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America, America

Original title: America America
  • 1963
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 54m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
6.3K
YOUR RATING
America, America (1963)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:46
11 Videos
99+ Photos
AdventureDrama

A young Greek stops at nothing to secure a passage to America.A young Greek stops at nothing to secure a passage to America.A young Greek stops at nothing to secure a passage to America.

  • Director
    • Elia Kazan
  • Writer
    • Elia Kazan
  • Stars
    • Stathis Giallelis
    • Frank Wolff
    • Elena Karam
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    6.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Elia Kazan
    • Writer
      • Elia Kazan
    • Stars
      • Stathis Giallelis
      • Frank Wolff
      • Elena Karam
    • 42User reviews
    • 25Critic reviews
    • 72Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 7 wins & 12 nominations total

    Videos11

    America America
    Trailer 2:46
    America America
    America, America: Ticket To America
    Clip 0:51
    America, America: Ticket To America
    America, America: Ticket To America
    Clip 0:51
    America, America: Ticket To America
    America, America: Last Hope
    Clip 2:17
    America, America: Last Hope
    America, America: Diversion
    Clip 2:11
    America, America: Diversion
    America, America: My Shoes
    Clip 2:02
    America, America: My Shoes
    America, America: Thief
    Clip 2:10
    America, America: Thief

    Photos102

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    Top cast20

    Edit
    Stathis Giallelis
    Stathis Giallelis
    • Stavros Topouzoglou
    Frank Wolff
    Frank Wolff
    • Vartan Damadian
    Elena Karam
    • Vasso Topouzoglou
    Harry Davis
    • Isaac Topouzoglou
    Estelle Hemsley
    Estelle Hemsley
    • Grandmother Topouzoglou
    Gregory Rozakis
    Gregory Rozakis
    • Hohannes Gardashian
    Lou Antonio
    Lou Antonio
    • Osman
    Salem Ludwig
    • Odysseus Topouzoglou
    John Marley
    John Marley
    • Garabet
    Joanna Frank
    Joanna Frank
    • Vartuhi
    Paul Mann
    • Aleko Sinnikoglou
    Linda Marsh
    Linda Marsh
    • Thomna Sinnikoglou
    Robert H. Harris
    Robert H. Harris
    • Aratoon Kebabian
    Katharine Balfour
    • Sophia Kebabian
    Garrett Cassell
    • Dog Walker
    • (uncredited)
    Giorgos Foundas
    Giorgos Foundas
      Tom Holland
      Tom Holland
      • Voice Overs
      • (voice)
      • (uncredited)
      Elia Kazan
      Elia Kazan
      • Self
      • (voice)
      • (uncredited)
      • Director
        • Elia Kazan
      • Writer
        • Elia Kazan
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews42

      7.76.3K
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      Featured reviews

      9TheLittleSongbird

      Coming to America

      Absolutely loved the idea for the story, and love it when films take on a very personal approach. Something that 'America America' did and one can tell from as early on as the opening voice over. Elia Kazan made so many great films and seldom made a bad one (even his worst, for me between 'The Sea of Grass' and 'The Visitors', is not that bad), he was a fine director and an influential one. Especially in his distinctive directing of actors, and one of the best at it, and it is a shame that his politics and testimony harmed somewhat his reputation.

      For me, 'America America' is not one of Kazan's best films and others have a bigger influence in film and on me. There is plenty though of what made Kazan so great a director and why his high regard was richly deserved. 'America America' to me was still a great film, perhaps his most personal out of all his films (almost auto-biographical, with it being based on the experiences of his own uncle) and it was very difficult to not admire it.

      Inexperience at times shows in the acting of Stathis Giallelis, with there being times where he seemed unsure. When it comes to nit-picks regarding 'America America' that is pretty much it.

      Giallelis mostly does very well in his role, not easy handling a big and difficult role so young but he does understated wonders in his best moments. Where Kazan also shows his great skill in how he managed to get the best out of his actors (much of the best of his performances from his films, in a list that includes Vivien Leigh, Marlon Brando, James Dean, are iconic), even those that were not always great or inexperienced. The rest of the acting is every bit as good, especially from Linda Marsh, Paul Mann and best of all Lou Antonio.

      Kazan's direction is exemplary, keeping one riveted throughout the long running time. 'America America' is a very well made film, beautifully lit and framed and was really intrigued by its documentary-like style in how it was shot without being heavy-handed. The Oscar win for the art direction was richly deserved. The music score is great in its authenticity and makes one feel that you are there where the film is set.

      The script also garnered award attention and understandably so, as it is very thought-provoking, can be quite gritty and doesn't sugar coat. The opening voice over is a very good indication of what to expect, making it very clear that it was a personal effort for Kazan without being egotistical. The story is long in length while not being long-winded, and is both touching and suitably uncompromising.

      Summarising, truly great. 9/10
      10planktonrules

      One of the most American of movies.

      While I am not sure I'd consider this to be Elia Kazan's best film, it certainly ranks up there with his best--which is saying a lot considering he's the same guy who brought us "On The Waterfront", "A Streetcar Named Desire" and "Rebel Without a Cause". As for Kazan himself, this was his favorite film as it's the story of his uncle--a man who busted his butt to get himself to America around the turn of the century.

      When the movie begins, Kazan himself narrates and explains that the story is about the man who is responsible for him and his family immigrating to the US. His story begins in Turkey. It's around the time in history when the Turks were about to wipe out most of the Armenians--and things for other minorities in their land (in this case, the Greeks) weren't very good either. So, a family decides to send their oldest son, Stavros (Stathis Giallelis), to Constantiople to earn his fortune--and to be able to afford to eventually bring them all to America...and freedom. Stavros is a very, very determined man...but also quite naive. Again and again, he's used by people and left with nothing. But, he's an amazingly resilient guy and soon he's willing to do just about anything to make the money he needs to take the ship to America.

