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Alice dans les villes

Original title: Alice in den Städten
  • 1974
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 53m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
15K
YOUR RATING
Yella Rottländer and Rüdiger Vogler in Alice dans les villes (1974)
Alice In The Cities: Motel (English Subtitled)
Play clip1:36
Watch Alice In The Cities: Motel (English Subtitled)
1 Video
99+ Photos
Road TripDrama

A German journalist is saddled with a nine-year-old girl after encountering her mother at a New York airport.A German journalist is saddled with a nine-year-old girl after encountering her mother at a New York airport.A German journalist is saddled with a nine-year-old girl after encountering her mother at a New York airport.

  • Director
    • Wim Wenders
  • Writers
    • Wim Wenders
    • Veith von Fürstenberg
  • Stars
    • Yella Rottländer
    • Rüdiger Vogler
    • Lisa Kreuzer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.8/10
    15K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Wim Wenders
    • Writers
      • Wim Wenders
      • Veith von Fürstenberg
    • Stars
      • Yella Rottländer
      • Rüdiger Vogler
      • Lisa Kreuzer
    • 48User reviews
    • 54Critic reviews
    • 78Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Alice In The Cities: Motel (English Subtitled)
    Clip 1:36
    Alice In The Cities: Motel (English Subtitled)

    Photos115

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    Top cast20

    Edit
    Yella Rottländer
    Yella Rottländer
    • Alice van Damm
    Rüdiger Vogler
    Rüdiger Vogler
    • Philip Winter
    Lisa Kreuzer
    Lisa Kreuzer
    • Lisa van Damm
    • (as Elisabeth Kreuzer)
    Edda Köchl
    Edda Köchl
    • Angela - Friend in New York
    Ernest Boehm
    Ernest Boehm
    • Publisher
    Sam Presti
    • Car Dealer
    Lois Moran
    • Airport Hostess
    Didi Petrikat
    • Woman at Swimming Park
    Hans Hirschmüller
    Hans Hirschmüller
    • Police Officer
    Sibylle Baier
    • Woman on Ferry
    Mirko
    • Boy Singing Next to Jukebox
    Julia Baier
    • Young Girl on Ferry
    • (uncredited)
    Chuck Berry
    Chuck Berry
    • Chuck Berry
    • (archive footage)
    • (uncredited)
    Peter Genée
    • Man Looking at Monitor in New York Airport
    • (uncredited)
    • …
    Peter Handke
    Peter Handke
    • Man at Chuck Berry concert
    • (uncredited)
    Jane Jarvis
    • Organist at Shea Stadium
    • (uncredited)
    Micky Kley
    • Woman Behind Philip and Alice on Plane
    • (uncredited)
    Martin Müller
    • Man on Empire State Building Roof
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Wim Wenders
    • Writers
      • Wim Wenders
      • Veith von Fürstenberg
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews48

    7.814.5K
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    Featured reviews

    8daydreamblvr1210

    a charming film, Paper Moon fans might enjoy

    This is easily one of Wenders' most accessible films of the 70s (along with the American Friend, 1976). Alice in den Stätden was originally released in the states after Paper Moon (Ryan, Tatum O'Neal) premiered and bears a slight resemblance to the story. In the case of Alice, this little girl gets stuck with a reluctant photojournalist and together they cross Germany in search of her grandmother's house. It differs from Wenders' other road movies in that it's plot line actually has some element of suspense to keep the momentum forward.

    It's very entertaining for the charm of the characters, especially Yella Rottländer as Alice. She shines here as a very self-possessed, precocious youngster who disrupts the life of the familiar, detached, angst-ridden protagonist, Philip (Rudiger Volger).

