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Palermo Shooting

  • 2008
  • 2 h 4 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,1/10
3,3 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Palermo Shooting (2008)
Drama

O estilo de vida selvagem, de um famoso jovem fotógrafo alemão, quase o mata. Ele decide, então, ir para Palermo, na Sicília, para fazer uma pausa. A bela cidade e uma atraente mulher do loc... Ler tudoO estilo de vida selvagem, de um famoso jovem fotógrafo alemão, quase o mata. Ele decide, então, ir para Palermo, na Sicília, para fazer uma pausa. A bela cidade e uma atraente mulher do local poderão ajudá-lo a se acalmar?O estilo de vida selvagem, de um famoso jovem fotógrafo alemão, quase o mata. Ele decide, então, ir para Palermo, na Sicília, para fazer uma pausa. A bela cidade e uma atraente mulher do local poderão ajudá-lo a se acalmar?

  • Direção
    • Wim Wenders
  • Roteiristas
    • Wim Wenders
    • Norman Ohler
    • Bernd Lange
  • Artistas
    • Campino
    • Giovanna Mezzogiorno
    • Dennis Hopper
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,1/10
    3,3 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Wim Wenders
    • Roteiristas
      • Wim Wenders
      • Norman Ohler
      • Bernd Lange
    • Artistas
      • Campino
      • Giovanna Mezzogiorno
      • Dennis Hopper
    • 18Avaliações de usuários
    • 31Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 1 vitória e 2 indicações no total

    Fotos23

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    Elenco principal33

    Editar
    Campino
    • Finn
    Giovanna Mezzogiorno
    Giovanna Mezzogiorno
    • Flavia
    Dennis Hopper
    Dennis Hopper
    • Frank
    Inga Busch
    • Karla
    Axel Sichrovsky
    • Hans
    Gerhard Gutberlet
    • Gerhard
    Harry Blain
    • Harry
    Sebastian Blomberg
    Sebastian Blomberg
    • Julian
    Jana Pallaske
    Jana Pallaske
    • Student
    Olivia Asiedu-Poku
    • Fan
    Melika Foroutan
    Melika Foroutan
    • Anke
    Anna Orso
    • Mother
    Lou Reed
    Lou Reed
    • Self
    Udo Samel
    Udo Samel
    • Banker
    Giuseppe Provinzano
    • Actor 1
    Giuseppe Massa
    • Actor 2
    Patrizia Schiavone
    • Market Woman
    Letizia Battaglia
    • Photographer
    • Direção
      • Wim Wenders
    • Roteiristas
      • Wim Wenders
      • Norman Ohler
      • Bernd Lange
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários18

    6,13.2K
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    10

    Avaliações em destaque

    8lester-alfonso

    Stylish Trip-to-Italy Film a Hidden Gem

    A big-budget feature film version of a mixtape: the conceit of letting the audience hear what the protagonist's personal playlist sounds like in their head when they wear their earbuds was executed very well by the seemingly arbitrary song selection to juxtapose with the action. It never felt like a "music video" yet this film has the look and all the trappings. I've been a fan of Wim Wenders for a long time but I somehow missed this one on its first release. The dream sequences are quite unique and effective; this film is Wenders as a cinema stylist. The film has an advertising gloss with the kind of patchwork of collage. I had no expectations coming into the film but I knew that I wasn't in the mood for anything intense. I got want I wanted. It's a visually stunning but understated trip-to-Italy film and I felt like I discovered a hidden gem. A must for any fan of Lou Reed; a decade later perhaps it's time to re-watch Palermo Shooting.
    RResende

    the German friend

    Wenders' supreme quality as an author, to my view, is that he knows that his films are not so much about what images show, but about images themselves. This is his magic, and his curse. This is why i have a shelter in his films, and why so many increasingly misunderstand them (first reviews on this one show it will go to the same package). Wenders knows this, whenever he is making a film, he is reflecting on the nature of image, and how that affects vision, and how vision affects understanding, and how understanding affects meaning, and essence.

    Not few times, he addresses directly the theme, and embeds it in the plot of the film. This is such a case. Film about images. People who are about image. People who become the images they fetch. The very first scene makes it clear. It "frames" (how meaningful this word is with Wenders) a landscape, through a window of a building which is in itself all about framing. A pure volume full of square holes, all of them corresponding to a different frame, depending on moment you look, position, distance to the window. This building reflects the personality of the photographer, it is in itself a succession of frames, a closed capsule interlaced with partial views to the outside.

    Than we have a story about creating images. A character photographer who loses his soul because he becomes a faker, he forgets the essence, he no longer searches for a truth in the image, instead he creates his own fake truth. Fake Australian skies reflected on S.Paulo's windows, that kind of stuff. The introduction of Milla stands for this, as she is photographed 'artificially', and than transported to the "true" environment. Than the photographer retires, isolated, to a place he feels to be 'true' (a big port, Palermo means).

    Now the big things happen in Palermo.

    The woman. Her work is to recover images, it is to find the "truth" of images, it is to interpret the vision of somebody else. Those eyes of the painter, starring at the "camera", what he was seeing is what she wants to see. Check the oppositions, check how that fresco is worked on the film: detail versus global sight, understanding versus loosing the essence, long versus short. Check how the time of an image is understood. The woman takes years working on one image, the photographer produces thousands without understanding a single one.

