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IMDbPro

Sissi e Seu Destino

Título original: Sissi - Schicksalsjahre einer Kaiserin
  • 1957
  • 1 h 49 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,6/10
6,3 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Romy Schneider in Sissi e Seu Destino (1957)
Costume DramaDramaHistoryRomance

A jovem imperatriz Elisabeth "Sissi", viaja pela Europa.A jovem imperatriz Elisabeth "Sissi", viaja pela Europa.A jovem imperatriz Elisabeth "Sissi", viaja pela Europa.

  • Direção
    • Ernst Marischka
  • Roteirista
    • Ernst Marischka
  • Artistas
    • Romy Schneider
    • Karlheinz Böhm
    • Magda Schneider
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,6/10
    6,3 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Ernst Marischka
    • Roteirista
      • Ernst Marischka
    • Artistas
      • Romy Schneider
      • Karlheinz Böhm
      • Magda Schneider
    • 10Avaliações de usuários
    • 12Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 2 indicações no total

    Fotos93

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    Elenco principal45

    Editar
    Romy Schneider
    Romy Schneider
    • Empress Elisabeth of Austria…
    Karlheinz Böhm
    Karlheinz Böhm
    • Emperor Franz Josef of Austria
    Magda Schneider
    Magda Schneider
    • Duchess Ludovika of Bavaria
    Gustav Knuth
    Gustav Knuth
    • Duke Max of Bavaria
    Uta Franz
    Uta Franz
    • Princess Helene…
    Walther Reyer
    Walther Reyer
    • Graf Andrassy
    Vilma Degischer
    Vilma Degischer
    • Archduchess Sophie, Franz Josef's mother
    Josef Meinrad
    Josef Meinrad
    • Oberst Böckl
    Senta Wengraf
    • Gräfin Bellegarde
    Erich Nikowitz
    • Erzherzog Franz-Karl
    Hans Ziegler
    Hans Ziegler
    • Hofrat Dr. Seeburger
    Sonia Sorel
    • Henriette Mendel
    • (as Sonja Sorel)
    Klaus Knuth
    Klaus Knuth
    • Prinz Ludwig
    Albert Rueprecht
    Albert Rueprecht
    • Erzherzog Ferdinand-Max
    Peter Neusser
    • Graf Batthyani
    Karl Fochler
    • Graf Grünne
    Susanne von Almassy
      Franca Parisi
      Franca Parisi
      • Helena
      • Direção
        • Ernst Marischka
      • Roteirista
        • Ernst Marischka
      • Elenco e equipe completos
      • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

      Avaliações de usuários10

      6,66.3K
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      Avaliações em destaque

      9mrdonleone

      Sissy must watch her Health in this One

      Very nice third part of the trilogy left me in tears throughout the viewing. Poor Sissy!!! And all that romance and the beauty made me just feel o so sad that there never was no fourth part to the series. With love,
      bonito

      Kitsch

      What a film: full colour (from Agfa), all those typical Austrian names and characters, beautiful and young Romy Schneider, but it is "Kitsch". The movie has nothing in common with real history, but served in the 50s an audience which tried to forget the war and nazism. They took the most wonderful scenes in Venice, when Sissis little daughter welcomes her mother arriving by gondola. Kitsch as kitsch can!
      6blanche-2

      Pure schmaltz but so gorgeous to look at

      The final film in the Sissi trilogy - The Fateful Years of the Empress -- again stars Romy Schneider as Empress Elisabeth of Austria. These films are beloved by the European public, just as some of the Disney films we saw as children are to us.

      As far as history goes, the movies are not very accurate, though they do show real events. Sissi and her husband are portrayed as very much in love, a very romantic couple, although that was not true. Also, for the purposes of this film, their daughter Sophie actually lives, and there aren't any other children. Actually the whole end of this film in Venice, in history, took place much later in Sissi's life, and her son Ludwig was present.

      One interesting fact is that, as in the film, Sissi's brother married the actress Henriette Mendel, and she was made a Baroness. Their illegitimate daughter, who appears as a character in the movie, becomes Marie Larish. Marie Larish was the go-between for Elisabeth's son Ludwig and his fiancé Mary. After the Mayerling scandal, when Ludwig shoots Mary and then himself, it was learned that Marie served as go-between, and the family, including her close companion Sissi, completely disowned her.

      During the time that Sissi spends in Hungary, there were rumors that Count Andrassy was her lover, but this was never proved. The film is so whitewashed that a liaison would never have occurred to Sissi. Sissi does become very ill -- they suspect tuberculosis -- and is sent to Madeira to recover. However, it is believed that her condition was very much psychosomatic -- she really didn't like being at the palace -- because, unlike in the film, when she arrived in Madeira, she had a miraculous recovery. In the film, she remains ill until her mother arrives and gets her walking, etc.

      This film ends with the Emperor and Empress' triumphant appearance in Venice. Marischka planned on doing a fourth film, but Romy Schneider refused, turning down one million Deutschemarks. Schneider would become Elisabeth once more, in 1972, in the film Ludwig, playing the character closer to the real Sissi.

      The costumes, the scenery, the pageantry in this film is spectacular. Romy Schneider is fresh and beautiful and luminous as Empress Elisabeth, not at all the dark, anorexic character described in history as time went on.

      Sissi's end was tragic, as was Schneider's, but Europeans, so beaten down by war, were in the mood for something beautiful, and they got it with the Sissi films. She is such a beloved character there, like Princess Diana, audiences loved this view of her life.

      To be enjoyed as a real feast for the eyes.
      kekseksa

      More goulash than pigs' trotters - a bit more kosher

      In reviews of the two earlier Sissi films I have already pointed out that the historical interest of the films is to be found in their relation to fifties Germany (pan-Germany) rather than to the rather slender connection with the real history of pre-First World War Austro-Hungary. I shall not repeat those arguments here.

      There is a curious "truth" game played in one of the films of Fassbinder where the characters determine who is intended by asking such questions as "What would s/he be if he were a tree" etc The last question (the killer) is "What would s/he have been during the Third Reich?" Fassbinder was one of the few West German film-makers to resolutely explore the old wound. The Austrian Marischka is at the furthest extreme, creating this really quite extraordinary fairy-tale epic which is, by careful design, light years away from the terrible "you know what", the unmentionable (like tuberculosis in this film), that most Germans now preferred to cast into oblivion.

      There is not very strong evidence for Sissi suffering from tuberculosis, although it was apparently at one time suspected, but the "white plague" was quite an important issue in the late forties and fifties (on the increase in the aftermath of the war) although it was in fact to be the decade when the disease was at least temporarily mastered. Germany, like Sissi, might hope for a complete cure.

      1957 was the comeback year for Veit Harlan (best known for the anti-semitic wartime classic Jud Süss. After somehow battling through to an acquittal in the courts, Harlan produced the film Anders als du und ich, a rather daring film about homosexuality, picking up a theme common in pre-Hitler Weimar. Harlan's film was also known as "the third sex", a term coined in the twenties by sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld (openly gay and Jewish), and similarly used as an alternative title both for Oswald's Anders als die Andern 1919 (in which Hirschfield himself appears) and for Dreyer's Mikaël (1924). Sadly for Harlan, his reputation was against him and the film met with demonstrations accusing him inter alia, and rather justly, of being anti-homosexual, although it is true that the film was more timid and conservative on the subject than its Weimar predecessors.

      Harlan could not call for this film on his former wartime collaborator, art director Bruno Mondi, for the very good reason that Mondi had his hands full as art director for the Sissi trilogy.

      The pan-Germanic theme continues in the third part of Sissi, to extend beyond Germany (represented by Sissi's native Bavaria), Austria and Hungary to include Italy - a perfect representation of Mitteleuropa, the maintenance of whose cultural imperium has throughout the trilogy been seen as Sissi's peculiar "destiny" = "order, peace, happiness, contentment" (order, typically still comes first)

      It is a sad irony of history that, had Hitler had a more generous conception of the Volkdeutsche, he might have been the champion of European Jewry (Ashkenazis throughout Europe were German speaking and very largely of German culture). In this film history is put right to a certain extent - but rather coyly. Not only do we see the Hungarian gypsies again, as in the second film but Sissi's brother marries .....an actress...and a bourgeoise(who just happens to have the Yiddish surname Mendel).

      Quite where this fairy-tale land benevolently dominated by the Volkdeutsche would have extended in the projected fourth part of Sissi, we cannot know. Von der Etsch bis an den Belt no doubt. What words, one wonders, did the German audience mutter to themselves as the Haydn music played (as it had in each part of the trilogy) at the climax of the film?

      The two charming puppets (Romy and Karlheinz) rebelled. For the special relevance of these two performers (both "innocent" children of parents prominently and ostentatiously, if relatively frivolously, known for their support of Hitler - Magda Schneider, who of course appears as the mother in the films and the conductor Karl Böhm).

      Schneider's unwillingness (despite her mother) to continue the masquerade is well known but I do not doubt that the feeling was shared by Karlheinz. Both marked their rebellion by a career-change, although in Romy's case this involved battling with her mother rather as Sissi battles with the mother-in-law in the trilogy. After agreeing to play the same part as her mother had played in the film Christine (a remake of Ophüls 1933 Liebelei), she broke the umbilical cord by running off with her co-star Alain Delon.

      As for Karlheinz he would appear, at great cost to his career, in the remarkable but disturbing film Peeping Tom (1960) made by the British director Michael Powell. The appearance of a German actor in the principal role is totally anomalous but may well be explained by the fact that the films is crucially concerned with the effect of a child growing up with a famous but grimly obsessive father (played by Powell himself in the film). If he never became a major star, the younger Böhm would nevertheless on the whole make a success of what might be described as his personal quest for rehabilitation, becoming a left-wing activist in the sixties and later a noted philanthropist and appearing in the seventies in the films of Fassbinder (as a homosexual in one and a communist in the other).

      For Romy Schneider, the road was far more difficult and, despite a period of great fame, would end with her suicide in 1982 at the age of forty-three. She had given both her children markedly Jewish names (David and Sarah) and was buried with a star of David around her neck.

      Escapism no doubt has its place but there is still no better antidote to a troubled past than facing it honestly.
      6v-56289

      the third and weakest

      The third and last episode has the same lyric, poetical tone. But this part is the weakest. Too much of discussions, too little of what I liked in the previous the most -> the idyllic nature celebrating tone

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      Enredo

      Editar

      Você sabia?

      Editar
      • Curiosidades
        Sissi was sick with tuberculosis. She insisted on being send to Madera to recover. After noticing some improvements in her condition she was send back to Vienna where she became a lot worst and then was send to Corfu to recover. She would only come back two years later.
      • Erros de gravação
        The previous movie ended in 1867 during the crowning of Elizabeth and Franz Joseph as king and queen of Hungary, Sissi is also titled as such during the movie. However in this sequel the loss of Lombardy and Veneto from Austrian Empire happened in 1859 and 1866.
      • Citações

        Emperor Franz Josef of Austria: I love Sissy and she has my fullest confidence. Of course, she is lovely. Everybody she meets finds her completely fascinating and, especially, the men! But, Sissy is no Catherine of Russia. Sissy is the truest, purest and most honest person I know.

      • Cenas durante ou pós-créditos
        In the opening credits the name "Sissi" is not displayed in the form of a title card, as in the previous movies, but on a square with birds posing forming the name before they fly away.
      • Conexões
        Edited into Sissi, para sempre meu amor (1962)
      • Trilhas sonoras
        Kaiserlied
        Music by Joseph Haydn

        Lyrics by Lorenz Leopold Haschka

      Principais escolhas

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      Perguntas frequentes15

      • How long is Sissi: The Fateful Years of an Empress?Fornecido pela Alexa

      Detalhes

      Editar
      • Data de lançamento
        • 1957 (Áustria)
      • País de origem
        • Áustria
      • Idiomas
        • Alemão
        • Grego
        • Húngaro
        • Italiano
        • Português
      • Também conhecido como
        • Sissi: The Fateful Years of an Empress
      • Locações de filme
        • Ravello, Salerno, Campania, Itália(as Korfu and Madeira)
      • Empresa de produção
        • Erma-Film
      • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

      Especificações técnicas

      Editar
      • Tempo de duração
        1 hora 49 minutos
      • Cor
        • Color
      • Proporção
        • 1.37 : 1

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