    There are small details captured in this film that are noteworthy to fans as well as casual viewers. The old organ at Shea Stadium (long since removed) is briefly shown in one early scene . The monorail in Wüppertal is featured in another sequence (one of the first monorails built). There is a lot of urban decay documented in their travels, particularly in the Ruhr district scenes but all of that can't detract from the humor of the 2 lead characters' playful interactions. The shot of Philip and Alice mimicking each other doing calisthenics offsets all the dreariness and alienation in one scene. The optimistic ending is a very satisfying one. This is a beautiful gem of a film if you can find it.
    8karmaswimswami

    Motherboard for a film genre

    What's not to like about this early Wim Wenders road-genre film? It's an operatic overture in which he sets out the themes, the provenance, the pacing we will see again in again...in "Goalie," in "Paris, Texas," even in "Wings of Desire." The atmospherics are perfect, and I could watch a 40-hour miniseries in this vein. The final 35mm print is bogged down now and again in graininess from blow-ups of the original 16mm negative, but the characters are flesh and blood, credible, and well- played. Alice's interaction with the protagonist's guiding male penumbra is nuanced, relieving, and something a post-modern film could never achieve. The older I get the more I cherish and cling to Wenders' early work: more worldly than you think, and a zero-tolerance zone for cynicism.
    spoilsbury_toast_girl

    Through the Eyes

    The references between Wenders' films and cinema in general are utterly diverse. They reach from direct hints and citations to more subliminal connections. And therefore, mainly the early films of De Sica resonate in Alice in the Cities, especially the neo-realistic masterpiece Ladri di biciclette. In the main protagonists' (journalist Philip and young girl Alice) search for her grandmother in the German Ruhrpott, we can see traces of the father's and his son's search for the bicycle in Rome. Both films are open for sidelong glances, for moments that don't want to give in the dramaturgic concept of the story. But, actually, you don't have to watch De Sica's film to lose yourself in the sheer beauty and poetry of Alice in the Cities, where documentary elements win over fiction and found pictures triumph over staged ones; when shots of moments fall out of the stream of images and reveal an almost boundless yearning.
    10two-rivers

    A Journey from Paralysis into Light

    A man around thirty, German journalist Philip Winters, travels alone in a rented car all over the States. He makes pictures with a Polaroid camera, which he wants to include in a story that he has to write for a publishing house. But the results of his photographic efforts do not correspond with what he believed to see when he took the pictures. And he does not even dare to assimilate his impressions into a written form. It seems, as if he keeps seeing nothing but the void, either the uniform monotony of always recurring urban landscapes on his lonely journeys or, in the single rooms of the motels, a television program that constantly reels off the same dull and dreary patterns. And how can you put emptiness into words?

    A silenced bewilderment has already become routine in the completely paralyzed life of a man, who only pities himself, and who apparently has lost all access to his fellow men. Therefore the girlfriend in New York, to whom he wants to unburden all his world-weariness can do nothing for him but show him the door, saying: "Nobody told me how to live either."

    So he forgot how to live, our very typical hero of modern times. But just as in a children's story rescue suddenly appears in the shape of a wondrous fairy, Philip Winters also has a surprising encounter, which will help him to determine his position in this world anew. The unexpected enlightening figure is a child, nine-year-old Alice. Her mother, whose acquaintance Philip had somehow forcibly made at the airport counter, has let her down, leaving behind a succinct message, in which she asks Winters to take provisionally charge of the girl until she will follow them to Amsterdam in a later airplane.

    The mother does not appear though, and thus Philip Winters does not have any other alternative but to go on looking after the child, a responsibility he most willingly would like to avoid. But Alice remains persistent, she scents the possibility of an exciting adventure. She mentions a grandmother, who possibly lives in Wuppertal, West Germany. Unwillingly Winters bows to his fate, but after a few abortive attempts he simply deposits her at a police station and goes to a Chuck Berry concert on his own.

    That could be the end of the story. But as I already mentioned, Alice is a fairy. And so she does not only come back, but also actually succeeds in getting a mechanism going in Philip Winters which seemed to be already dead and buried: the reference to the other one, the preparedness to get involved with his fellow creatures. At the end of the film he seems to be recovered, the train in which he and Alice are sitting, is obviously moving along on newly built tracks, the decisive switching of the points has been made.

    At least for the time being. For it is exactly in this hopeful and promising moment that we have to leave this wonderful movie. We are just allowed to throw another brief glance at the protagonist, who is sitting in the compartment joyfully united with Alice, a moment before the camera steps back and rises into the air, moving irresistibly away from the scene, until it depicts a vast panoramic view. But our eyes are still fixed on the train that hastens steadily through the immense landscape heading towards a destiny unknown.
    7random_avenger

    Alice in the Cities

    Besides the acclaimed and popular later works like Paris, Texas (1984) and Wings of Desire (1987), Wim Wenders is also known for his Road Movie Trilogy, a string of three films that came out in consecutive years in the 1970s. Alice in the Cities, the first movie in the trilogy, was released in 1974, while the other two are The Wrong Move (1975) and Kings of the Road (1976).

