Ein New Yorker Arzt, der mit einer Kunstkuratorin verheiratet ist, zwingt sich zu einer qualvollen und gefährlichen Odyssee durch die Nacht, um sein eigenes Sexleben und seine moralischen Gr... Alles lesenEin New Yorker Arzt, der mit einer Kunstkuratorin verheiratet ist, zwingt sich zu einer qualvollen und gefährlichen Odyssee durch die Nacht, um sein eigenes Sexleben und seine moralischen Grenzen kennen zu lernen, nachdem ihm seine Frau gestanden hat, ihn betrogen zu haben.Ein New Yorker Arzt, der mit einer Kunstkuratorin verheiratet ist, zwingt sich zu einer qualvollen und gefährlichen Odyssee durch die Nacht, um sein eigenes Sexleben und seine moralischen Grenzen kennen zu lernen, nachdem ihm seine Frau gestanden hat, ihn betrogen zu haben.
- Auszeichnungen
- 12 Gewinne & 30 Nominierungen insgesamt
- Bandleader
- (as Peter Benson)
- Sandor Szavost
- (as Sky Dumont)
- Gayle
- (as Louise Taylor)
Director's Trademarks: A Guide to Stanley Kubrick's Films
Director's Trademarks: A Guide to Stanley Kubrick's Films
Handlung
WUSSTEST DU SCHON:
- WissenswertesStanley Kubrick died just four days after presenting Warner Bros. with what was reported to be a final cut of the film, after a legendarily long shoot. His friends and family, as well as the cast and crew of the film, all claimed that Kubrick's death was completely unexpected and that he never seemed to be in poor health while making the film.
- PatzerBill Harford arrives at Rainbow Fashions by taxi from the Sonata Cafe, and, as he talks to Milich, Gillespie's Diner can be been seen across the other side of the street. Earlier in the story, it was seen that Gillespie's is next door to the Sonata Cafe; there's no way he would have taken a taxi just to cross the street.
- Zitate
Dr. Bill Harford: No dream is ever just a dream.
- Crazy CreditsThe end credits are a slideshow. This is unusual for a film of its time, when many employed rolling end credits.
- Alternative VersionenThe Europeans version is completely uncensored. The orgy scene was partially censored in the American release to avoid an "NC-17" rating. Computer generated people were placed in front of the sexually explicit action to obscure it from view.
- VerbindungenEdited into Hai-Kubrick (1999)
- SoundtracksMusica Ricercata II: Mesto, Rigido e Cerimonale
(1950)
Performed by Dominic Harlan, piano
Written by György Ligeti
Published by Schott Musik International GmbH & Co. KG
Personally, I like the long, slow scenes in his films. When they're filled with something: music, movement, thought, memory of a previous scene, dread, or any other emotion, they can never really be said to be empty. I like them because, with Kubrick, I can be sure that they're absolutely essential to his ultimate vision. He could have put out a six-hour documentary on tissue manufacturing; at least I'll know that not one minute of screen time is wasted.
"Eyes Wide Shut" isn't as vacuous as, say, "Barry Lyndon" or "The Shining." Compared to those two, this one scoots along like a person trying to get to his car in the rain. It'll try a lot of folks' patience, I'm sure -- even his most loyal fans will be bothered by the incessant piano "bell tolls" in the soundtrack of some scenes, or the constant reminders (in imaginary flashbacks) that Cruise's character is bothered by his wife's near-infidelity. I know I was.
Despite that, it's an apt final film for the long, glorious career of a man who has done more for the cinema, with less movies, than can ever be catalogued. To try and cite influences for this particular work is futile. Though one might draw parallels to Lindsay Anderson's "O Lucky Man!" or Martin Scorsese's "After Hours," "Eyes Wide Shut" is no less than a complete work from the cold heart and brilliant mind of Stanley Kubrick alone. It's also a furiously ingenious piece of filmmaking, one that works less on the emotions than on the senses and on the mind. Unlike most of Kubrick's earlier work, however, it does have an emotional subtext, which is used to devastating effect.
Cruise, by the way, does an outstanding job, not as a trained, camera-conscious film actor, but as a mature, seasoned performer. Here he uses his "Top Gun"/"Jerry Maguire" suavity to malicious effect; like Ryan O'Neal's Barry Lyndon before him, he's an egotistical cad. Unlike Lyndon, he gains our sympathy -- that's key to keeping us from disowning his character and thus negating the entire film.
Kidman is given less screen time, but it matters little. She's mostly seen in the beginning, and she has brief (but crucial) scenes throughout, and a masterful one at the end. It is safe to say that this is her best performance to date, and those of us who have been ignoring her treasured abilities up until now (the Academy, critics, myself) will be astounded to see how far she's come since "Dead Calm." Her high points: the argument with her husband that ends by setting the film's plot in motion perfectly captures the way women lure men into arguments when the cause for one is nonexistent (and on Cruise's part, how men can't think fast enough to do anything about it), and her dream confession scene, in which she wakes laughing but becomes tearful during recollection.
On a technical level, "Eyes Wide Shut" displays Kubrick's trademark perfectionism. Recreating Vietnam in rural England for "Full Metal Jacket" must have been nearly impossible, but the unrelenting accuracy in recreating uptown and downtown New York City is absolutely stunning. Right down to the diners and the newspaper stands; I shake my head in awe when I remind myself that Kubrick (a native Brooklynite) hasn't been to NYC in decades. The lighting and photography is impeccable, also, as it is in every one of his films.
This is the sort of film one sees more than once. Once is good to cleanse the palate, to clear out all the residual toxins left from other recent films. See it again, perhaps a third time, and get to appreciate the graceful, nearly unblemished finale of a man who took the art of cinema seriously. It's a sobering experience.
- Jaime N. Christley
- 15. Juli 1999
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsländer
- Offizieller Standort
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Ojos bien cerrados
- Drehorte
- Elveden Hall, Elveden, Suffolk, England, Vereinigtes Königreich(interiors: Long Island Mansion "Somerton" where orgy takes place)
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Budget
- 65.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 55.691.208 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 21.706.163 $
- 18. Juli 1999
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 162.378.895 $
- Laufzeit2 Stunden 39 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix