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Teresa, une mère autrichienne de cinquante ans, voyage au paradis des plages du Kenya, à la recherche de l'amour des garçons africains. Mais elle doit affronter la dure vérité que sur les pl... Tout lireTeresa, une mère autrichienne de cinquante ans, voyage au paradis des plages du Kenya, à la recherche de l'amour des garçons africains. Mais elle doit affronter la dure vérité que sur les plages du Kenya, l'amour est un business.Teresa, une mère autrichienne de cinquante ans, voyage au paradis des plages du Kenya, à la recherche de l'amour des garçons africains. Mais elle doit affronter la dure vérité que sur les plages du Kenya, l'amour est un business.
- Prix
- 4 victoires et 7 nominations au total
Margarete Tiesel
- Teresa
- (as Margarethe Tiesel)
Gabriel Mwarua
- Gabriel
- (as Gabriel Nguma Mwaruwa)
Carlos Mkutano
- Salama
- (as Carlos Mukutani)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesCasting of the lead actress took one year before Margarethe Tiesel won the part. "From the beginning I knew I wanted to work with a professional actor for the main role. But the job description was extremely demanding. A woman over fifty who doesn't correspond to the usual Western beauty ideals, in that she's overweight, for example. As usual with my method, she had to possess the ability to improvise scenes and to appear authentic on camera. And then there was the greatest difficulty: She had to shoot nude sex scenes, fall for these young black men.," director Ulrich Seidl said. "A few weeks before we started the shooting, I went to Africa with three actresses, one after the other: I wanted them to try out on site, so I could find out right there how they would communicate with African men, how they would touch the skin of African men, and things of that kind.It was only then that I decided in favour of Margarete Tiesel."
- ConnexionsFeatured in Pauw & Witteman: Episode #7.65 (2013)
Commentaire en vedette
We enter here a paradisaical world with this woman, a middle-aged Austrian who's gone to Kenya on vacation. We enter as she does, strangers, fascinated. There is no transition to this new world, no waiting on airports, no planning for the journey, we are immediately swept as if by the urge to be there. Once there we see as she does, stylized images, arranged symmetries.
In the hotel resort there are trivial games, senile safety, control: the Africans are confections to be toyed with and enjoyed, ranges for the eye to roam. The question that looms is is she there for the encounter and surprise or merely looking for images to bring home to a dull life? You'll see this early in the metaphor with the monkey that takes her bait but refuses to be photographed, eluding her. More importantly: are we here on cinematic vacation or to come to an understanding?
Out in the streets there is a more palpable tension however; all about baring yourself to be seen and the quest for meaning. I like the subject, the lush Africa, the sexual frankness, the fact that sex and meaning are sublimated in a viewing space between people.
So I believe this could have been tremendously powerful stuff in the right hands. Alas the filmmaker is Austrian and this means that we see in the same stark light they bring to everything they do: from logic to politics to music. What does this mean, a stark light ?
It means every encounter has to be sooner rather than later exposed as meaningless, because the ultimate point here is some void at heart, the same that originally creates the journey there, which is also the filmmaker's. It means that he can't let go, and not allowing himself to yet know, coast on the tension of an encounter that may be false, that most probably is false, yet like movies and love work in life, that we can throw ourselves in it as if it is real and in doing so imbue it with truth, weave it from air. A Mood for Love with a question behind each glance.
I'm dreaming of the film Cassavetes would do: all about building to this more or less certain horizon of betrayal with momentary truths, small moments like passing a joint in the dark, riding this tension, hiding the logical knowledge. So I lament this because his failure is the same as his heroine's failure to find fulfillment. He resorts to more obvious stuff, merely chronicling the lack: disillusionment, loneliness and how that gives rise to dehumanizing spectacle as in the scene where the woman is offered in her hotel room a witless African to tease and fondle. Ordinary.
You can even see this reluctance in his camera when now and then he lets it wander: we don't deeply feel the textures, we are never truly enmeshed in the world.
Again this is as much cinematic translation of the woman's pov as it is inescapable worldview for the filmmaker, the same boxed worldview that Herzog runs from by journeying to the edges to throw himself on the manifold strangeness of things, letting his eye roam, staging boats tugged over hills so it can become real.
In the hotel resort there are trivial games, senile safety, control: the Africans are confections to be toyed with and enjoyed, ranges for the eye to roam. The question that looms is is she there for the encounter and surprise or merely looking for images to bring home to a dull life? You'll see this early in the metaphor with the monkey that takes her bait but refuses to be photographed, eluding her. More importantly: are we here on cinematic vacation or to come to an understanding?
Out in the streets there is a more palpable tension however; all about baring yourself to be seen and the quest for meaning. I like the subject, the lush Africa, the sexual frankness, the fact that sex and meaning are sublimated in a viewing space between people.
So I believe this could have been tremendously powerful stuff in the right hands. Alas the filmmaker is Austrian and this means that we see in the same stark light they bring to everything they do: from logic to politics to music. What does this mean, a stark light ?
It means every encounter has to be sooner rather than later exposed as meaningless, because the ultimate point here is some void at heart, the same that originally creates the journey there, which is also the filmmaker's. It means that he can't let go, and not allowing himself to yet know, coast on the tension of an encounter that may be false, that most probably is false, yet like movies and love work in life, that we can throw ourselves in it as if it is real and in doing so imbue it with truth, weave it from air. A Mood for Love with a question behind each glance.
I'm dreaming of the film Cassavetes would do: all about building to this more or less certain horizon of betrayal with momentary truths, small moments like passing a joint in the dark, riding this tension, hiding the logical knowledge. So I lament this because his failure is the same as his heroine's failure to find fulfillment. He resorts to more obvious stuff, merely chronicling the lack: disillusionment, loneliness and how that gives rise to dehumanizing spectacle as in the scene where the woman is offered in her hotel room a witless African to tease and fondle. Ordinary.
You can even see this reluctance in his camera when now and then he lets it wander: we don't deeply feel the textures, we are never truly enmeshed in the world.
Again this is as much cinematic translation of the woman's pov as it is inescapable worldview for the filmmaker, the same boxed worldview that Herzog runs from by journeying to the edges to throw himself on the manifold strangeness of things, letting his eye roam, staging boats tugged over hills so it can become real.
- chaos-rampant
- 30 sept. 2013
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- How long is Paradise: Love?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Paradise: Love
- Lieux de tournage
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 3 600 000 € (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 24 267 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 6 014 $ US
- 28 avr. 2013
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 1 709 036 $ US
- Durée2 heures
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Paradies: Liebe (2012) officially released in Canada in French?
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