PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,3/10
8 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Un joven judío en Europa del este busca refugio durante la segunda guerra mundial y encuentra a personajes variopintos.Un joven judío en Europa del este busca refugio durante la segunda guerra mundial y encuentra a personajes variopintos.Un joven judío en Europa del este busca refugio durante la segunda guerra mundial y encuentra a personajes variopintos.
- Premios
- 24 premios y 24 nominaciones en total
Nina Sunevic
- Marta
- (as Nina Shunevych)
Marika Sarah Procházková
- Woman #1
- (as Marika Procházková)
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesIn the nineteen-sixties, writer Jerzy Kosinski had become famous in Manhattan literary circles for his astonishing tales about the brutalities he had allegedly suffered during the Second World War. Abandoned by his parents at the age of six, he claimed he had roamed the countryside alone, witnessing rape, murder, and incest, constantly fearing for his life. Kosinski turned those stories into his first novel, "The Painted Bird" (1965), which, for a time, was considered a major work of Holocaust literature. Kosinski's autobiographic claims were later debunked when it was revealed that he and his parents had all been sheltered by religious Polish people who had never handed him over to the Nazis.
- PifiasAfter the old man died, Lubina rolled him face down in his grave. The next shot he lies face up.
- ConexionesFeatured in CT na MFF Karlovy Vary 2019: Nabarvené ptáce (2019)
- Banda sonoraFür Elise
Music by Ludwig van Beethoven
Reseña destacada
It's an eastern european movie at its core: raw, uncompromising, brutal, dim, hopeless and honest.
Brutality actually lead to several people leaving the screening I attended to at Venice 76. Here, this movie was labeled as '14+' but I believe it can be easily rated NC-17. The brutality of this movie includes some very graphic gore (although it's mostly present in the first half of the movie) and sexual-related violence (mostly implied but persistent throughout the film). I believe that, as of on-screen depiction of violence, this film probably outranks Schindler's List (although It isn't as vast scaled as Spielberg's film).
Stylistically, this film uses mostly the visual medium rather than conversations to provide information to the viewer. Dialogue becomes secondary at a point where the main character maybe utters a couple of lines throughout the movie, and some of the characters he meets with are entirely silent (Skasgard's character, for example).
The film has a very precise structure: it is made up of 8 chapters, each entitled after a character that the kid meets with, and each chapter reaches a moment when the screen fades to black. After that, a sort-of connective sequence displays the events that lead the kid to change his whereabouts. Among the characters he meets, the audience might recognize Alexander Skasgard, but also Harvey Keitel (in an entirely czech-speaking role) as well as Barry Pepper and german actor Udo Kier.
I wouldn't say that The Painted Bird is a holocaust or ww2 movie, or better, it isn't only that. Thematic elements that relate to either the Holocaust or the War, with the exception of a german plane seen early on, come up only after around one hour in-movie. Before that, whatever happens is mostly related to a strongly rural and superstitious society.
The Painted Bird pays implicit homage to several Eastern European films. The opening sequence mimics the one seen in Jan Nemec's "Diamonds of the Night", a lot of settings remind Elem Klimov's "Come and See" and Tarkovsky's "Ivan's Childhood", the overall fatalist tone reminds strongly of Bela Tarr's films.
It is an outstanding accomplishment, and I sincerely hope that this movie, despite its graphic content, receives enough recognition.
Brutality actually lead to several people leaving the screening I attended to at Venice 76. Here, this movie was labeled as '14+' but I believe it can be easily rated NC-17. The brutality of this movie includes some very graphic gore (although it's mostly present in the first half of the movie) and sexual-related violence (mostly implied but persistent throughout the film). I believe that, as of on-screen depiction of violence, this film probably outranks Schindler's List (although It isn't as vast scaled as Spielberg's film).
Stylistically, this film uses mostly the visual medium rather than conversations to provide information to the viewer. Dialogue becomes secondary at a point where the main character maybe utters a couple of lines throughout the movie, and some of the characters he meets with are entirely silent (Skasgard's character, for example).
The film has a very precise structure: it is made up of 8 chapters, each entitled after a character that the kid meets with, and each chapter reaches a moment when the screen fades to black. After that, a sort-of connective sequence displays the events that lead the kid to change his whereabouts. Among the characters he meets, the audience might recognize Alexander Skasgard, but also Harvey Keitel (in an entirely czech-speaking role) as well as Barry Pepper and german actor Udo Kier.
I wouldn't say that The Painted Bird is a holocaust or ww2 movie, or better, it isn't only that. Thematic elements that relate to either the Holocaust or the War, with the exception of a german plane seen early on, come up only after around one hour in-movie. Before that, whatever happens is mostly related to a strongly rural and superstitious society.
The Painted Bird pays implicit homage to several Eastern European films. The opening sequence mimics the one seen in Jan Nemec's "Diamonds of the Night", a lot of settings remind Elem Klimov's "Come and See" and Tarkovsky's "Ivan's Childhood", the overall fatalist tone reminds strongly of Bela Tarr's films.
It is an outstanding accomplishment, and I sincerely hope that this movie, despite its graphic content, receives enough recognition.
- Come-and-Review
- 3 sept 2019
- Enlace permanente
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- How long is The Painted Bird?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Sitios oficiales
- Idiomas
- Títulos en diferentes países
- The Painted Bird
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 175.000.000 CZK (estimación)
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 1460 US$
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- 452 US$
- 19 jul 2020
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 659.535 US$
- Duración2 horas 49 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39 : 1
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