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IMDbPro

La Terre qui flambe

Titre original : Der brennende Acker
  • 1922
  • 1h 38min
NOTE IMDb
6,9/10
828
MA NOTE
Josef Fenneker in La Terre qui flambe (1922)
Drame

Un drame rural sur les luttes familiales pour la possession de la terre, dépeignant la passion et la cupidité, les superstitions et les légendes, dans un récit expressionniste.Un drame rural sur les luttes familiales pour la possession de la terre, dépeignant la passion et la cupidité, les superstitions et les légendes, dans un récit expressionniste.Un drame rural sur les luttes familiales pour la possession de la terre, dépeignant la passion et la cupidité, les superstitions et les légendes, dans un récit expressionniste.

  • Réalisation
    • F.W. Murnau
  • Scénario
    • Willy Haas
    • Arthur Rosen
    • Thea von Harbou
  • Casting principal
    • Werner Krauss
    • Eugen Klöpfer
    • Vladimir Gajdarov
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,9/10
    828
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • F.W. Murnau
    • Scénario
      • Willy Haas
      • Arthur Rosen
      • Thea von Harbou
    • Casting principal
      • Werner Krauss
      • Eugen Klöpfer
      • Vladimir Gajdarov
    • 16avis d'utilisateurs
    • 5avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos3

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux25

    Modifier
    Werner Krauss
    Werner Krauss
    • Der alte Rog…
    Eugen Klöpfer
    Eugen Klöpfer
    • Peter Rog
    Vladimir Gajdarov
    Vladimir Gajdarov
    • Johannes Rog
    Eduard von Winterstein
    Eduard von Winterstein
    • Graf Rudenburg…
    Lya De Putti
    Lya De Putti
    • Gerda - Rudenburg's Tochter…
    Stella Arbenina
    Stella Arbenina
    • Helga - Rudenburg's zweite Frau…
    Alfred Abel
    Alfred Abel
    • Ludwig von Lellewel
    Grete Diercks
    • Maria
    Elsa Wagner
    • Magda
    Emilia Unda
    Emilia Unda
    • Alte Magd…
    Leonie Taliansky
    • Gerdas Zofe…
    Georg John
    Georg John
    • Großknecht…
    Emilie Kurz
    • Großmagd
    Robert Leffler
    Robert Leffler
    • Diener
    Eugen Rex
    Eugen Rex
    • Ackerkäufer
    Hellmuth Bergmann
    Hellmuth Bergmann
    • Kutscher
    Leonhard Haskel
    • Pferdehändler
    Gustav Botz
    • Prof. Butkin
    • Réalisation
      • F.W. Murnau
    • Scénario
      • Willy Haas
      • Arthur Rosen
      • Thea von Harbou
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs16

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    Avis à la une

    10overseer-3

    Murnau's Version Of The Prodigal Son

    Another masterpiece by Murnau, dark and moody, very little romance, mostly the dark side of life reflected in the greed and ambition of a prodigal son who arrives home too late to say goodbye to his dying father. Instead of obeying his father's last wishes, to marry his childhood friend and work the farm, Johannes wants to rise above his station in life, and he doesn't care who he has to walk over to get there. There is positive restoration by the end of the film that is rather jarring, but this seems to be a favorite theme of Murnau's. Instead of restoration with the father, as in the biblical story of the prodigal son, we see the genuine restoration of the two brothers, and forgiveness. We're not quite sure if the two brothers in the bible story ever truly reconcile, but in Murnau's story it is clearly evident.

