IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,3/10
52.657
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Die Geschichte eines Jungen im turbulenten Neapel der 1980er Jahre. Sorrentinos bisher persönlichster Film ist eine Geschichte über Schicksal und Familie, Sport und Kino, Liebe und Verlust.Die Geschichte eines Jungen im turbulenten Neapel der 1980er Jahre. Sorrentinos bisher persönlichster Film ist eine Geschichte über Schicksal und Familie, Sport und Kino, Liebe und Verlust.Die Geschichte eines Jungen im turbulenten Neapel der 1980er Jahre. Sorrentinos bisher persönlichster Film ist eine Geschichte über Schicksal und Familie, Sport und Kino, Liebe und Verlust.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Für 1 Oscar nominiert
- 32 Gewinne & 66 Nominierungen insgesamt
Betty Pedrazzi
- Baronessa Focale
- (as Betti Pedrazzi)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
A brilliant piece of filmmaking that totally took my breath away. This feels a lot personal because it is. Sorrentino created this film with an enormous love and you just feel it. His use of camara is outstanding, applying a lot of different techniques to give us some really beautiful shots and scenes, all of them unforgettable.
The first hour is magic. I laughed more than in most comedies I've seen. I was totally in awe with all those fascinating and lively characters. Everything feel so alive, so real. The sense of community is palpable.
The second hour is emotionally brutal. Sorrentino doesn't want to stay for a long time on overdramatic scenes. Just the necessary to tell his story. But he does it through powerful images and with a lot to say.
Even if this film is personal to the director, I believe this will feel familiar to a lot of us and that is the beauty of the cinema: a personal individual story can touch many people. Great homage to Napoli and cinema in a fantastic coming of age film.
The first hour is magic. I laughed more than in most comedies I've seen. I was totally in awe with all those fascinating and lively characters. Everything feel so alive, so real. The sense of community is palpable.
The second hour is emotionally brutal. Sorrentino doesn't want to stay for a long time on overdramatic scenes. Just the necessary to tell his story. But he does it through powerful images and with a lot to say.
Even if this film is personal to the director, I believe this will feel familiar to a lot of us and that is the beauty of the cinema: a personal individual story can touch many people. Great homage to Napoli and cinema in a fantastic coming of age film.
A gorgeous looking coming of age story that's worth watching for the Italian locations alone.
Paolo Sorrentino has been compared to Federico Fellini, and watching this film you can see why. This movie reminded me a lot of Fellini's "Amarcord," not necessarily in the specifics but in the general tone and vibe. "The Hand of God" flip flops between gentle comedy and domestic tragedy deftly, and in that way feels a lot like life. It's about a teenager who's forced to forge a life for himself and a place in the world when his parents are suddenly and unexpectedly removed from the picture. I've also seen it compared to "Call Me by Your Name," and I can see why, but in many ways it's a very different kind of movie from that one.
The family at the film's center should probably have disgusted me actually since they're kind of mean. In the film's first half hour they mock a woman for being fat and a man for having a speech disability. There's a smugness about them that comes from being part of an insular group where you always know you'll never be an outsider. It makes the later portion of the film that much more poignant, then, when the main character loses that protection and the big wide world becomes an insular club that excludes him.
This movie is so laid back that it would be easy to enjoy it without thinking much at all about what it's also saying. But this is one film that has both beauty and brains.
Grade: A.
Paolo Sorrentino has been compared to Federico Fellini, and watching this film you can see why. This movie reminded me a lot of Fellini's "Amarcord," not necessarily in the specifics but in the general tone and vibe. "The Hand of God" flip flops between gentle comedy and domestic tragedy deftly, and in that way feels a lot like life. It's about a teenager who's forced to forge a life for himself and a place in the world when his parents are suddenly and unexpectedly removed from the picture. I've also seen it compared to "Call Me by Your Name," and I can see why, but in many ways it's a very different kind of movie from that one.
The family at the film's center should probably have disgusted me actually since they're kind of mean. In the film's first half hour they mock a woman for being fat and a man for having a speech disability. There's a smugness about them that comes from being part of an insular group where you always know you'll never be an outsider. It makes the later portion of the film that much more poignant, then, when the main character loses that protection and the big wide world becomes an insular club that excludes him.
This movie is so laid back that it would be easy to enjoy it without thinking much at all about what it's also saying. But this is one film that has both beauty and brains.
Grade: A.
Although I have only an embryonic understanding of Italian, I felt the rhythm and mood of the scenes allowed me to feel the soul of Naples on a cellular level.
For a reason I could never understand, everyone expected a "Rome" from Sorrentino. And out of every 5 reviews written about this movie, 4 of them mentioned the movie 'ROMA'.
Sorrentino made his own 'È stata la mano di Dio' rather than his own Rome, and he did it well.
I didn't want to watch this movie without a proper copy, when Netflix came to my rescue.
It was a beautiful film with everything from its editing to the role its screenplay plays in storytelling, from the angle choices of the cinematographer to the sometimes exaggerated and everywhere calm performances of the actors.
It's been a long time since I heard Italian "in a good sense" in the cinema.
And it was worth the wait.
Sorrentino made his own 'È stata la mano di Dio' rather than his own Rome, and he did it well.
I didn't want to watch this movie without a proper copy, when Netflix came to my rescue.
It was a beautiful film with everything from its editing to the role its screenplay plays in storytelling, from the angle choices of the cinematographer to the sometimes exaggerated and everywhere calm performances of the actors.
It's been a long time since I heard Italian "in a good sense" in the cinema.
And it was worth the wait.
It is a very difficult challenge to try to lightly tell such a personal and traumatic drama as it happens in "The hand of God". The director Sorrentino tries to face it without veils and metaphors, keeping only his very personal taste for the grotesque and decadence because- as he tries to explain several times in the film- after the personal tragedy he experienced as a teenager, he no longer likes reality: "the reality is poor". Yet reality can also be extraordinary, so much so as to generate one of the best contemporary Italian directors from a such atrocious trauma.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesAccording to Paolo Sorrentino, it was Alfonso Cuarón's Roma (2018), which was based on Cuaron's childhood in Mexico City, that gave Sorrentino permission to commit his own experience to film. For Sorrentino realized that "a personal, private film could tell a universal story."
- Zitate
Antonio Capuano: Remember, those without courage don't sleep with beautiful women.
- SoundtracksNapule è
Written and performed by Pino Daniele
Top-Auswahl
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- Fue la mano de Dios
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- Budget
- 13.049.974 € (geschätzt)
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 167.909 $
- Laufzeit
- 2 Std. 10 Min.(130 min)
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.39 : 1
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