Der Nachtmahr
- 2015
- 1 h 32 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,5/10
3,3 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAfter attending a rave party, a teenage girl forms a bond with a strange monster as she suffers a slow chaotic mental breakdown.After attending a rave party, a teenage girl forms a bond with a strange monster as she suffers a slow chaotic mental breakdown.After attending a rave party, a teenage girl forms a bond with a strange monster as she suffers a slow chaotic mental breakdown.
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 1 vitória e 3 indicações no total
Wilson Gonzalez
- Adam
- (as a different name)
Phoenix Melville
- Party Guest
- (apenas creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
Just found a new favourite. The Nightmare. Kind of like a mix of E. T., Climax, and Basket Case. And for a film about a young woman losing her mind, it's a well handled and nice movie. It actually had me cheering towards the end. It's not for everybody. But I 💜 it.
Akiz's (Achim Bornhak) monster movie from 2015 (the director prefers to be called that way rather than the horror genre). It was screened in if Istanbul the same year.
The creature resembling ET is actually a mix of a very old man and a newborn baby. The demon Tina confronts when she realizes there's no escape from it. They share fears and pains. The goal in common is to try to make room for themselves in society. This part actually constitutes the psychological dimension of the movie. There is also the theme of reality, which is the weak point of the film. The creature is presented as a phantasmagorical character in the first part of the movie, and the title of the movie (Nachtmahr: nightmare in German) proves this. But there is no time/event plot that supports its visibility later on, everything is left unsupported.
The acting and gestures of the parents do not seem to be good either. The girl seems to suffer more from her parents' disbelief in fact, rather than the creature itself.
The creature resembling ET is actually a mix of a very old man and a newborn baby. The demon Tina confronts when she realizes there's no escape from it. They share fears and pains. The goal in common is to try to make room for themselves in society. This part actually constitutes the psychological dimension of the movie. There is also the theme of reality, which is the weak point of the film. The creature is presented as a phantasmagorical character in the first part of the movie, and the title of the movie (Nachtmahr: nightmare in German) proves this. But there is no time/event plot that supports its visibility later on, everything is left unsupported.
The acting and gestures of the parents do not seem to be good either. The girl seems to suffer more from her parents' disbelief in fact, rather than the creature itself.
THE NIGHTMARE is a hell of a trip. It's a creature feature based on the painting of the same name by the Swiss painter Henry Fuseli. This film is a nightmarish tale of a slow psychological disintegration of a teen who mysteriously gets attached to an ape-like creature after an inexplicable incident at a party. The film is a slow burn and is visually gorgeous. The strobing lights, disorienting camera angles, and pulsating beats, all create a mystifying and moody atmosphere. The bulk of the film is pretty straightforward, but it takes a hard left turn in its third act and enters into the surrealist realm and the ending is fairly ambiguous. It is a very solid and less-talked-about surrealist psychological horror cum creature feature with great production values and good acting about identity and individuality. Not to be missed!
Awesome film. I saw an excellent combination on the same evening, first a documentary titled Zen For Nothing, about a Swiss girl spending some 6 months at a zen monastery in japan. A very quiet film about finding yourself, some of the characters eventually experiencing a cathartic moment, letting their emotional demons out along the way, meditating, working or just chatting the rest of the time. I knew that Nachtmahr was going to be quite the opposite as I had read about the subject and the rave music and aggressive lights etc, but it was a total surprise to discover that it touched on a similar theme as the zen documentary.Of course the social environments are completely different and it is significant that Nachtmahr is about a teenager's emotional state and the two couldn't be stylistically more different, but nevertheless both films are about finding and asserting one's true self. I actually recommend watching the two as a sort of diptych as they really complement each other: on the one hand the silence, bells and zen chanting immersed in subdued natural winter light, on the other the wild aggressive rave beats and flashing colored electrical strobe lights. Apart from that, I really enjoyed the rave scenes, the visuals the structure or storytelling and the underlying humor as well as the "unpretentiousness" and obvious "not big budget productionness" of Der Nachtmahr. If you liked films like Morvern Callar, Aurora and David Lynch films, you'll like this.. It's not hard to find flaws if you're after the perfect festival winning movie but this film is not perfect and I loved that about it.
What is this film? Part horror, part mystery, part coming of age, think "David Lynch makes an ET-reboot targeted at high schoolers".
This wide spectrum of genres gives the film a nice flow, because it allows the director to mold the story in any way that he pleases. The viewer is kept on the edge of the seat, while the story is taking turn after turn.
Still, a little more focus would have been beneficial. Take, for example, the bold claim I found on the back of the DVD: "The ultimate Berlin-movie of this generation". Whoever sits down to watch "Der Nachtmahr" with this expectation is bound to be disappointed. To be fair, it features some very impressive scenes of raves and clubs but this is simply a back drop, to draw this to the foreground is merely a marketing move. Same goes for the mystery elements. There is enough material to break the wall between reality and fiction but if you are looking for dark, mind-bending mystery, there is other places to look.
I, as a viewer, brushed aside the mystery, the raving, the strobe effects and under all the rubble, found the beautiful story of Tina and "her" nightmare. Whatever it is, she is bound to it; the more people are trying to drive it out, the stronger their bond becomes; until it becomes clear that, while ugly and inapt for posh Berlin suburbia, it is a peaceful companion that Tina learnes to love and live with.
Surrounded by people pushing her around for the sake of "mental health" and fitting into suburbian society, a teenager emancipates into a young adult with a healthy attitude towards the darker sides of life... This might not be a good promotional slogan but viewing "Der Nachtmahr", this is what I will remember.
Still, a little more focus would have been beneficial. Take, for example, the bold claim I found on the back of the DVD: "The ultimate Berlin-movie of this generation". Whoever sits down to watch "Der Nachtmahr" with this expectation is bound to be disappointed. To be fair, it features some very impressive scenes of raves and clubs but this is simply a back drop, to draw this to the foreground is merely a marketing move. Same goes for the mystery elements. There is enough material to break the wall between reality and fiction but if you are looking for dark, mind-bending mystery, there is other places to look.
I, as a viewer, brushed aside the mystery, the raving, the strobe effects and under all the rubble, found the beautiful story of Tina and "her" nightmare. Whatever it is, she is bound to it; the more people are trying to drive it out, the stronger their bond becomes; until it becomes clear that, while ugly and inapt for posh Berlin suburbia, it is a peaceful companion that Tina learnes to love and live with.
Surrounded by people pushing her around for the sake of "mental health" and fitting into suburbian society, a teenager emancipates into a young adult with a healthy attitude towards the darker sides of life... This might not be a good promotional slogan but viewing "Der Nachtmahr", this is what I will remember.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe film was made without any funding from a public broadcaster or film funding organization, which is quite unusual for a German movie released to theaters.
- Trilhas sonorasDune
Written and performed by Oblast
Principais escolhas
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- How long is The Nightmare?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Centrais de atendimento oficiais
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- The Nightmare
- Locações de filme
- Berlim, Alemanha(Exterior)
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- € 80.000 (estimativa)
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 32 min(92 min)
- Cor
- Proporção
- 2.35 : 1
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