    If you are someone who enjoys Murnau's films definitely see The Burning Soil. Interesting story, good acting, overall good condition of the surviving film.
    7Ben-207

    Obscure but not lost

    A print of this movie was found a few years ago in an Italian monastery, apparently. It is particularly interesting because it is the film Murnau shot right before his seminal "Nosferatu". It contains some incredible exterior shots, but is not as amazing as "sunrise" or "the last laugh". Still, Murnau's reputation as one of the TRUE film geniuses remains intact.
    8blue-7

    Available on DVD from Grapevine

    Murnau's SUNRISE ranks as one my ten favorite films -- it may be number one! It has been exciting to see SUNRISE and other of his films make it to DVD, many in beautifully restored prints. It is also exciting to discover some of his earlier works and see the genius of this master filmmaker developing. That is certainly the case with his 1922 BURNING SOIL. Like a reviewer elsewhere on this site I felt that I was watching a work done by Ingmar Bergman. The story may be viewed as somewhat melodramatic but the directing, acting and cinematography are for the most part quite stunning. It is frustrating to read about a film that you would like to see and not find it available to see, so I am pleased to let anyone interested in seeing this early Murnau work know that Grapevine Video of Phoenix, Arizona has released it. The picture quality is quite sharp and the tones quite nice though the print has a lot of specks. However, coming from the only known print to exist, I was more then pleased with the print. The orchestra score provided by Lou McMahon does not fit the mood some of the time, but for the most part it adds to the watching of the film. If you are interested in obtaining this title then get check it out on www.grapevinevideo.com . Grapevine Video offers a number of silent titles that can not be found anywhere else.
    6TheLittleSongbird

    Doesn't burn enough

    FW Murnau was a fantastic and influential director/film maker, with interesting themes and full of stunning and unlike anything seen before for the time imagery. Evident in 'Faust', 'The Last Laugh', 'Nosferatu', 'City Girl' and especially 'Sunrise'. When it comes to silent film, he, Fritz Lang and Georges Melies were particularly important in its development, DW Griffith also but his output wasn't as consistent, and even lesser films are worth a look for curiosity sake.

    'The Burning Soil' is definitely worth seeing, if more for curiosity to see more of Murnau's films (that are available) than anything else. It isn't Murnau's worst, it is better than 'The Haunted Castle' for instance, but 'The Burning Soil' is to me a lesser effort of his and it is better seeing the films mentioned in the first paragraph. There is a sense of Murnau having not yet found his comfort zone, but it is watchable and in many places pretty good. Its good things even being great.

    Especially good about 'The Burning Soil' is the way it looks. Especially in the very atmospheric and often exquisite, by his early period standards, cinematography. The sets show ambition and skill. Murnau directs with an assured hand generally. Also really liked the hauntingly dark atmosphere and melancholic edge, when it comes to atmosphere, 'The Burning Soil' is a triumph.

    While there aren't any performances that are iconic as such, most of the acting is actually fine and a lot more subtle than that in 'The Haunted Castle'. Would go as far as calling Lye De Patti and affecting Stella Arbenina excellent.

    Did feel that there was an exception when it came to the acting, for my tastes Vladimir Gajidarov came over as too theatrical and like he was over-compensating. Werner Krauss is severely underused but does what he can with what he has. Really didn't like how Johannes was written, very one-dimensional and with few redeeming qualities which made it hard to understand what the other characters saw in him.

    Moreover, 'The Burning Soil' is very flawed in story. Which came over as too melodramatic and over-stretched from being too thin and pace wise some of it really plods. Murnau's direction had moments where it seemed like he wasn't in complete control of the material, and the music is a pretty ill match.

    In conclusion, interesting film but not one of the Murnau essentials. 6/10.
    7wmorrow59

    A tale of familial jealousy, greed, and suffering, directed by a master

    If Ingmar Bergman had been an adult in 1922, directing silent dramas in Germany, Der Brennende Acker (known as "The Burning Soil" in the U.S.) is likely the sort of thing he would have produced. The themes of family rivalry and filial guilt are similar to the motifs Bergman would explore decades later, while the somber atmosphere and bleak landscapes are so Bergman-like I wonder if the young Ingmar might have seen it while still at a young and impressionable age. As it happens, the director of this film was the legendary F.W. Murnau, whose own cinematic apprenticeship was reaching its conclusion; he worked on this project virtually back-to-back with Nosferatu, the first of a handful of works that would earn him a reputation as one of the great filmmakers of his era. Some may find it difficult to appreciate this comparatively conventional effort in light of Murnau's later achievements, but patient viewers with a taste for sophisticated silent drama will likely find this film interesting and rewarding.

