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Quarto 666

Título original: Chambre 666
  • Filme para televisão
  • 1982
  • Livre
  • 45 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,6/10
1,8 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Werner Herzog in Quarto 666 (1982)
Home Video Extra (Clip) from Anchor Bay Entertainment
Reproduzir trailer2:11
1 vídeo
3 fotos
Documentário

Em um quarto de hotel no Festival de Cannes de 1982, Wim Wenders inicia uma pesquisa entre seus colegas sobre o futuro do cinema.Em um quarto de hotel no Festival de Cannes de 1982, Wim Wenders inicia uma pesquisa entre seus colegas sobre o futuro do cinema.Em um quarto de hotel no Festival de Cannes de 1982, Wim Wenders inicia uma pesquisa entre seus colegas sobre o futuro do cinema.

  • Direção
    • Wim Wenders
  • Roteirista
    • Wim Wenders
  • Artistas
    • Wim Wenders
    • Michelangelo Antonioni
    • Maroun Bagdadi
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,6/10
    1,8 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Wim Wenders
    • Roteirista
      • Wim Wenders
    • Artistas
      • Wim Wenders
      • Michelangelo Antonioni
      • Maroun Bagdadi
    • 9Avaliações de usuários
    • 10Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Vídeos1

    Wim Wenders:Room 666
    Trailer 2:11
    Wim Wenders:Room 666

    Fotos2

    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster

    Elenco principal16

    Editar
    Wim Wenders
    Wim Wenders
    • Self
    Michelangelo Antonioni
    Michelangelo Antonioni
    • Self
    Maroun Bagdadi
    Maroun Bagdadi
    • Self
    Ana Carolina
    Ana Carolina
    • Self
    Mike De Leon
    Mike De Leon
    • Self
    Rainer Werner Fassbinder
    Rainer Werner Fassbinder
    • Self
    Jean-Luc Godard
    Jean-Luc Godard
    • Self
    Romain Goupil
    Romain Goupil
    • Self
    Yilmaz Güney
    Yilmaz Güney
    • Self
    • (narração)
    Monte Hellman
    Monte Hellman
    • Self
    Werner Herzog
    Werner Herzog
    • Self
    Robert Kramer
    Robert Kramer
    • Self
    Paul Morrissey
    Paul Morrissey
    • Self
    Susan Seidelman
    Susan Seidelman
    • Self
    Noël Simsolo
    Noël Simsolo
    • Self
    Steven Spielberg
    Steven Spielberg
    • Self
    • Direção
      • Wim Wenders
    • Roteirista
      • Wim Wenders
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários9

    6,61.8K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    9yusufpiskin

    Time Capsule

    Chambre 666 (1982) is a fascinating time capsule of a film. During the 1982 Cannes Film Festival, Wim Wenders, a visionary in his own right, set up a static camera in room 666 of the Hotel Martinez and invited a who's who of filmmaking - Jean-Luc Godard, Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Werner Herzog, Maroun Bagdadi, Steven Spielberg, Michelangelo Antonioni, and even Yilmaz Güney (via voice message) - to ponder the future of cinema.

    Wenders presented each director with a list of questions, most notably, "Is cinema a language about to get lost, an art about to die?" Each had one 16mm reel (roughly 11 minutes) to respond. The result is a captivating montage of insights, anxieties, and predictions from some of the most influential figures in film history.

    This exercise should be repeated every decade, I think. And every ten years, the participants should be confronted with their previous responses, their reactions captured on film.

    We're witnessing some of the greatest minds of our time grappling with the future of their art form, and it's a truly bizarre feeling. It's like a time capsule, a glimpse into the past that forces us to reflect on the present.

    Wim Wenders, you genius.
    Michael_Elliott

    Good Doc

    Chambre 666 (1982)

    *** (out of 4)

    Wim Winders directed this somewhat interesting documentary filmed during the 1982 Cannes Fil Festival. Winders set up a camera in a hotel room and he'd ask various directors to come in and say what they thought about the future of cinema. Werner Herzog, Steven Spielberg, Michelangelo Antonioni, Jean-Luc Godard, Paul Morrissey and various others take part and offer their thoughts on the subject. The opinions very from Herzog not fearing the future to Spielberg showing high concern over the budgets of big movies, which are forcing studios to cut back on smaller films. It's funny because he speaks of being worried about the $10 million it took to film E.T., which he says could cost $18 million in a few years. It's also interesting to hear Herzog "predict" that one day you might be able to order movies through a computer or television. There's nothing technically good about this 45-minute film but it's interesting none the less.
    9Rodrigo_Amaro

    Wenders makes relevant questions about the future of movies

    The movies are dying? This art form will cease to exist someday? What's the future of movies? And what do movie makers think about all this? See some of the answers in "Chambre 666" documentary directed by Wim Wenders in 1982, inviting film directors from all over the world to answer these questions, give their own opinion on the matter while attending the Cannes Film Festival of that year.