    Alice in the Cities marks the first appearance of the director's recurring character Philip Winter (Rüdiger Vogler) who would later reappear in several other Wenders titles. This time he is a journalist and photographer who has been assigned to travel around in the United States and write a story about his experiences but suffers from a bad case of writer's block. Just before returning to his native Germany he meets a German woman called Lisa (Lisa Kreuzer) and her young daughter Alice (Yella Rottländer) who are also planning to return home. Soon Philip finds himself as Alice's temporary custodian and takes her on a long road trip through Germany in order to find her grandmother whose whereabouts seem to be more or less unknown.

    Many stories have been made about men learning something new about themselves upon suddenly becoming responsible for a child. The premise can easily be made into a cheesy inspirational family movie, but luckily Alice in the Cities takes a more ambitious, or perhaps ambiguous, route. There are only three significant characters in the story: Philip appears to enjoy living and working alone but gets fairly well along with the young Alice who has also been thrown into the situation against her will but is able to maintain a positive attitude most of the time. The third important figure in the film is Alice's mother Lisa who remains rather enigmatic and does not reveal much about her motives. Philip and Alice do quietly evolve as persons over the course of the story; how exactly, the audience must figure out by themselves.

    Visually the movie looks fine. The grainy black and white cinematography is guaranteed Robby Müller quality and the melancholic score is provided by the legendary German krautrock band Can. Numerous shots are filmed through car windows as Philip drives through American or German towns by himself or with Alice, so admirers of urban environments can get a neat first-hand view of a traveler. I especially liked the scenes on or near the suspended monorail in Wuppertal, Germany. Loud TV programs playing in various television sets are also a recurring theme and a source of frustration for Philip, whereas Alice seems to enjoy them more.

    There are some things I'm not sure I like, such as the slightly excessive runtime or the frequent fades to black that make many scenes feel a tad rushed, but in the end I enjoyed the movie as a whole. Rüdiger Vogler does a good job as the quiet Philip and Yella Rottländer never comes across as unnatural or annoying in the role of Alice. Alienation, parenthood and traveling are themes that have wide appeal and whilst "the journey is more important than the destination" may not be a wildly original conclusion, it always makes a fitting overhanging theme for a road movie. In addition, Alice in the Cities features a strong thematic connection to Paris, Texas and is recommended viewing to fans of said movie and traveling films in general.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The novel "Tender is the Night" by F. Scott Fitzgerald is seen on the coffee table of Phil Winter's girlfriend. A character in the novel, Rosemary Hoyt, was inspired by Fitzgerald's affair with actress Lois Moran, who appears in this film as an airport hostess. It was Moran's last movie.
    • Goofs
      Crew are reflected in the side of the car (at around 46 mins - sound man, microphone and other crew. This is why so many cars in movies appear dirty or have a matte paint job.).
    • Quotes

      Lisa - Alice's Mother: What are you writing?

      Philip 'Phil' Winter: The inhuman thing about American TV is not so much that they hack everything up with commercials, though that's bad enough, but in the end all programmes become commercials. Commercials for the status quo. Every image radiates the same disgusting and nauseated message. A kind of boastful contempt. Not one image leaves you in peace, they all want something from you.

    • Connections
      Featured in Mia toso makryni apousia (1985)
    • Soundtracks
      Under the Boardwalk
      Written by Kenny Young and Arthur Resnick

      Performed by The Drifters and The Rolling Stones

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Alice in the Cities?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 25, 1977 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • West Germany
    • Languages
      • German
      • English
      • Dutch
    • Also known as
      • Alice in the Cities
    • Filming locations
      • Wuppertal Suspension Railway, Wuppertal, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
    • Production companies
      • Westdeutscher Rundfunk (WDR)
      • Produktion 1 im Filmverlag der Autoren
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • DEM 500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $59,294
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 53m(113 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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