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Despair

  • 1978
  • 1h 59m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
2.9K
YOUR RATING
Dirk Bogarde, Andréa Ferréol, and Volker Spengler in Despair (1978)
In early-1930s Berlin, an elegant Russian émigré and eccentric chocolatier convinces himself that he has seen his doppelgänger, and hatches a murderous plan to trade his existence for an entirely new one. Will he get over the deep despair?
Play trailer2:23
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DramaHistory

In early-1930s Berlin, an elegant Russian émigré and eccentric chocolatier convinces himself that he has seen his doppelgänger, and hatches a murderous plan to trade his existence for an ent... Read allIn early-1930s Berlin, an elegant Russian émigré and eccentric chocolatier convinces himself that he has seen his doppelgänger, and hatches a murderous plan to trade his existence for an entirely new one. Will he get over the deep despair?In early-1930s Berlin, an elegant Russian émigré and eccentric chocolatier convinces himself that he has seen his doppelgänger, and hatches a murderous plan to trade his existence for an entirely new one. Will he get over the deep despair?

  • Director
    • Rainer Werner Fassbinder
  • Writers
    • Tom Stoppard
    • Vladimir Nabokov
  • Stars
    • Dirk Bogarde
    • Andréa Ferréol
    • Klaus Löwitsch
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    2.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Rainer Werner Fassbinder
    • Writers
      • Tom Stoppard
      • Vladimir Nabokov
    • Stars
      • Dirk Bogarde
      • Andréa Ferréol
      • Klaus Löwitsch
    • 16User reviews
    • 34Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 1 nomination total

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    Photos85

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    Top cast20

    Edit
    Dirk Bogarde
    Dirk Bogarde
    • Herman
    Andréa Ferréol
    Andréa Ferréol
    • Lydia
    Klaus Löwitsch
    Klaus Löwitsch
    • Felix
    Volker Spengler
    Volker Spengler
    • Ardalion
    Armin Meier
    • Silverman…
    Peter Kern
    Peter Kern
    • Müller
    Adrian Hoven
    Adrian Hoven
    • Inspector Schelling
    Alexander Allerson
    Alexander Allerson
    • Mayer
    Hark Bohm
    Hark Bohm
    • Doctor
    Roger Fritz
    Roger Fritz
    • Inspector Braun
    Gottfried John
    Gottfried John
    • Perebrodov
    Y Sa Lo
    • Elsie
    Lilo Pempeit
    • Secretary Schmidt
    Ingrid Caven
    Ingrid Caven
    • Hotel Manager
    Voli Geiler
    • 1st Landlady
    Isolde Barth
    Isolde Barth
    • 2nd Landlady
    Bernhard Wicki
    Bernhard Wicki
    • Orlovius
    Harry Baer
    Harry Baer
    • Innkeeper
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Rainer Werner Fassbinder
    • Writers
      • Tom Stoppard
      • Vladimir Nabokov
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    6.92.8K
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    Featured reviews

    6JuguAbraham

    Interesting but not a major Fassbinder film

    One would expect a combination of Nabokov and Stoppard would result in amazing cinema. Unfortunately, "Despair" does not count as great cinema, not even as a great Fassbinder film, even though it is a rare Fassbinder film made in English with a German locale. (The problems are similar to Malick's "A Hidden Life": here, too, people except Bogarde, speak English with a heavy German accent.)

    Vladimir Nabokov wrote his novel "Despair" as a spoof of Dostoyevsky's "Crime and Punishment." The script includes lines referring to Dostoyevsky and Arthur Conan Doyle. "Despair" the film falls short of achieving/adapting the greatness of Dostoevsky or Conan Doyle. It is possibly because for Nabokov and Fassbinder the mental state of Herman (Bogarde) is paramount than the tale itself.

    The audience struggles to come to terms with a clean shaven Herman suddenly sporting an elegant moustache in between sequences. If it was a fake moustache, the audience is not prepared for it by Fassbinder. Or were scenes edited out in the final cut?

    Fassbinder was evidently quite familiar with Nabokov. Nabokov wrote Lolita with a lead character named Humbert Humbert. Fassbinder extrapolates the idea in "Despair" (or was it Stoppard?) by calling the lead character in "Despair" Herman Hermann, when Nabokov called him just Herman.

    If there was one outstanding aspect in this film it was cinematographer Michael Ballhaus working with mirrors and glass panes in doors. One great shot, creditable to Fassbinder and Ballhaus, was of two Jews continuing to play chess at the street cafe as a Jewish shop is attacked by Nazis followed much later in the film by a distinctly similar shot of the same Jewish duo playing chess with non-distinctive clothes.