    A hotel room, a tape recorder, a paper with the questions and a camera rolling is all that there is. The directors come in and try to explain themselves in the best possible way according to their beliefs. Between the guests are Jean-Luc Godard, Paul Morrissey, Ana Carolina, Steven Spielberg, Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Werner Herzog, Michelangelo Antonioni and Wenders himself appear to explain why the director of "Yol" Yilmaz Güney couldn't attend the call and film his statement but he recorded through audio. They've got ten minutes each to answer the questions but the majority preferred to not speak so much (Godard might be the only one who used all the given time).

    Trying to keep your curiosity alive I'll only make short explanations of what some of them had to say. The greatest contributions came from Herzog and Antonioni, they said things about the ways of technology and how they might influence peoples lives. The director of "Aguirre", before quoting about his optimistic view on films, made a whole ritual before giving his reply, taking off his shoes, socks and turning off the television (no one did that!) present there. Seeing this now we can only think that Herzog was wrong with one thing: people will stop to live their lives and succumb to the technologies, online shops and all, avoiding whatever what's out there. He said the opposite would occur.

    The other testimonies are either too short or too confusing, or ingenuous, or too simplistic. I don't feel that anyone really answered this thoughtful doubt because this is completely subjective, hard to explain, can't be answered at all.

    Godard got moronic while presenting his views; the female directors only emphasize about the passion about making films, if that still exists then the movies shall not die; Fassbinder only changed the mood in the room and in the film and got me real confused. By mood I mean when he entered in the room Wim's edition of the film cuts off to an exterior shot with a tense music along. Strangely enough, this would be one of his last interviews, he would die a few months later taking with him German's New Cinema.

    One good interview came from the 2nd director, and his reflection that just like many other art forms that at that time were dying or reduced to occasional resurrection, films are also going through the same way. I agree with that. There aren't many good movies anymore, worst, there aren't movies with a message to be sent, art films that are worthy of our time and money, and the masses are only interested in the blockbusters, movies to be consumed. Hollywood feeds us with that all the bloody time! Then comes Spielberg to open your eyes to that fact but frankly what he has to say is quite naive and hypocrite. "I'm not responsible for that" says the man who broke records with "Jaws" AND was promoting "E.T." in Cannes. Really? He changed the way Hollywood makes its system by giving special release dates, trying to predict what people want to see, money grabbing things filled of special effects. His best insight is when he talks about the studios lack of concern for storytelling, they only want the money they spent getting doubled, and most of the time they idealize the "perfect movie" that will join all kinds of public and make a big profit at the box-office. It's really hard to please everybody!

    So, this was in 1982, TV and videotapes were the only dominant trend among people, main cause for people walking off from the theaters. Today, we have mobile phones, internet, DVD, BluRay, TV is garbage (it's strange to see Herzog praising it with such quality here but two years earlier he seemed to hate its commercials, declaring holy war against Bonanza on "Werner Herzog Eats His Shoe"). It's fascinating to look back and see how their opinions weren't so prophetic, very few got it right and movies aren't dead...yet. Almost there.

    Judging the movie now. The idea was great, everyone should see it just to have some perspective and make up their own minds abut the intriguing and difficult questions Wenders makes. The concept is somewhat flawed though, uninteresting, tiring partly because most of the filmmakers don't talk about movies with passion, with love and even good will. Someone like Scorsese or Kieslowski here would be amazing, they would give positive and remarkable comments.

    "Chambre 666" desperately needs a sequel. Wenders must call back all the directors who are still alive, show their interviews back in the 1980's and present what has changed, what they've got it right or wrong, give us new light on things and maybe predict another future for the movies. Keep this idea alive, Wim! 9/10
    lor_

    Incisive experimental docu from Wim Wenders

    My review was written in July 1984 after watching the film at a Manhattan screening room.

    Filmed at the Cannes Film Festival in 192, and shown in a shorter version on French tv that year, Wim Wenders' "Room 666" is an informative and often funny cinematic stunt. Pic is scheduled for release later this year in tandem with a longer docu by Wenders about Japanese director Yasujiro Ozu, tentatively titled "Tokyo".

    Wenders' concept, simple yet novel, was to present a written list of questions on the future of cinema and its relationship to tv technology to a large number of film directors attending the Cannes Fest, admit them one by one to a hotel room, containing a tape recorder and a pre-set 16mm camera holding one reel of film. With identical compositional framing, each participant is seated in a chair by a window, with a tv set playing next to him, its sound turned off, and permitted complete freedom (other than the time constraint imposed by the single film reel) to present a monolog on camera.

    Wenders edited the results, comically choking off the dullards with a sudden blackout (minimalist filmmaking's equivalent to vaudeville tradition's "Get the hook!") and adding a brief, poetic framing story to put everything into context: a shot of an aged cedar standing by the highway, a tree old enough to have seen the entire history of photography, and cinema as well.

