Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueIn a totalitarian society of the future, in which the government controls all facets of the press, a homicide detective investigates a string of bombings, and finds out more than he bargaine... Tout lireIn a totalitarian society of the future, in which the government controls all facets of the press, a homicide detective investigates a string of bombings, and finds out more than he bargained for.In a totalitarian society of the future, in which the government controls all facets of the press, a homicide detective investigates a string of bombings, and finds out more than he bargained for.
- Prix
- 1 victoire et 3 nominations au total
- Wechselschichtregisseur
- (as Andreas Mannkopf)
- Polizeiärztin
- (as Ute Fitz-Koska)
- Polizist
- (as Hans-Eckhardt Eckhardt)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis was the final acting role for Rainer Werner Fassbinder.
- GaffesThe movie claims 27 September 1989 to be a Monday, but that day was a Wednesday (The movie plays in 1989, as the title and a spoken intro make clear. The supposed explosion in the beginning of the movie was planned to take place on September 23, as Jansen points out. The chief of the police then urges Jansen to solve the case within for days, saying "until Monday afternoon," which would be September 27).
- Citations
Policewoman: Suicide
Polizeileutnant Jansen: It would be the first in four years.
Policewoman: Sorry, I meant 'premature death.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Fassbinder (2015)
Police lieutenant Jansen, unforgettably played by Rainer Werner Fassbinder in his last role, is charged with the investigation, during which the open position of Krysmopompas is offered to him several times, but he refuses to take it over. Since the concern represents the good, the police must represent the evil. Even the police president is in the hand of the concern and looks like a caricature of Dr. Mabuse turned himself into a puppet. Possibly Jansen realizes that becoming Krysmopompas and thus fulfilling the vacuum of evilness would just consolidate the omnipotent concern, because it needs the evil to define itself as the good. Consequently, the director of the concern offers him a job, which Jansen also refuses. Therefore, Jansen takes a third position in a world in which there are only two, and this is presumably the reason why the movie is called "Kamikaze". However the title may be meant, this movie offers a highly complicated situation in which the categories of ethics are perverted. The typical 80ies' German TV-style of this movie should not make the audience blind that in portraying paradoxical ethical categories in a world in which metaphysics has been shoveled out like the alcohol, the seeds and suicide, "Kamikaze" goes way beyond thematically related movies like Godard's "Alphaville", Kubrik's "Dr. Strangelove" and even Tarkovsky's "Solyaris". A few years before "Kamikaze 1989", Fassbinder himself had directed the science-fiction movie "Welt am Draht" ("World on wire") which many people believe to have surpassed "Solyaris". In the final scene of Kamikaze, Fassbinder says his ultimate goodbye to his audience grinning in front of a picture of Armstrong's moon landing.
- hasosch
- 7 oct. 2008
- Lien permanent
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Kamikaze 89?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 22 440 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 5 613 $ US
- 5 juin 2016
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 22 440 $ US