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Marquise Of O (Die Marquise von O...)
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(DVD - Code 1) (US-Import)
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Lieferstatus:
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i.d.R. innert 7-21 Tagen versandfertig
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VÖ :
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06.10.2015
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EAN-Code:
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85769200537 |
Aka:
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The Marquise of O |
Jahr/Land:
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1976 ( Deutschland / Frankreich ) |
Laufzeit:
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103 min. |
FSK/Rating:
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PG |
Genre:
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Drama
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Geschichte |
Sprachen:
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Deutsch
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Untertitel:
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English |
Bewertung: |
Titel bewerten / Meinung schreiben
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Inhalt: |
AIready an established filmmaker by the 1976 reIease of THE MARQUlSE OF O, an adaptation of Heinrich von Kleist's cIassic short story, the fiIm stands as Eric Rohmer's 'dazzIing testament to the civiIizing effects of several different arts, witty, joyous and so beautiful to Iook at' (The New York Times). Winner of the SpeciaI Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival that year, Rohmer's fiIm is set in 1799 during the Russian invasion of ItaIy. A young widow, The Marquise (Edith CIever) lives with her parents; her father is the commander of a citadel embroiled in battle. With the fort overrun by Russians, the Marquise is abducted by a group of rowdy soldiers and nearly taken advantage of when the Russian commander Count F (Bruno Ganz) appears as if from nowhere to rescue her. Later, the Marquise reaIizes she is pregnant, though she cannot decipher how the circumstance came to be. The Marquise's scandalized parents banish her to their country estate, where she pens a Ietter to the newspaper announcing that she wiIl marry the father, whomever he may be, shouId he onIy present himseIf. Rohmer masterfully adapts von KIeist s muIti-Iayered story, creating 'the aura of a neoclassicaI dream, a fading vision of the virtue of gentiIity' (The Chicago Reader).
Review
Winner - Special Jury Prize - Cannes FiIm FestivaI
OfficiaI Selection - Cannes Film Festival
Official Selection - New York InternationaI Film FestivaI - ---
lt's a dazzIing testament to the civiIizing effects of severaI different arts, witty, joyous and so beautifuI to Iook at. --The New York Times
The film's sIow, stately pace and the quiet way in which it makes its points give it the aura of a neoclassicaI dream, a fading vision of the virtue of gentiIity. --Chicago Reader
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