    Stars of this format emerge as Jean-Luc Godard and Steven Spielberg, each one arguably the key director of, respectively, the '60s and the current decade. Godard addresses with both provocative insight and consierable background the issue of technological change, noting how tv esthetics are replacing cinematic standards. Stating that advertising-supported tv has adopted the representational and editing methods of Sergei Eisentstein's classic "Potemkin", he notes that one-minute "Potemkin"-style commercials work at that length because if they were longer they would face the problem of having to tell the truth about the product involved.

    Addressing the tendency toward super-production films and tv miniseries, he notes that in the U. S. the trend to make just one important film, in which the title is the key, not the content. The idea, per Godard, is to shoot less film but release more of it (e.g.ll, lthe miniserires version) than in the past.

    Spielberg begins his discourse with some self-serving analysis of how the inflation of film budgets has affected him since the "Jaws" days, but segues into several pointed and valuable observations concerning the trends for studio heads to approve only pictures made "to please everybody", leaving no room for personal films. His segment is definitely an interesting one and takes "Room 666" out of the esoteric territory earmarked by most of the other helmers, each speaking for the most part in his or her native tongue (with English subtitles).

    Werner Herzog is the only subject to direct himself actively, turning off the nearby tv set, taking off his shoes and socks, and even dramatically ending his spot by placing a couch pillow over the camera lens. He has no fear of tv, which he compaes to a jukebox: "tv never absorbs you like a movie; you can't turn off the cinema" is the subtilted translation. The late Rainer Werner Fassbinder, looking and sounding weary, defends personal and national-identity cinema against the current trend towards sensationalism in films.

    Other speakers often resemble their film output, with Michelangelo Antonioni pacing around the room and asking numerous unanswerable questions, repeatedly stressing what he doesn't know; Monte Hellman proving to be as laconic as one of his pictures; and Paul Morrissey, acting glib yet sincere in his favoring of tv ovr filmmaking since the "intrusion of the director does not exist on tv" and because tv stresses people and characters.

    Unfortunately, the third-world directors on view seem hung up with their own parochial issues and do not address Wenders' philosophical questions. The two women included, New York's Susan Seidelman and Brazil's Ana Carolina, seem a bit flustered and inarticulate, adding little to the discourse.

    Minimalist in desing Wenders' experimenal concept works and whets one's appetite for similar projects with other subjects. Failing to obtain the righs to use Bernard Herrmann's soundtrack music from "North by Northwest" in the background (reportedly they would have costg more than the filming did), he opted for out-tracks by Jurgen Knieper, leftover from his scoes of other Wenders features. They add a note of melancholy to link "Room 666" with the director's more familiar fictional odysseys.
    6gbill-74877

    A mixed bag

    In light of the dominance of television and the rise of the VCR by 1982, Wim Wenders sounds the alarm that cinema may be dying, and asks a number of famous directors to comment on that in this short documentary, ominously putting a TV on over their shoulder in the background as they do so. What we get is an impressive collection of directors, but it's a mixed bag as to what they actually have to say. Oh, there are some prescient comments, for example, the prediction of larger screens in the home, making theaters less important, or that studios interested in profits driving films to be more 'for the masses' (and this, long before the MCU), or that technology will allow you to buy vegetables by pushing a few buttons. But there is also a lot of drab commentary, overstating the doom and gloom, and also many segments that are very short and really don't add anything. Not surprisingly, Jean-Luc Godard is the most tedious as he rambles pretentiously through half-baked points, and Steven Spielberg is the most optimistic. Spielberg expresses the view that filmmakers have to make do with the time they live in, specifically as it relates to budgeting, and then mostly speaks in terms of cash, which was pretty tone deaf to what he was being asked about. Although hell, to him cinema wasn't dying at all, it was thriving. And to be fair, there have been a lot of incredible films since this documentary, so it is true that artists adapt.

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    • Curiosidades
      German director Reiner Werner Fassbinder died a few week after this short documentary. That's why Wenders included the ominous music after his interview.
    • Conexões
      Edited into De Volta ao Quarto 666 (2008)

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    Detalhes

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    • Data de lançamento
      • 2 de junho de 1982 (França)
    • Países de origem
      • França
      • Alemanha Ocidental
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Francês
      • Alemão
      • Italiano
      • Turco
      • Português
    • Também conhecido como
      • Room 666
    • Locações de filme
      • Hôtel Martinez - 73 Boulevard de la Croisette, Cannes, Alpes-Maritimes, França(main location)
    • Empresas de produção
      • Chris Sievernich Filmproduktion
      • Films A2
      • France 2 (FR2)
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

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    • Tempo de duração
      • 45 min
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 1.33 : 1

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