    The Death. It's not the death, it's Dennis Hopper, and this matters. To see how Hopper was inserted in this project made the whole thing come clear to me, and it completed a portion of my film life that i now know was incomplete. Hopper is here the designated master framer, the man who observes life, who pulls strings (even though he is only doing his job). He is a superior agent, someone who is beyond and above all that we see. When people look at him, he looks back. He makes the record of all that, we see that, that metaphor of arrows, of "shooting" with a double meaning. So he is framed as much as he is a framer. Now, remember The American Friend. See that film before seeing this one if you can, it may strike you as 2 halves of the same idea, as it stroke me. Check how similar are the characters Hopper performs. There he was also the master framer, the manipulator behind the actions that we had. In fact he was manipulating a "framer" (literaly, a man who created frames for paintings). He used the framer as he provided the main "image". That film, which i consider essential, was all about the same game of images. Now we have an update, on how times changed (and with it changed deeply our relation to images) and how Wenders himself changed. Dennis Hopper is the connection, and his role is pivotal.

    Now, i believe that if you want to establish a successful relation to a creator you have to take his works for what they are. It's like loving beyond infatuation, like friendship beyond day to day chat. You have to enjoy the qualities and most important, acknowledge the flaws, and you have to live with that. That's my kind of relation with Wenders. His films in the last 10 years or so have become more and more on the verge of being an intellectual monologue, something you are supposed to sit and listen, and nod affirmatively with you head. That's something i won't tolerate with other filmmakers (Stone, Tarantino), but that i'm willing to put up with Wenders, because it matters to me what he has to say. If, like i did, you are able to put up with discursive dialogs, and the sensation that the man beyond the scenes is leading you to believe that he has the Truth, you may let this change your life. I did.

    A side quality you might appreciate is how music shapes the environment, regardless of the scenery. Wenders was also great in understanding this, now he does it with the aid of portable music. The music editing is great

    My opinion: 5/5

    http://www.7eyes.wordpress.com
    7acg_Pangea

    Gives the mood but still something is missing

    Since I saw "Der Himmel über Berlin" approximately 3 years ago I've become a valid Vim Venders fan. After that day, I always thought, Wim Wenders had something original to say. Palermo Shooting hasn't changed my verdict, well... Almost. The Thing about Palermo Shooting that I guess, this movie tells the well known story with different methods. The methods that little bit um, shall we say cheesy? Of course, this doesn't mean that it's not a enjoyable movie. It's very "warm" movie after all. But despite all this "warmness", you think in somewhere, something/things is/are missing in this movie. Still, it's worth to watching.
    VoyagerMN1986

    Let's admit it, if it were not Wenders, this exact film would get 2/10 stars from the 10 star reviewers

    Just to make sure to do justice, and that I had not misses something, I watched Palermo shooting twice before sharing how disappointing this mess of a film is.

    Wenders has been going downhill, and severely for a couple of decades. Stick to his works of genius from the 1970's and 80's. Another reviewers said Wenders is "increasingly misunderstood."

    That is the the problem. the problem is Wenders is increasing in a repetitive and hermetic bubble of his own making. See his most recent nonsense and ridiculously hagiographic portrait of Pope Francis to see the full decline.
    6mgr2000

    an interesting failure

    I saw it yesterday at a late evening screening in Los Angeles with Wenders in-attendance, and he did an intro and stayed for a Q&A afterward (which ended at 1:30am!)

    I'd describe Palermo Shooting as an interesting failure, though with some good stuff in it. And not as a worst-ever film, or even as awful like some folks. Also interesting to me was how the naturalistic Wenders of "Paris, Texas" days has embraced modern CGI effects.

    Dennis Hopper, in his last role, was very good in a small but important supporting part in the very last scene of the film (don't walk out early or quit watching, cause you'd miss Hopper).

    It's kind of a 3 act play defining by its locations: Act 1. Dusseldorf, Act 2. Palermo, Act 3. Gangi.

    Not one of Wenders good ones. But if it had some editing-out of some of the more pretentious musing stuff, and general tightening-up, and a bit of clarification here and there, it could've been pretty good. Too bad...

    For a long and detailed plot summary, see the German Wikipedia page (worthwhile to do even putting up with Google Chrome's German-to-English translation.) It helped clarify a lot for me. de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palermo_Shooting (Note: the English Wikipedia page was very minimal).

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      The film marks the first time that Director Wenders shot a movie in his hometown, Düsseldorf.
    • Erros de gravação
      In the scene, when Finn talks with lady photographer, they discuss the age of their cameras. He tells that his Plaubel is twenty years old and she tells that her Leica is 40 years old. Actually she has Leica M7, which slightly differs from older Leica cameras. This camera marketed only in 2002.
    • Conexões
      Featured in Dennis Hopper: Uneasy Rider (2016)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Dream (Song for Finn)
      Written by Nick Cave and Warren Ellis

      Performed by Grinderman

      Published by Mute Song Ltd. 2008

      Courtesy of Cave/Ellis 2008

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    Perguntas frequentes17

    • How long is Palermo Shooting?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 20 de novembro de 2008 (Alemanha)
    • Países de origem
      • Alemanha
      • França
      • Itália
    • Centrais de atendimento oficiais
      • Official site (Japan)
      • Senator Film (Germany)
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Alemão
      • Italiano
    • Também conhecido como
      • Palermo'da yüzleşme
    • Locações de filme
      • Neuss, North Rhine-Westphalia, Alemanha
    • Empresas de produção
      • Neue Road Movies
      • P.O.R. Sicilia
      • Arte France Cinéma
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 580.203
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      2 horas 4 minutos
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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