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.
- Regisseur/-in
- Autoren
- Stars
- Auszeichnungen
- 12 Gewinne & 30 Nominierungen insgesamt
- Bandleader
- (as Peter Benson)
- Sandor Szavost
- (as Sky Dumont)
- Gayle
- (as Louise Taylor)
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Blind Faith...
Hypnotic and misunderstood
Eyes Wide Open
Sydney Pollock's Ziegler argues, during his amazing final monologue, that the Masonic orgies are practiced by society's elite which excludes Bill. Bill spends the duration of the film's first half attempting to engage in infidelity after his wife reveals that she was willing to choose one night with a naval officer over their future. Naturally, this enrages Bill and he spends the night attempting to fulfill his personal need to subjugate his feelings of impotence, sexual and otherwise. Even in the very beginning, when Bill walks with two models, his short stature implicitly denotes his lack of power. Bill is convinced that he has been subjected to a life of domesticity and his wife is responsible; he vows to reaffirm his masculinity. Kubrick paints long shots of New York at midnight which is designed to inspire the viewer with dread. Almost every single beautiful shot capturing the very essence of soft, warm colors in the beginning soon descends into the dark and strong colors that reflect the very dream-state many describe when they watch this film. Yet, to me, it evokes a foreboding death-like state which suggests impending doom.
Bill's quest for reaffirmation of his masculinity only renders him emasculated when he enters a Masonic orgy and is rendered socially powerless by a group of the masked elite. Bill's journey neither leads him towards enlightenment nor satisfaction but humiliation and understanding that he has been domesticated by the higher classes. Ironically, his quest for sexual empowerment only led him to the understanding of social domesticity; Bill is not as influential or elite as he had initially anticipated. Not unlike the elite's perception of women; they use the high-class prostitutes as objects valued for their material value which reflects their perception of the masses that are responsible for their success. As in the beginning, when Ziegler needs Bill to revive a dying woman who almost overdoses on a combination of cocaine and heroin, Ziegler values Bill for his medical expertise which prevented trouble with the law rather than his personality. Kubrick's film argues that we live in ignorance of others perceptions of us and this is the ultimate existential fear of Harford; the elite have seen Harford unmasked, vulnerable and exposed. Pollock says 'If you knew who was there, you wouldn't sleep so well.' Kubrick has finally exposed man for who he really is; vulnerable and ignorant of the mysterious forces which govern him. The final and most playfully complex of cinema's closing lines concludes that Bill and Alice Harford have learned to stop worrying and love the bomb. They refuse to acknowledge their social impotence and would prefer for their eyes to remain wide shut, ignorant to the mysterious forces that govern them. On a more optimistic note, however, perhaps Bill's odyssey only made him aware of his vulnerability, and Kubrick evokes this through the dark imagery that recreates the sense of subjective paranoia that Bill is experiencing. Bill realizes what ultimately matters: love and family, as opposed to the power which he initially craved but only realized he was at the mercy of others' application of such social power. I'm open to many interpretations of this film, because Kubrick wanted the audience's eyes to remain wide open soon after they finished experiencing this masterpiece.
Compelling, complex observation of fidelities and fantasies
A World of Its Own
So I went to see "Eyes Wide Shut" (1999) at the cinema. I credit it, along with Terrence Malick's "The Thin Red Line" (1998), as an experience that ignited my interest in film, since they were both films like I had never seen before. Sure, there's that one reason why a young lad might be interested in this, but I was so struck by its atmosphere and narrative flow that I had to read Schnitzler's "Traumnovelle". And how disappointed I was in how unalike they were. The film was in a world of its own that had a sense of time that was its own, a sense of colour that was its own, a sense of light that was its own. Every movement was languid, every word deliberate.
I never really thought about the connection between this and Malick's film until now, but really, they both move in the realm of dreams and memories and projected, subjective realities – between something that did happen (to someone) and something that might have happened. There's ellipsis, ambiguity, metaphor. Both work their magic in visual terms. I'm soaked in that light from the ball even by recalling the images in my mind as I'm writing this.
Fidelio – enter.
Director's Trademarks: A Guide to Stanley Kubrick's Films
Director's Trademarks: A Guide to Stanley Kubrick's Films
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesTom Cruise and Nicole Kidman signed open-ended contracts. They agreed to work on this project until Stanley Kubrick released them from it, however long that turned out to be.
- 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
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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
- 162.496.398 $
- Laufzeit
- 2 Std. 39 Min.(159 min)
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix






