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El Sanatorio de la Clepsidra

Título original: Sanatorium pod Klepsydra
  • 1973
  • 2h 4min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,4/10
5,6 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
El Sanatorio de la Clepsidra (1973)
DramaFantasyHorror

Añade un argumento en tu idiomaJózef visits his dying father at a remote mental institution, where time itself doesn't seem to exist, and the line between dreams and memories becomes indistinguishable.Józef visits his dying father at a remote mental institution, where time itself doesn't seem to exist, and the line between dreams and memories becomes indistinguishable.Józef visits his dying father at a remote mental institution, where time itself doesn't seem to exist, and the line between dreams and memories becomes indistinguishable.

  • Dirección
    • Wojciech Has
  • Guión
    • Wojciech Has
    • Bruno Schulz
  • Reparto principal
    • Jan Nowicki
    • Tadeusz Kondrat
    • Irena Orska
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,4/10
    5,6 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Wojciech Has
    • Guión
      • Wojciech Has
      • Bruno Schulz
    • Reparto principal
      • Jan Nowicki
      • Tadeusz Kondrat
      • Irena Orska
    • 30Reseñas de usuarios
    • 37Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 2 premios y 1 nominación en total

    Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 0:58
    Trailer

    Imágenes56

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    Reparto principal57

    Editar
    Jan Nowicki
    Jan Nowicki
    • Józef
    Tadeusz Kondrat
    Tadeusz Kondrat
    • Jakub - Józef's father
    Irena Orska
    Irena Orska
    • Józef's mother
    Halina Kowalska
    Halina Kowalska
    • Adela
    Gustaw Holoubek
    Gustaw Holoubek
    • Dr. Gotard
    Mieczyslaw Voit
    Mieczyslaw Voit
    • Blind Conductor
    Bozena Adamek
    Bozena Adamek
    • Bianka
    Ludwik Benoit
    Ludwik Benoit
    • Szloma
    Henryk Boukolowski
    Henryk Boukolowski
    • Fireman
    Seweryn Dalecki
    • Teodor
    Julian Jabczynski
    • Dignitary
    Jerzy Przybylski
    Jerzy Przybylski
    • Mr. de Voss
    Wiktor Sadecki
    Wiktor Sadecki
    • Dignitary
    Janina Sokolowska
    • Nurse
    Wojciech Standello
    • Jew Interlocutor in Restaurant
    Tadeusz Schmidt
    Tadeusz Schmidt
    • Officer
    Szymon Szurmiej
    Szymon Szurmiej
    • Jewish Man Reciting False Qoheleth's Verses
    Jan Szurmiej
    Jan Szurmiej
    • Instructive Jewish Man
    • Dirección
      • Wojciech Has
    • Guión
      • Wojciech Has
      • Bruno Schulz
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios30

    7,45.5K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    chaos-rampant

    Emanations

    At the day of writing this, the great Chilean filmmaker Raoul Ruiz passed away. This is dedicated to him - a film, I like to think, he would have loved.

    This is an exceptional film that I will cherish for a number of reasons. It's the kind of film I'm looking for, that places consciousness within itself to give us actual in-sight of our place in the world of narratives.

    For afar, it is a little like Jodorowsky; the heavy, symbolist system visualized inside a cacophony. But it ventures freely beyond the threshold where Jodorowsky (and most filmmakers) barely fumbled; it is a story about unconscious stories about the broader metaphysical narrative from which they flow and illustrate.

    It begins with the promise of a journey, a common motif in early myth; a man's symbolic descent in the underworld in search of his father. But a little preamble.

    The narrative of the understanding is one after you abstract. It has been fractured from the one into many, according to the provincial peculiarities of human experience, yet taken together each of the symbolic motifs or shadowy shapes that comprise it, insinuate the same fabric of the experienced world. The same images, the same narratives, seem to bubble forth in almost identical repetition, as though something in the soul calls out for them.

    Two observations further elucidate this. In the places that ancient cities were built like temples, with clearly defined pattern that reflected above (usually in circles), denizens lived within the dimensions of their symbol. They were situated directly inside the blueprint of their cosmology, one they had constructed to reflect the cosmos.

    The reverse of this is the mandala of the Buddhists, as sacred space for the concentration of the mind. The image was not the painted sum of its counterparts, but a way of passage. Meditations practiced on this symbol are directed from the symbolic world into the world at large; so that, outside the temple, the entire world becomes a support for meditation.