      While the story is rather simple, it's handled exquisitely. You can really tell that it's a labor of love, as the story unfolds very slowly and patiently. This is NOT a complaint-just a statement about the writer/director's style in the movie. It's really great what he was able to achieve with mostly inexperienced actors and non-actors. Perhaps Giallelis' performance is a bit too quiet and even stilted...but it is hard to imagine that he wasn't even an actor! Overall, it's a beautiful tale--and one of the most American of movies because it tells a story of immigration that most of us in the US can relate to. Even though my family was not Greek, so much of the rest of the film is pretty typical of what other poor families like my own probably went through on their way to a new land. Well worth seeing and a nice history lesson.
      ChuckTurner

      A Forgotten Masterpiece

      Kazan's reputation seems to have been diminishing for some time, a process, ironically, that his 'Lifetime Achievement' Oscar seems to have accelerated. Yeah, he did betray his fellows and himself in the 1950s. Again, ironically, it's the films he made later in his career, which show the scars of his loss of self-esteem, which are the most fascinating - WILD RIVER, SPLENDOR IN THE GRASS, THE ARRANGEMENT - and most powerful of them all, AMERICA AMERICA.

      I too am surprised that this monument to Americanism and monument of American cinema, seems not very widely known in America itself. It has all the values of classic American cinema - a strong, simple narrative, a limpid visual style which eschews any directorial histrionics to concentrate purely on the characters. It is the story of young men driven from their homeland and making the long voyage to America - the huddled masses yearning to be free. The journey is long and terribly hard, and even as the shore of American comes into view, sacrifices still have to be made. The end of the film is enormously powerful, one of the most moving I have ever seen - the effect is still with me now, 30 years after seeing it.

      It is the story of Kazan's father and uncle - the character who makes an appearance, played by Richard Boone, in Kazan's more heavily fictionalised subsequent film THE ARRANGEMENT. It is a personal story, and the simplicity of the telling seems like the end of a process of endless re-telling around smokey fireplaces, and before children go to sleep, a family saga which has almost attained the status of myth. The savagery of the film's first hour, and the dream-like quality of the last act make AMERICA AMERICA a genuine and powerful part of American mythology.

      So don't torture yourself about whether Kazan was morally and politically wrong in betraying his colleagues - see AMERICA AMERICA, and you'll see why he could never have acted any differently. Yes, he was a radical, and a leftist, and a deeply intelligent and passionate man; but he was also an immigrant - and his horror of disenfranchisement and ejection overcame his moral and political views. Kazan may criticise aspects of its culture and politics, but he loves and respects and is grateful to America above all. So he made his choice. He could have made no other.
      10oOgiandujaOo_and_Eddy_Merckx

      A jewel

      "America, America" is a movie made with the soul. It is a hair-raising movie about the immigrant experience, made by artists temporarily outside the Hollywood cage. It is about the struggle to be human in a world that bites at you, and it is about naked desire. "America, America" is a film about a young man with ichor in his arteries, made by people with ichor in their arteries.

      Stavros is a young Greek from Anatolia, a youth with burning eyes, full of ethos as well. He yearns to live a life away from degradation (Greeks in Anatolia were a despised minority). This movie shows his peregrination to America, in three of the shortest hours I've ever lived. It shows a cycle of being broken and rebuilt over and again, the death of illusions, the obduracy of hope, and the rack of desire.

      Haskell Wexler deserves special mention as he quite frequently produced jaw-dropping shots in this movie. There is a scene in this movie where Stavros is sat next to an older woman, Sophia (sat together like panthers watching an ape play with jackals), and the electricity between them, established entirely visually, is a devastation.

      The editing from Dede Allen, is similarly special, and you can see that Kazan acknowledged all this creative talent as he reads out all the names of the major creative staff at the end over the credits. One particularly beautiful effect was a dissolve the last time we see Stavros' mother, where her face persist on the screen for a moment, almost as if she has become a ghost.

      You absolutely must see this movie.
      cathyb

      A realistic portrayal of the immigrant experience

      I first saw America, America when it was originally released and I saw it with my father. When the lights came up, I looked at my father and there were tears in his eyes and he said "this is my story too". His journey to America was the same as the character in the movie, only he came from Armenia.

      Elia Kazan, with this movie has told the story of many immigrants, just like my father, with truth and depth of character. This isn't a fairy tale, the story is real and reflects the perils and experiences many immigrants took to come to

      America. I am amazed that more people don't know about this movie. Whenever I rewatch it, I am reminded of the sacrifices my father made to come to this country and why I'm am blessed to be an American.

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      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        Of all the films he had directed, this one was Elia Kazan's favorite film, as it was very personal to him.
      • Goofs
        An old woman is humming a tune from Astor Piazzolla's Libertango in the 1900s, decades before the composer was even born.
      • Quotes

        Elia Kazan: [Voice- over] My name is Elia Kazan. I am a Greek by blood, a Turk by birth and an American because my uncle made a journey.

      • Crazy credits
        Director Elia Kazan narrates the main portion of the closing credits, reading the words as they appear on the screen, using complete sentences such as "The cinematography was by Haskell Wexler."
      • Connections
        Edited into Grand format: Amérique, notre histoire (2006)
      • Soundtracks
        Excitement In The Village

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      FAQ

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      Details

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      • Release date
        • June 17, 1964 (France)
      • Country of origin
        • United States
      • Official sites
        • HBOMAX (United States)
        • Official site
      • Language
        • English
      • Also known as
        • America America
      • Filming locations
        • Istanbul, Turkey
      • Production companies
        • Athena Enterprises
        • Warner Bros.
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        2 hours 54 minutes
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.85 : 1

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