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6.9/10
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Agrega una trama en tu idiomaThe film tells the story of Anita G., a young East German migrant to West Germany and her struggle to adjust to her new life.The film tells the story of Anita G., a young East German migrant to West Germany and her struggle to adjust to her new life.The film tells the story of Anita G., a young East German migrant to West Germany and her struggle to adjust to her new life.
- Premios
- 12 premios ganados y 1 nominación en total
Eva Maria Meineke
- Pichota
- (as Meineke)
Hans Korte
- The Judge
- (as Korte)
Ursula Dirichs
- Mother
- (as Dirichs)
Edith Kuntze-Pellogio
- Parole Board Officer
- (as Pellogio)
E.O. Fuhrmann
- The Skydiver
- (as Fuhrmann)
Josef Kreindl
- Record Company Owner
- (as Kreindl)
Käthe Ebner
- Record Company Owner's Wife
- (as Ebner)
Hans Brammer
- The Professor
- (as Brammer)
Karl-Heinz Peters
- A Man
- (as Peters)
Fritz Bauer
- Attorney General
- (sin créditos)
Erna Bepperling
- Welfare Worker in Jail
- (sin créditos)
Gottfried Gerhard Bowin-Schlegel
- Commissionaire
- (sin créditos)
Adam Delle
- Dog Trainer
- (sin créditos)
Alfred Edel
- Assistant at the University
- (sin créditos)
Palma Falck
- Mrs. Budeck
- (sin créditos)
Nathan Gnatz
- Chief of the Hotel
- (sin créditos)
Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- Créditos curiosos"Uns trennt von gestern kein Abgrund, sondern die veränderte Lage" (Reinhard Baumgart)
- ConexionesEdited into Mein Jahrhundert, mein Tier! (2007)
- Bandas sonorasBlauer Himmer
by Josef Rixner
Opinión destacada
Abschied von gestern - (Anita G.) is clearly the German answer to À bout de soufflé (released six years earlier) by Godard. Even more: it is as if Godard had made a German version of his own production. It's the experimental drive for ANYTHING. Neue Welle!
I just name some of the daring tricks that for a reason did not become common in cinema: showing, after an abrupt transition, photographs or drawings; inserting voice-overs during a dialogue; changing the volume of the sound during a scene; reading the lines from a note. And so on. We also see a murder without context (dream?), a finger is pierced by a stiletto heel and milk flows out of the finger (surrealism?), and there's a scene with toy soldiers. There's lack of structure all over, but there is still a common thread: she, who is always on the road.
Anyhow, director Alexander Kluge took every bit of freedom he could with his first real film. His actors went with it, including his sister Alexandra, who plays Anita G. They probably filmed EVERYTHING that came on their paths: a dog training, a visit to a bar, scenes on the streets. 'Alexander, I'm going to rest in a park.' 'No, wait, I take the camera, we can shoot a scene there!'
That said, the film lacks for me the frivolous and intuitive from the original (Godard), though it does strikes gold once in a while. The affair of only two seconds was beautiful. At the staircase there is an intimate conversation between a man and Anita G.. Next second, while having dinner, a woman asks the man: 'Is she a redhead?' The most interesting thing about the film is that it pauses history for a second: this is the life of an ordinary but adventurous woman in the sixties in Germany.
If this film wasn't so excessively experimental, and there were 'regular' ideas intertwined, it could have been a classic. Now, for me, is it is just one of the Godard-like films. It's a shame that Alexandra would only play in one other film (also from her brother) while her pleasure in acting is evident here. Alexander got a career as a critic, started a film school (Ulm Institut für Filmgestaltung) and made A LOT of shorts. At this point, Kluge is in his eighties. I rate it 7/10, mostly for courage.
I just name some of the daring tricks that for a reason did not become common in cinema: showing, after an abrupt transition, photographs or drawings; inserting voice-overs during a dialogue; changing the volume of the sound during a scene; reading the lines from a note. And so on. We also see a murder without context (dream?), a finger is pierced by a stiletto heel and milk flows out of the finger (surrealism?), and there's a scene with toy soldiers. There's lack of structure all over, but there is still a common thread: she, who is always on the road.
Anyhow, director Alexander Kluge took every bit of freedom he could with his first real film. His actors went with it, including his sister Alexandra, who plays Anita G. They probably filmed EVERYTHING that came on their paths: a dog training, a visit to a bar, scenes on the streets. 'Alexander, I'm going to rest in a park.' 'No, wait, I take the camera, we can shoot a scene there!'
That said, the film lacks for me the frivolous and intuitive from the original (Godard), though it does strikes gold once in a while. The affair of only two seconds was beautiful. At the staircase there is an intimate conversation between a man and Anita G.. Next second, while having dinner, a woman asks the man: 'Is she a redhead?' The most interesting thing about the film is that it pauses history for a second: this is the life of an ordinary but adventurous woman in the sixties in Germany.
If this film wasn't so excessively experimental, and there were 'regular' ideas intertwined, it could have been a classic. Now, for me, is it is just one of the Godard-like films. It's a shame that Alexandra would only play in one other film (also from her brother) while her pleasure in acting is evident here. Alexander got a career as a critic, started a film school (Ulm Institut für Filmgestaltung) and made A LOT of shorts. At this point, Kluge is in his eighties. I rate it 7/10, mostly for courage.
- tony_le_stephanois
- 6 may 2015
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 446
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 28 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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What is the Spanish language plot outline for Despedida del ayer (1966)?
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