    On a deeper level, both these describe the same thing; the spiritual effort of aligning a center inside with something outside, so that the cycles of life become one. Can we say this is the forgotten knowledge? Modern life is scattered in the chaos of ever-changing peripheries. We build - and live - in random.

    So this is what the filmmaker does. Our man, having embarked on his inner journey, is constantly frustrated by the apparent randomness of the world he participates in. He turns for guidance to a child, an inner child who is his heir in the dreamlike underworld, holding a book filled with stamps about places - a book of names and forms that symbolically encompasses the totality of the catalogued world; but there is no answer there, meaning another world extends from our catalogue of it which cannot be fully accounted for.

    From inside his limited perspective in the fictional world, the protagonist is baffled, exasperated for meaning. But we, observing from a vantage point, can recognize first pattern, and then that the protagonist, who seems to himself to be a hapless stooge, to be the one creating the narrative.

    It is stunning stuff if you contemplate it a little. There are, of course, the notions about nested stories. The journey that transports across different levels of symbolic life; there is the place where history is a gallery of the pliable, lifeless mannequins of famous persons; elsewhere, language is shown to be the random teetering of birds.

    Above all, there is the world, the space of human experience limited by reason; our symbolic translation in terms of a graven image, passage for meditation; our understanding of the image as applicable to both the personal and cosmic cycles (being-nonbeing, light-dark) and the meaning of those cycles within the larger cycle of sentience that observes them; and finally, the threshold once crossed and returned from, the unbound sentience now effortlessly understands all these things to be emanations of the one source.

    Having aligned all these cycles, the film is - at every point - at the center of each and all. A beautiful thing.
    6HEFILM

    Striking but odd attempts at comedy and slack pace and length become tedious

    The director, as he did with Sargosso Manuscript, seems more interested in trying for comic surreal than drama/horror or psychological depth.

    This is not to say that Surrealism doesn't work when it has a comic edge, but that this director doesn't do surreal comedy that well, while when he gets serious, and visual he's so good you just wish he'd really stick with that.

    As in the previous film the more serious aspects are the best elements, this film is more impressive visually but a good part of that is that it's in color. I admit the first time I saw this film I thought quite highly of it and in seeing it again I thought it would get even better as I'd understand more of how the pieces came together and what they meant. But after a long gap between viewings the film almost fell apart for me. Despite a powerful wrap up sequence.

    After a strong start the script just doesn't come together or feel like it's rushing into nightmare or meaning, it plods along. Some of the episodes just seem pointless--especially the soldiers near the boat and the manikin sequence. These set pieces aren't really that funny and go on forever. And most of the manikins are obviously people trying to stand still so you end up watching to see them breath or move when you should be reading subtitles. Another thing about the attempts at antic bizarre comedy is that these are the talkiest sections of the film, really almost like a stage play in these spots.

    These have nothing to do with the core story which is the man and his father sort of loose in time. At one point the son talking to his father says these various episodes are "hard to discern, the meaning." He's got that right!

    The Jewish seuqences and elements are interesting--especially coming from a Communist country at the time it was made is praise worthy.

    And yes indeed Blade Runner owes this film a debt.

    But aside from the stunning sets and transitions you just don't know what is going on some of the time and with a film that is a bit over 2 hours in length you just stop caring. You can still sit there and marvel at the images, but this is not enough. It's almost like footage cut out of a great movie because it didn't advance the story.

    The film also tends to get really talky in spots. The best moments and sequences are silent. The whole thing feels like a missed opportunity despite some great silent sequences and a great core idea, it doesn't hold you or hold together for the whole length. Opening and closing sequences are the best though there are scattered images and an excellent, if sparsely placed, music score. For the record there is also a fair amount of female nudity involving a brothel, though this too seems a bit forced after awhile and is played with a leering comic quality never with any erotic intent.

    Though it has some great dream images it fails ultimately to convince us there is a dream logic at work here.

    All in all an almost fascinating film that becomes frustrating instead. Have to fault the script as all the elements on a production level were there ready to make a great film, but as is so often the case you need a great script to make a great movie no matter what genre.

