IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,7/10
2081
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA sharecropper decides to become a preacher after falling for a vamp from the city.A sharecropper decides to become a preacher after falling for a vamp from the city.A sharecropper decides to become a preacher after falling for a vamp from the city.
- Für 1 Oscar nominiert
- 3 Gewinne & 1 Nominierung insgesamt
Matthew 'Stymie' Beard
- Child
- (Nicht genannt)
Evelyn Pope Burwell
- Singer
- (Nicht genannt)
Eddie Conners
- Singer
- (Nicht genannt)
William Allen Garrison
- Heavy
- (Nicht genannt)
Eva Jessye
- Singer
- (Nicht genannt)
Sam McDaniel
- Adam
- (Nicht genannt)
Clarence Muse
- Church Member
- (Nicht genannt)
Handlung
WUSSTEST DU SCHON:
- WissenswertesKing Vidor had been hoping to make the film for several years, and jumped at the chance to make it with the advent of sound. He so wanted to produce the picture that he offered to give up his salary.
- PatzerWhen Zeke confronts Chick and Hot Shot and strong-arms them in front of the crowd, the shadow of the microphone falls across Hot Shot as he is pushed to the background of the scene and tries to regain his composure. The shadow of the boom is also visible falling across the extras behind him.
- Alternative VersionenMGM also issued this movie in a silent version, with Marian Ainslee writing the titles.
- SoundtracksSometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child
(uncredited)
Traditional Spiritual
Sung offscreen during the opening credits
Ausgewählte Rezension
There's something hypnotic about good preaching. All that passion, all that energy, whether it's in film or in person, has a cumulative power. It's hard to doubt the spreading power of religion when you see Daniel L. Haynes (this film) or Robert Duvall ("The Apostle"), or read the sermon at the end of "The Sound and the Fury." Feverishly, they try and communicate God's word. They rant, they rave, they speak quickly and with an undeniable amount of integrity. They get the crowd going, usually in whoops and outbursts, and one man's conversation with God becomes a community event. (Indeed, the power of a worked-up crowd is a powerful tool in and of itself).
That's what's so terrific about King Vidor's "Hallelujah." Everyone's up in arms about one thing or another in this movie, whether it's money, sex, or Jesus. Early in the film there's a rather ludicrous scene where the hero's brother is accidentally killed, due to the hero's folly and hubris. That's his Sin, for which he must Redeem Himself Before God. There's also a woman who represents Temptation, who leads him astray time and time again. In the end there's an extended chase through a swamp, that would be done again in Kurosawa's "Stray Dogs."
All of that's well and good, but the film really peaks during the sermon sequences. Done wrong, sermons in movies usually pass by unnoticed, or are used as a clothsline to hang lame jokes about apathetic churchgoers. Done right, as in this film, "The Apostle," and the most unusual ones in "Beloved," they can be as captivating as if you were really in attendance. It's a testament to the power of the motion picture.
That's what's so terrific about King Vidor's "Hallelujah." Everyone's up in arms about one thing or another in this movie, whether it's money, sex, or Jesus. Early in the film there's a rather ludicrous scene where the hero's brother is accidentally killed, due to the hero's folly and hubris. That's his Sin, for which he must Redeem Himself Before God. There's also a woman who represents Temptation, who leads him astray time and time again. In the end there's an extended chase through a swamp, that would be done again in Kurosawa's "Stray Dogs."
All of that's well and good, but the film really peaks during the sermon sequences. Done wrong, sermons in movies usually pass by unnoticed, or are used as a clothsline to hang lame jokes about apathetic churchgoers. Done right, as in this film, "The Apostle," and the most unusual ones in "Beloved," they can be as captivating as if you were really in attendance. It's a testament to the power of the motion picture.
- Jaime N. Christley
- 9. Juli 1999
- Permalink
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Details
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 49 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.20 : 1
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