Telluride 2008 Festival
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The Tin Drum
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Directed by Volker Schlöndorff.
In Volker Schlöndorff's award-winning adaptation of Nobel Prize winner Günter Grass' allegorical novel, David Bennent plays Oskar, the young son of a German rural family, circa 1925. On his third birthday, Oskar receives a shiny new tin drum. At this point, rather than mature into one of the miserable specimens of grown-up humanity that he sees around him, he vows never to get any older or any bigger. Whenever the world around him becomes too much to bear, the boy begins to hammer on his drum; should anyone try to take the toy away from him, he emits an ear-piercing scream that literally shatters glass. As Germany goes to hell during the 1930s and '40s, the never-aging Oskar continues savagely beating his drum, serving as the angry conscience of a world gone mad. The intense and visceral Tin Drum was one of the most financially successful German films of the 1970s and won the 1979 Oscar for Best Foreign Film and the 1979 Golden Palm (which it shared with Apocalypse Now). In the late '90s, the film became the center of a censorship controversy when some U.S. videotapes were confiscated because of the film's supposed violation of a child pornography statute. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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ProteusProteus Re:TOP 5 MOVIES TO TEACH AN ALI ...
by Proteus in Filmgaming
loved it.
"Hey, stranger. How's tricks? Here's a brief overview of life on earth, in 5 or so languages: 5. Akira Kurosawa's Dreams: An overview of human foibles and achievements, presented with unflinching sympathy and penetrating understanding. 4. The Maltese Falcon: Honor and integrity and everything (drugs, money, sex, etc.) combatting it in a fast-paced, but tightly focused character study. Has the double virtue of leaving Casablanca to be seen at some other point down the road. 3. Jules & Jim: Love and Romance, and the importance of knowing the difference. How life feels to the young, and how decisions can be made without regard for consequences, based on intuition, principle, and ambiguity. 2. The Tin Drum: The follies of youth in competition with the absurdity of life and the misery of war - a firm lesson on the harsh realities of life, and the redemptive power of imagination and individuality. 1. My Life as a Dog - a second helping of the lessons of The Tin Drum, this masterpi ... " [More]
leeroy711leeroy711 Top 5 Reflection shots
by leeroy711 in Top 5
loved it.
"OK.......... so this may seem a bit obscure but I've allways been a big sucker for shots that are done as a reflection through a mirror or window pane or something. Here it goes. 5. Southland Tales - when Sean William Scott discovers a delay in his reflection. I liked this one although there wasn't anything super stylish about the angles or anything it was just a cool effect. 4. The Tin Drum - There is shot from the bedroom closet in which the son is watching his mother being...............er........ ..um..... ravished while the reflection in the mirror shows her husband in the other room fixing himself a drink. 3. Jurassic Park - When the little girl is hiding in the kitchen from the raptor and you see her reflection on the stainless steel cabinet as the monster smashes into it thinking it was her. 2. Jurassic Park - The more famous scece of "OBJECTS IN REAR VIEW MIRROR ARE CLOSER THAN THEY APPEAR" We all know what I'm talking about. 1. Spirit of the Beehive - There is a seemin ... " [More]
CinemaRianCinemaRian The Tin Drum (1979, Germany, Vo ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"You can say many, many, many things about The Tin Drum but you can't say it was boring. This movie held me interest all the way though, even thought I sometimes didn't want it too. The premise sounds pretencious, but that's not the movies problem. In the mid 1920's, Oskar Matzerath (David Bennet) decides stop growing, so he doesn't. Although he ages in mind, he remains physically at the age of three perpetually. Oskar is really self-centered. He carries around a drum all the time, and plays it whenever he feels like it. Throughout the rise of the Nazi's he has no interested in what is going on, in fact, he has no interest in much of anything outside of himself. He also looks really, really creepy, a little like a cross between the Star Child at the end of 2001 and Damien from The Omen. He doesn't look very much like a kid at all- I thought we was played by a little person until I found out that David Benneth was twelve when he made the film. Considering some of the stuff tha ... " [More]
JakeStevensJakeStevens Surrealist German Cinema
by JakeStevens in JakeStevens Blog
liked it.
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"I can't believe this fim was banned in Oklahoma! It's an ugly, harsh film with a powerful message behind it. Rent it if you can, you may not care for it - but you'll never forget it... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
The first German film to win the Best Foreign Film Oscar, New German Cinema forefather Volker Schlöndorff's adaptation of The Tin Drum is a potent Fellini-esque epic of intuitive rebellion against a corrupt world. Shot on location in Poland, Germany, and France, the film mixes the palpable reality of ordinary life in prewar and World War II Danzig with the surreal, innocent perspective of stunted boy/man Oskar as he raises instinctive hell against the horrors he witnesses, first in his family and then as the Nazis take over his hometown. Reaching the heights of comedy in a chaotic Nazi rally and the depths of tragedy during the Danzig post-office siege, Oskar's incessant drum-beating and glass-shattering shriek become a powerful, if futile, protest. Twelve-year-old neophyte David Bennent, cast partly for his striking eyes, anchors a superb German cast, while such memorable images as a lone matriarch, grotesque eels, and a midget circus act underscore a society unhinged. Co-winner of Cannes' Palme d'Or (with, appropriately, Apocalypse Now [1979]), The Tin Drum became an international hit and a '90s target for censors in the U.S. Though his film covers only the first two-thirds of Günter Grass' novel, Schlöndorff has refrained from a Tin Drum 2. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
 



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