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Der Fußgänger

  • 1973
  • PG
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
316
YOUR RATING
Der Fußgänger (1973)
Drama

When a German businessman causes a car accident with deadly consequences, the papers start digging into his past to find scandals. What they find causes him to reevaluate his own past during... Read allWhen a German businessman causes a car accident with deadly consequences, the papers start digging into his past to find scandals. What they find causes him to reevaluate his own past during WW2 when he was in Greece.When a German businessman causes a car accident with deadly consequences, the papers start digging into his past to find scandals. What they find causes him to reevaluate his own past during WW2 when he was in Greece.

  • Director
    • Maximilian Schell
  • Writers
    • Dagmar Hirtz
    • Maximilian Schell
    • Franz Seitz
  • Stars
    • Gustav Rudolf Sellner
    • Peter Hall
    • Maximilian Schell
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    316
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Maximilian Schell
    • Writers
      • Dagmar Hirtz
      • Maximilian Schell
      • Franz Seitz
    • Stars
      • Gustav Rudolf Sellner
      • Peter Hall
      • Maximilian Schell
    • 6User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 4 wins & 2 nominations total

    Photos5

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    Top cast32

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    Gustav Rudolf Sellner
    • Heinz Alfred Giese
    Peter Hall
    Peter Hall
    • Rudolf Hartmann
    Maximilian Schell
    Maximilian Schell
    • Andreas Giese
    Gila von Weitershausen
    Gila von Weitershausen
    • Karin
    Alexander May
    • Alexander Markowitz
    Elsa Wagner
    • Elsa Giese
    Ruth Hausmeister
    • Inge Marie Giese
    Dagmar Hirtz
    • Elke Giese
    Manuel Sellner
    • Hubert Giese
    Michael Weinert
    • Michael Giese
    Norbert Schiller
    Norbert Schiller
    • Minor Role
    Angela Salloker
    Angela Salloker
    Fani Fotinou
    • Griechin
    Herbert Mensching
    • Reporter
    Peter Moland
    • Reporter
    Walter Kohut
    • Dr. Rolf Meineke
    Christian Kohlund
    • Erwin Gotz
    Walter Varndal
    • Dr. Kratxer
    • (as Walter von Varndal)
    • Director
      • Maximilian Schell
    • Writers
      • Dagmar Hirtz
      • Maximilian Schell
      • Franz Seitz
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews6

    6.5316
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    Featured reviews

    6Mort-31

    Shades of grey

    This film is about a man who committed a terrible crime during war and is now old and somehow sorry for what he did. The story about the preparations for his trial are described from different points of view, also from his.

    It's interesting to experience Maximilian Schell mainly as a director. (The role he plays in the film is quite small.) Shades of grey dominate the film. It looks like made with a low budget in a studio with minimum scenery. Although the story is really interesting and the topic is controversial – shall an old, harmless man still be called to account for the crimes he committed a long time ago in war? – somehow the film doesn't keep awake. There are some surprising takes here and charming guest appearances there – there seems to be no continuity, no concept. The film seems „undirected`, uncoordinated. I guess, that's a common problem, when actors, who believe they know their way around, try and direct a movie.

    The movie ends abruptly, after changing into a TV discussion. I got the impression that the film had been over for minutes and I was watching that discussion. Really weird.
    7Bunuel1976

    THE PEDESTRIAN (Maximilian Schell, 1973) ***

    Initially it was my intention to dedicate my month-long Oscar marathon to catching up solely with winners but the sudden passing of Austrian actor/writer/director Maximilian Schell on its very first day soon dispelled those plans! Schell, already an acting Oscar winner at the start of the 1960s, went behind the camera towards the end of that same decade and his directorial debut – FIRST LOVE (1970) which, sadly, is unavailable for viewing at this juncture – immediately earned him a Best Foreign Language Film Oscar nomination; the film under review is his sophomore effort and it was equally recognized by the Academy and, even though it lost out to François Truffaut's delightful film-making classic DAY FOR NIGHT (1973) on this occasion, it emerged victorious at the Golden Globes.

    Bringing former Nazi officials to justice has been an ongoing worldwide quest ever since the 1947 Nuremberg trials; it is perhaps not coincidental that Maximilian Schell not only won his sole acting Oscar for a fictional, star-studded reenactment of that infamous event but that he tackled the subject again when he became a director. Curiously enough, while he does appear as an actor in THE PEDESTRIAN, his is only a star cameo as the dead son of a German industrialist targeted by his surviving Greek subjects 30 years after the retaliatory massacre of their village populace. However, Schell did appear as hunted ex-Nazis in such Hollywood indictments as THE ODESSA FILE (1974) and THE MAN IN THE GLASS BOOTH (1975; which garnered him another Best Actor nod and a viewing of which will follow presently) before essaying yet another proud Nazi officer in Sam Peckinpah's CROSS OF IRON (1977).

    The central character of THE PEDESTRIAN – so called because his reckless steering costs him his driving license and the life of his son (Schell) – is played by Gustav Rudolf Sellner and, although it is the first time I have heard of him or seen his work (in fact, this was his screen debut in that capacity as he is also a director of TV movies), his sensitive portrayal is a quietly impressive one that was recognized at that year's German Film Awards; typically, he is shown leading a double life even on a personal level by keeping a much-younger mistress! Amusingly, at one point, Sellner's younger, rebellious, hippie son is also shown catching a TV screening of the classic Bolivian film BLOOD OF THE CONDOR (1969). Schell's treatment of the somber material (including potentially disturbing footage of road accident victims which the felonious drivers are forced to watch as part of their 'rehabilitation' process!) is predictably heavy-going if occasionally brilliant, relying on several flashbacks to the all- important WWII and car crash episodes. Even so, the unexpected highlight of the film turns out to be a couple of sequences set in an old people's home where Sellner's wife reminisces with her elderly friends that are (unaccountably but delightfully) played by such acting veterans as Peggy Ashcroft, Elizabeth Bergner, Lil Dagover and Françoise Rosay! ...
    6mjneu59

    confronting the past

    The Nazi wartime past of a prominent German industrialist is uncovered by a tabloid newspaper hungry for another exposé, and the investigation prompts a second look into the auto accident which killed the man's oldest son. Director Maximillian Schell, who appears briefly on screen (in flashback) as the deceased son, uses the story to examine the skeletons in his country's closet, and to scratch once again the collective guilt of the German people. The film's major liability is its European-style post-dubbed English soundtrack, and to a lesser degree the outdated cut-and-splice collage editing, a smokescreen technique often used to give a film more 'meaning'. Otherwise it's an engrossing study of national responsibility, and on an even more intimate scale of a man haunted by the ghosts of his criminal past.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Margarete Schell Noé (Frau Buchmann) was the mother of the writer, director and star Maximilian Schell (Andreas Giese).
    • Connections
      References Un condamné à mort s'est échappé ou Le vent souffle où il veut (1956)
    • Soundtracks
      Symphony No. 7 in A major, Op. 92
      Written by Ludwig van Beethoven

      Played by the Berliner Philharmoniker

      Conducted by Herbert von Karajan

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 6, 1973 (West Germany)
    • Countries of origin
      • West Germany
      • Switzerland
      • Israel
    • Languages
      • German
      • French
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Pedestrian
    • Filming locations
      • Jaffa, Israel
    • Production companies
      • Franz Seitz Filmproduktion
      • Alfa Film
      • MFG-Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 38 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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