Une survivante de l'Holocauste défigurée cherche à savoir si l'homme qu'elle aimait a trahi sa confiance.Une survivante de l'Holocauste défigurée cherche à savoir si l'homme qu'elle aimait a trahi sa confiance.Une survivante de l'Holocauste défigurée cherche à savoir si l'homme qu'elle aimait a trahi sa confiance.
- Prix
- 17 victoires et 30 nominations au total
- Tänzerin
- (as Valerie Koch)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis is the fifth out of Christian Petzold's seven feature films to feature actress Nina Hoss. Also, it's his second film in a row after Barbara (2012) to star Hoss and Ronald Zehrfeld in the leading roles.
- GaffesThe actor playing the US Army Sergeant sentry at the checkpoint is clearly German: while he speaks English well, his German accent still comes through.
- Citations
[first lines]
Lene Winter: [arriving at the border]
Soldat an der Brücke: Passport... Nice car. Where did you get it from?
Lene Winter: It's from Switzerland.
Soldat an der Brücke: Just like you?
Lene Winter: Like me.
Soldat an der Brücke: [whistles to the gate] They're from Switzerland. The girl too.
[to her passenger]
Soldat an der Brücke: I want to see your face.
Lene Winter: Can I talk to you?
[gets out]
Lene Winter: Come on, she's not Eva Braun.
Soldat an der Brücke: Of course not. The bitch got killed by her husband.
Lene Winter: She's from the camps.
- Bandes originalesSpeak Low
Music by Kurt Weill
Lyrics by Ogden Nash
Performed by Nina Hoss and heard as a theme over the credits
Phoenix is a simple film with complicated themes of identity, survival, and loss. It is not your normal post WWII film, nor is it your typical concentration camp survivor story. The main character, Nelly, was in a camp and her trauma is reflected in the desperation of a divided Berlin. Her interactions with others are clearly influenced by her time in the camps, and Nina Hoss wonderfully portrays the protagonist.
Unfortunately, the actor who plays the lead male, Johnny (Ronald Zehrfeld) is relatively ineffective compared to the stunning Hoss. I am not sure whether is is the script or the acting, but he clearly isn't up to her level. Nelly's best friend, Lena, is performed with skill by Nina Kunzendorf. While not as remarkable as Hoss, she holds her own in their scenes together.
The look of the film is lovely, but it is clearly made on a budget. The music is appropriate for the mood and the era, though a couple of times too loud and overly dramatic. The pace is deliberate and effective.
It is a good film that offers us no answers to the questions it poses: how do we survive after everything is taken away, how do we return to a life that no longer exists, whom do we trust now when many of our old friends were Nazi or collaborators during the war, how do we react to someone who returns who we thought was dead, and where do we go when nothing is left of our former life. In the film, like life, there are no easy answers. That only strengthens the film's appeal.
Rating: Pay full price.
I don't want to say to much for fear of giving too much away. The film, while not shocking, is not predicable.
Peace, Tex Shelters
- texshelters
- 12 sept. 2015
- Lien permanent
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Phoenix?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 3 184 472 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 30 296 $ US
- 26 juill. 2015
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 5 855 623 $ US
- Durée1 heure 38 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1