Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWith help from airport technician Dak, Alexej breaks out of the holding area for refugees, Dak puts up the Russian, who yearns to become a pilot, in an underground labyrinth of pipes and ven... Tout lireWith help from airport technician Dak, Alexej breaks out of the holding area for refugees, Dak puts up the Russian, who yearns to become a pilot, in an underground labyrinth of pipes and vents. Meanwhile, young Indian woman named Nisha is an aircraft cleaner who dreams of being a... Tout lireWith help from airport technician Dak, Alexej breaks out of the holding area for refugees, Dak puts up the Russian, who yearns to become a pilot, in an underground labyrinth of pipes and vents. Meanwhile, young Indian woman named Nisha is an aircraft cleaner who dreams of being a flight attendant.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Photos
- Alexej
- (as Valera Nikolaev)
- Dak
- (as Miki Manojlovic)
Avis en vedette
Along with "The Terminal" & "Up In The Air" as excellent romantic comedies set entirely (or almost entirely) inside airports, this hidden gem is another unique winner from German director Veit Helmer. (The male lead actor, Valeriy Nikolaev, also had a minor role in "The Terminal"- coincidence?) The airport as a microcosm is a fascinating perspective and Helmer uses this to his advantage. Unlike the aforementioned American films, Helmer chooses to never show the public side of Frankfurt International Airport. Instead, audiences are immersed in the after hours, behind the scenes life in the airport- air strips, baggage conveyor belts, concourses, hangars, runways, terminals, and pipes and tunnels included!
This is the sixth film I've seen from him and even though they were not all overwhelming winners for me, they were nevertheless all creative, innovative, and memorable for their unique approach to storytelling. Honestly, it is a mystery why he isn't more widely known, especially in the arthouse film circles that typically adore these experimental and quirky perspectives.
With comedy sprinkled throughout the runtime, a couple quirky supporting characters with their own amusing side stories, and even a couple Bollywood style musical numbers thrown in for good measure, this feel good romance manages to address some serious issues (cultural acclimation, marginalized populations, racism, refugees struggling for asylum, socioeconomic status) without becoming too heavy handed.
We first meet our leading lady Nisha, a cleaning lady that aspires to become an airline stewardess. Her meet cute takes place in an empty airplane after hours where she practices reciting the pre-flight safety briefing to invisible passengers. Our leading man, Aleksei, chooses the same airplane to play out his piloting fantasies. They have instant chemistry and continue to make time for rendezvous in various airport locations, having fallen for each other practically at first sight. His competition is Nowak, a wealthy man out to set the Guinness World Record for having sex in the most places in an airport! Although Nisha has her heart set on Aleksei, Nowak unfortunately can offer the connections and the means necessary to get her hired as a stewardess.
Aleksei is a Russian refugee hiding out from the authorities by living in the engine room next to the pipes and vents in the airport. He works for Dak, a Yugoslavian who takes advantage of the desperate refugees, employing them in the airport for his profit. To be fair, he does have a compassionate side, evidenced by his willingness- albeit with a price- to find someone to smuggle in Nisha's son from India. Alas, things do not go according to plan and her adorable son is locked up and given a lawyer under deportation threat and Aleksei must save the day, lest Nisha resort to Nowak in order to get her son rescued!
Not flawless by any means- implausibility abounds- but this is a romantic comedy, after all, and audiences will be left not only laughing and smiling, but also with a little more insight into airports, cultural acclimation, and how love can overcome both language and physical barriers!
Last but not the least: To me this is the first non-Indian movie, which although is made by almost all non-Indian team, that has a soul of a bollywood film.
This film was WONDERFUL. The director was in attendance and explained how it took 10 years to make it, as there were a lot of obstacles to making a film at the Frankfurt Airport, which operates like a city.
Because all the characters were from all over the world, despite it being a "German" film, it's all in English. The director explained how getting help from Lufthansa to do this, he described it as a cleaning crew girl aspiring to become a flight attendant, and a maintenance man aspiring to become a pilot and a love story ensues...and while that is all "technically" correct -- this film while imbued with great wit and humor is a MUCH deeper expose on an underground life and culture of people trying to escape impoverished homelands in a 1st world country. And some of the dangers of living underground in the Frankfurt Airport.
There is a massive 'ode to Bollywood' scene that is wonderful and took a lot of budget -- it's a brilliant film that was worthy of much wider recognition and as you can, see, (as I'm writing this in 2013, 8-9 years after I saw it) what a positive impression it made and what a good feeling I had as I left the theater. I'd recommend this to any film goer as a wonderful film with lots of fun characters, and a mixture of pathos, humor and exposing of some deeper issues.
Travelling by baggage conveyor and using other people's ID cards to bluff their way through checkpoints, they take us into the underworld of Frankfurt Airport. A wondrous place, where one can access simulators and parked aeroplanes and move about like fish in the water. Where an illegal immigrant works on one of the museum planes on display to make it airworthy again --to carry him back home to Ulan Bataar.
Sounds like a fairy tale? I believe it *is* a fairy tale, and the makers were taking cues from Bollywood films, not only in the staging of a few dance scenes but also in creating a colourful cinematography for a drab place like an airport. Although a German production, this is a light-hearted comedy, not least thanks to the very international team that got together to make this (German comedies can be very heavy-handed, at times...). Don't expect too much in the way of romance, the storyline is sometimes a bit far-fetched, but it is an enjoyable way to spend an evening in front of the Telly.
Le saviez-vous
- Bandes originalesZukunft/Future
Performed by Schiller
Meilleurs choix
Détails
Box-office
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 1 917 $ US
- Durée1 heure 30 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1