scale. Based on Katherine Anne Porter's epic novel, the Oscar-nominated "Best Picture" centers on a sundry group of travelers circa 1933 who clash "Grand Hotel" style on a German ocean liner bound, via Mexico, for Germany (and impending doom it would seem) just as strong Nazi sentiment was breeding. The ship becomes a microcosm of pre-WWII life and mores, with a plethora of subplots alternately swelling and ebbing throughout - situations that alter the course of some of its passengers and crew members, for better or worse.

    From the clever opening collage of credits (don't miss this part) set to a catchy, flavorful Latin score to its fascinating all-star disembarkation at the end, it's smooth sailing for most of this trip, guided with an assured hand by the always capable Stanley ("Judgment at Nuremberg") Kramer, with certain cast members (Simone Signoret, Oskar Werner, Vivien Leigh, Lee Marvin, Michael Dunn) coming off better than others (José Ferrer, Elizabeth Ashley, George Segal).

    A number of compelling vignettes acted out by the choice, eclectic ensemble make up for the sometimes turgid melodramatics that occur on board as our "ship of fools" are forced to examine their own pride and prejudice while victimized by others. Who can forget the tormented Simone Signoret and Oskar Werner (both Oscar-nominated) as the morphine-addicted political prisoner and dutiful ship's physician who provide the film with its most poignant and tragic shipboard romance. Their clandestine encounters are exquisitely written and beautifully realized. Or Vivien Leigh's coy, aging elitist, Mary Treadwell, who delivers a brilliantly despairing monologue in front of a makeup mirror that, in turn, sets up a wildly climactic shoe-bashing scene with Lee Marvin's besotted baseballer when he viciously assaults, then profusely apologizes to the now-humiliated matron after mistaking her in the dark for a cooch dancer. Or José Greco & company's steamy, frenetic flamenco sequence during a raucous, after-hours party. Or dwarf actor Michael Dunn's sublime Greek Chorus that effectively bookends the movie (the Oscar-nominated Dunn subsequently played evil Dr. Loveless on TV's "Wild, Wild West" series). These glorious scenes and more help to balance out the less serviceable ones, particularly those involving Jose Ferrer's boisterous, irritating Nazi bigot who borders on caricature, and Elizabeth Ashley and George Segal's turbulent lovers who come off dull and forced.

    Ernest Laszlo's lustrous black-and-white cinematography was suitably Oscar awarded, while the whole look, feel and tone of the movie is decidedly old-style theatre at its best. This movie has remained one of my all-time favorite wallows.
    7don_agu

    What kind of fool am I?

    Vivien Leigh sits opposite redneck Lee Marvin in the ship's upper deck restaurant, Marvin confesses to Leigh he never new what a Jew was until he was 15, "You were too busy lynching blacks" is her replay. I thought to mention it just to give you a hint of the sort of cruise ship we're travelling on. We sail through a sea that goes from the sublime to the ridiculous. Abby Mann is a master at drawing characters with long shadows and Kramer a master at capturing them. Think "Judgement at Neuremberg" Here you'll feel sea sick sometimes but the trip is worth taking. I mean. Vivien Leigh and Lee Marvin in a sad comedy of errors. Simone Signoret as a drug addicted countess and Oskar Werner her kindly, tragic, doctor, pusher. Highly charged, beautifully written moments. The lower decks for the down trodden is full of extras. George Segal and Elizabeth Ashley try both decks and and a deck all their own with melodramatic regularity. Jose Ferrer and Heinz Rhumman have one of my favourite exchanges. Ferrer, the German military tells Rhumman, the German Jew, that he should admit that the Jews are great part of the German problem. Rhumman calmly agrees and ads "true, but not only the Jews, also men who smoke the pipe are great part of the German problem" "Why men who smoke the pipe?" Shouts Ferrer. To what Rhumman replies "Why the Jews?" Michael Dunn addresses us directly, asking us to find ourselves among the passengers. Okay.
    7theowinthrop

    A World Going to Hell in a Hack...err Steamer

    About 1490 or so a German writer named Sebastian Brandt wrote an allegorical novel about the condition of mankind and types of men in their follies called DER NARR SHIFF (I believe that is the German title) which translates to "The Ship of Fools". At that time in Europe many humanists wrote such allegories, the most famous one being Erasmus' IN PRAISE OF FOLLY. Today Erasmus is still remembered, while Brandt is studied only by students of the German language and it's literature.

    The title SHIP OF FOOLS was picked up by Katherine Anne Porter, who (for most of her literary career) was an excellent short story writer. At the tail end of that career she decided to tackle the larger target of a complete, complex novel. As one can see from the comments on this thread some people think she did superbly with her story and characterizations, while others think she flubbed it. I've never read the novel, but judging from the film version (and suspecting it is a watered down treatment, like most novels into films) it must be an above average work.

    To me this is a film that actually stands out for individual moments by the cast. Michael Dunn ferociously lecturing Heinz Ruhlmann about the extreme anti-Semitism of the other passengers (not only the irritating neo-Nazi Jose Ferrer, but most of the other passengers) that has caused them (Dunn and Ruhlmann) to be banished to an isolated table for their meals. Ruhlmann, a kindly, nice man (who manages to make Ferrer's bigotry seem funny and stupid at one point) responds, "There are one million Jews in Germany. Are they going to kill us all?" The dialog is fairly sharp in these vignettes. Werner Klemperer, as a ship's officer, responding from signals from Vivien Leigh for some type of shipboard sexual encounter, discovering that Leigh is simply using him for a matter of trivial amusement. He tells her off in a fine little speech, which may have been the best delivered dialog of his career on film (and is years away from his Col. Wilhelm Klinck on HOGAN'S HEROES). Ferrer is half gregarious and half a bigoted swine, and totally untrustworthy. In the coming war unlike Herr Schindler, if Ferrer made a list it would be to turn Jews over to the authorities so he could get their possessions. His comment about how he is not anti-Semitic, he adores Arab people is almost as good as his spirited moment of pure entertainment when he sings a comic German song for the passengers. Even the minor actors on the screen have good moments. Witness the now forgotten Henry Calvin (a few years earlier he had been one of the "Laurel & Hardy" imitations in Walt Disney's BABES IN TOYLAND). Here he is one of the Cuban peasants transported by the ship to pre-Civil War Spain. His moment is when he tells off the racist Captain and his officers who have looked down on these steerage passengers, referring to the Captain as a pig. One can keep going on, especially with the sympathetic Oscar Werner and Simone Signoret, and with Dunn again, the only one of the passengers and crew who is intelligent.

    For the point of the story is that this world of the 1930s is headed (as the reader knows) for disaster that will engulf everyone. The café society will not survive it. The Cuban immigrants will soon be killed by Republican or Fascists in Spain. The Captain and his crew will be drafted into Hitler's navy, and probably die in the Bismarck or some other ship. Marvin will be drafted, and even if he should survive the war he will find the segregation of his United States slowly eroded in the decades following the war. Ferrer will probably be starving in the ruins of Dresden or Berlin (if he is not killed in a bombing), wondering what happened to that prosperity the Nazis promised in a world without Jews. Every character in the story is facing the conclusion of the standards that gave them some degree of stability - some like Vivien Leigh and Simone Signoret are already going to pieces. In some ways, at the end, Werner and Dunn may be the only lucky ones. Werner is lucky because he will die before the war comes. Dunn...well since he is the clearest in terms of reality of all the characters, he will probably leave Europe before 1939, settle in the U.S. sitting out the war there, and only return afterwards to gaze at the ruins the others wrought.
    10DavidAllenUSA

    "Ship Of Fools" (1965) movie is better than K. A. Porter's book, and possibly the best ensemble top actors movie ever made.

    "Ship Of Fools" (1965) movie is better than K. A. Porter's book, and possibly the best ensemble top actors movie ever made.

    The movie got two Academy Awards....one for best cinematography, and the other for best art direction. Both deserved.

    "Ship Of Fools" (1965) also deserved (but did not get, sadly) multiple "Best Actor" and Best Actress" awards ["Best Supporting Actor/ Actress awards, also].

    High quality, in-depth acting of true talent and accomplishment have seldom ever reached the levels achieved in this movie, done repeatedly, again and again and again, from start to finish.

    The movie contained at least half a dozen (possibly more) Academy Award winner best actor performances.....at least three best actor academy award winners performed (incredibily) in this movie (Lee Marvin, Vivien Leigh, and Jose Ferrer), and others (some who may have gotten academy awards I overlooked) were also wonderful in all ways (Simone Signoret, Oscar Werner, Michael Dunn, Elizabeth Ashley, George Segal, Gila Golan, Jose Greco, and Barbara Luna....who sang the famous "Dites Moi" song in South Pacific on the Broadway stage when she was a little girl in 1949!).

    The titles at the start of movie are incredible, and deserve to be ranked with the best of all movie titles ever presented (someday, a special award for movie titles will be established....if this has not already been done, it is certainly an unmet need.....movie titles are important, are an art unto themselves, and a major asset to movies when done well.........see the titles for Bullitt 1968 and North By Northwest 1959 as only two examples of "the best of the best movie titles...the "Ship Of Fools" 1965 movie titles are part of the "the best of the best.") The Abby Mann written screenplay is really an original screenplay with an original story, by far better than the best selling Katherine Anne Porter novel also titled "Ship Of Fools" .... not at all the same as the book....better! Stanley Kramer's direction is wonderful.

    Original music by Ernest Gold in the movie includes a German language song performed very well by Jose Ferrer. The title of the song is "Heute abend geh'n wir bummein auf der Reeperbahn," and it is a true "gemutlicheit" German language song, indeed, even if it was written in the USA for a Hollywood, English language movie.

    This movie is a true gem, and deserves to be ranked as one of the best movies of all times.

    All movie actors (I am one) should see this movie....it's a chance to see "the best of the best" one after the other after the other after the other.

    Acting just doesn't get better than is the case in "Ship Of Fools" (1965).

    -------------- Written by Tex Allen, SAG Actor Email Tex Allen at TexAllen@Rocketmail.Com Visit WWW.IMDb.Me/TexAllen for movie credits and biography information.

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    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Vivien Leigh was subject to bouts of depression and alcoholism and was abrasive to fellow actors. There was a rocky start to her relationship with Lee Marvin, complaining about his stale alcohol breath. Eventually, the two became highly unlikely good friends.
    • Erros de gravação
      Although set in 1933, the hairstyles and costumes are decidedly mid-1960s.
    • Citações

      Rieber: Lowenthal, you know it is a historical fact that the Jews are the basis of our misfortunes.

      Lowenthal: Of course.

      Rieber: You agree?

      Lowenthal: Of course. The Jews and the bicycle riders.

      Rieber: The bicycle riders? Why the bicycle riders?

      Lowenthal: Why the Jews?

    • Conexões
      Edited into Spisok korabley (2008)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Heute abend geh'n wir bummeln auf der Reeperbahn
      Music by Ernest Gold

      Lyrics by Jack Lloyd

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    Perguntas frequentes18

    • How long is Ship of Fools?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 6 de agosto de 1965 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Alemão
      • Espanhol
    • Também conhecido como
      • La nave del mal
    • Locações de filme
      • Hollywood, Califórnia, EUA
    • Empresa de produção
      • Stanley Kramer Productions
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 4.000.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 206
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 2 h 29 min(149 min)
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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