    One final note I have read THE SARGOSSA MANUSCRIPT, I have not read the source material to this film, so I make an assumption about the director's interest in comedic twists rather than more serious horrific ones based on what he did with the first film and book.
    6galensaysyes

    Hallucinatory

    This is a film that will either absorb or exasperate, depending on one's temper. It mostly exasperated me, but many of its images have stayed with me, and I think viewers who have the patience for, say, Strindberg's "Dream Play" will enjoy its corkscrew narrative. Many may be amused, as I was, by the highly shadowed, highly colored Gothic decor but may have difficulty, as I did, staying the course. The synopsis above is slightly misleading on one count: The old man in the sanatorium is or would be dead in the real world, but his death would be financially inconvenient to the family and so his son is paying to have him kept in the enclosed world of the sanatorium, where time moves more slowly and he can stay alive indefinitely. The film begins like a horror movie, with the protagonist taking an eerily populated train to the ruined sanatorium. But once he's taken care of his business there both he and the story wander into a series of absurdist-picaresque adventures, set in scenes from his memory and imagination (apparently: some are quasi-historical, and his father appears in one of them as a young man). They grow and flower and intertwine with one another as they would in a dream or a reverie, until at last the protagonist arrives back where he started and finds out his fate after all. That seemed arbitrary to me; and why the place should have led him where it did, literally or symbolically, I don't really know; and to my taste the film is so boldly stated as to be a little cheap. But it still has a way of floating around inside the head for a long time after. And if enough people were interested enough by it, the process of identifying and interpreting its cornucopia of allusions and symbols could fuel a semester's worth of late-night discussions.
    10mobia

    Macabre Kaleidoscope

    The late Polish director Wojceich Has is better known for his amazing "The Saragosa Manuscript" which has a Chinese box structure of nested stories. However, this film (known to english audiences as "The Sandglass"), tops its predecessor in fantastic imagery. Based on several stories of Bruno Schultz, this film might be the most successful recreation of the inner psyche ever commited to celluloid.

    A man journeys by dilapidated train (where most of the passengers look like corpses) to visit his ailing father who is kept in a crumbling ornate sanatorium. He is told by a doctor that time exists differently there and his dying father may recover. The man experiences a flood of dreamlike visions of his past and the small Jewish town he was raised in. The father is seen both ill and as a giddy philosopher in an attic full of birds. At some point we get the creeping sensation that it is the man himself who is dying, not the father as a blind train conductor reappears like a death figure. The increasingly baroque episodes become the rich compost of a graveyard.

    The film can also been seen as a requiem for the Eastern European Jewish culture that was wiped out by WW2. It isn't an accident that the protagonist is named Joseph and his father Jacob. Many of the films episodes evoke Jewish symbolism.
    9HumanoidOfFlesh

    Dreamlike surrealism of the highest order.

    "Sanatorium pod klepsydra" is a surreal assault on the senses and perhaps one of the most beautifully shot Polish movies ever made.It's based on the remarkable collection of stories 'Sanatorium under the Sign of the Hourglass' written by Bruno Schultz.Our protagonist Josef(Jan Nowicki)travels on a dilapidated and mysterious train to visit his father at a decayed sanatorium in the middle of the Polish countryside.His journey into a tangled world of real and imagined experiences begins.Extremely stylish and surreal mind trip is the best way to describe "Hourglass Sanatorium".Filled with elaborate set-pieces and philosophical dialogue the world imagined by Bruno Schultz is truly one of its kind.The sleazy shots of half-naked women are a nice touch and the glimpse into Jewish culture is fascinating.A must-see for fans of bizarre and unusual cinema.The wax mannequins sequence is stunningly beautiful.9 out of 10.

    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que...?

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    • Curiosidades
      Despite the communist authorities' ban on the film, it was in secret sent to Cannes in film cans with false inscriptions on them. Because of this incident, Has couldn't make a movie for the next 8 years.
    • Citas

      Blind Conductor: There are things which cannot fully happen. They are too big to be accommodated in an event, and too wonderful. They only try to happen.

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    Preguntas frecuentes14

    • How long is The Hourglass Sanatorium?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 12 de diciembre de 1973 (Polonia)
    • País de origen
      • Polonia
    • Sitio oficial
      • Mr Bongo Films
    • Idiomas
      • Polaco
      • Yidis
      • Hebreo
      • Latín
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • The Hourglass Sanatorium
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Drohiczyn, Podlaskie, Polonia
    • Empresa productora
      • Zespól Filmowy "Silesia"
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      2 horas 4 minutos
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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