    Der Brennende Acker depicts two households: that of the wealthy Count Josef Emmanuel of Rudenberg, his daughter Gerda, and his much-younger second wife, Helga; and the Rogs, a fairly prosperous farm family who live nearby. As the story begins the elderly Rog patriarch is dying, attended by his hard-working son Peter. Meanwhile, the younger and more worldly son Johannes rushes home but arrives too late to bid his father goodbye. At the Count's castle we hear the story of the strange- looking structure on his property which stands on barren land known as the Devil's Field. It seems that an ancestor of the Count's believed the land held a treasure and sent his serfs down a shaft to investigate, but one of their torches set off an explosion. The Chapel of Atonement was built on the spot where the men were killed. The present Count Rudenberg, who, like the Rog patriarch, is also dying, is obsessed with the subject and learns that the land sits on an untapped oil field worth a fortune. As so often happens, this wealth bears a curse and brings only misery to all who come into contact with it.

    Tension mounts between Peter and Johannes; the older brother bitterly remarks that his sibling has acquired "worldly tastes" and has no interest in farming. Through the influence of the Count's attractive daughter Gerda he becomes her father's secretary. Johannes and Gerda seem to be on the verge of an affair, but when he learns that the Devil's Field is worth millions and that it will be inherited by the Count's wife Helga, he turns his attention to her. When she is widowed, he marries her.

    More melodramatic twists in the plot lead to harsh family conflict, jealousy, and, ultimately, to an oil well fire at the Devil's Field (thus "Burning Soil"). Based on the plot synopsis it probably goes without saying that this borders on soap opera, but it's not the story or the histrionics that make it intriguing. Actually, where the acting is concerned the film is quite low-key for its time (aside from an unfortunate moment when Stella Arbenina, who plays Helga, indicates a state of high emotion by flinging herself to the ground). No, it's something harder to define that kept me watching with keen interest: a sustained mood of wintry melancholy, perked by a number of understated but impressive directorial touches. There's business involving a document torn into little pieces that is poetic. When Murnau was at his peak, in such films as Faust and Sunrise, he would stage his effects on a much grander scale, but here he manages to create a beautiful moment with a few torn pieces of paper. And while some viewers may be disappointed to find no supernatural element in a work produced almost concurrently with Nosferatu, several scenes in the Count's gloomy castle have a uniquely eerie quality. When an old servant tells the tale of the Devil's Field to the younger maids the lighting gives the scene a ghostly aura, nicely augmented when we see the Count in his study, reading about the tragedy at that same moment. The conflict between the Rog brothers is more prosaic and, yes, somewhat "soapy," but the actors are good and their scenes are never boring. The ending feels a bit pat but dramatically necessary after all the high emotion of the fiery climax.

    In short, Der Brennende Acker is a lesser but decidedly worthwhile drama by one of the silent screen's greatest directors. In this early work Murnau shows deftness in laying out a fairly complicated story with several key characters, skill in drawing subtle performances from his actors, and real artistry in creating and maintaining an atmosphere of foreboding that builds to a satisfying resolution.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      This movie was considered lost for many years. In 1978, an almost complete print was found in the estate of an Italian priest who had organised screenings in mental hospitals. The same was true of La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc (1928).
    • Connexions
      Featured in Der Weg nach Murnau (2003)

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 20 octobre 1922 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Allemagne
    • Langue
      • Aucun
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Burning Soil
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Bornstedter Feld, Potsdam, Brandebourg, Allemagne
    • Sociétés de production
      • Deulig Film
      • Goron Film
      • ARTE
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 38min(98 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Mixage
      • Silent
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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