    Another important aspect of the film is Fassbinder 's dedication of this quaint work to three mentally unstable geniuses: Antonin Artaud (the actor/playwright who introduced The Theatre of Cruelty) , Vincent Van Gogh (the painter who cut off his ear) and Unica Zurn (a painter famous for her paintings of torsos bound with string). And lastly several actors in this film and those supposed to play originally in the film were openly gay as was the director..
    7christopher-underwood

    Interesting and always ambitious but ultimately flawed interpretation.

    This was good enough to encourage me to read the original Nabokov novel but this Tom Stoppard adaptation as filmed by Fassbinder has real problems. Stoppard suggests that it had been his intention that although we would see Bogarde and his supposed doppelgänger as different, Bogarde's vision, within the film, would be of his own image. If that sounds complicated wait till you see the rather melodramatic screen version. Andrea Ferreol as the ample 'ever moist' child/woman is fantastic (even though it seems she was learning the language on set) but Bogarde is only competent in what is admittedly and almost impossible role(s). There is much going on here in the director's first big budget movie but I feel he should have kept things more simple and not got so carried away with the finer details and contradictions of the inherent absurdity and surreal elements so as to highlight the tragedy of 30s Germany. Interesting and always ambitious but ultimately flawed interpretation.
    10mo-20

    Visually stunning, masterfully acted, brilliantly directedadaptation of a complex Nabokov novella.

    It's hard for me to stay away from excessive use of superlatives when commenting on what I consider to be Fassbinder's masterpiece. Michael Ballhaus has filmed more than a dozen Fassbinder films, and Despair is a fine example of the value of their collaboration. Several images are stunningly memorable: the water dripping on the eggshells in the sink; the circular tracking shot through the glass walls of Hermann Hermann's office revealing him in his cage; and the auto-voyeurism of Hermann watching himself in bed with his voluptuous, vacant Frau. Doing justice to Nabokov's compelling dialog and canny character studies has been well done before in Kubrick's Lolita, but Tom Stoppard's rendition here was a perfect match for Fassbinder's (and Ballhaus's) visual feast. And if you are somehow not yet a fan of Dirk Bogarde, seeing his performance in Despair will surely make you as ardent an admirer of his work as I have become.
    8meathookcinema

    An entertaining enigma of a movie

    Dirk Bogarde stars in this 1978 Fassbinder film as Hermann, a chocolate factory owner living in Berlin during the Weimar Republic who suffers from dissociation. He dreams of escape. On his travels he meets a homeless man who he thinks can imitate him in a scam. This will involve his faked murder so that he can escape his life. His wife will then receive a substantial insurance pay out because of his supposed death. In reality Hermann will vanish to Switzerland, live below the radar and start a new life. Will Hermann's plan go without a hitch?

    I love the mystery of this film. It really is a puzzle of a film and sweeps us along on it's gorgeous journey. Twist follows turn and back again.

    The whole cast are perfect with Dirk Bogarde being perfect as Hermann. The screenplay is brilliantly adopted from a Nabokov novel by Tom Stoppard with snappy and wicked dialogue that positively crackles.

    The look of the film is muted and also beautiful because of it. It lends massively to why the film works so well as it's visually and uniformly a treat for the eyes. Enjoy the ride which will keep you guessing until the final frame.
    8kurtralske

    Fassbinder + Nabokov + Dirk Bogarde = the poetry of the psychotic break

    Fassbinder took on a heavy task in choosing to make a film of Nabokov's "Despair". In the novel, the reader slowly comes to realize that the narrator is unreliable, and the truth of what's going on creeps up little by little by little. That isn't possible in a cinematic adaptation of this story: the viewer sees the truth at once; there can't be a slow reveal. Filming an unfilmable novel certainly put Fassbinder at a disadvantage.

    Given this, Fassbinder instead focused on his strengths: getting wonderful Douglas Sirk-like melodramatic performances from his actors, and going for the emotional jugular. Parts of "Despair" are surprisingly light and even comical, but these serve to set up the subsequent tragic tone and histrionic intensity.

    Like his later "Berlin Alexanderplatz", Fassbinder exaggerates several aspects of his source novels. He queer-ifies the story, making clearer the ambiguously gay dimensions of the narrative -- "Despair" becomes a tale of homosexual paranoia. Fassbinder also places the narrative firmly in its historical moment: it's emphasized that the protagonist is half-Jewish, and this becomes an occasion to explore not only racial paranoia, but the specific events and cultural attitudes that existed in Germany as the Nazis rose to power.

    But most of all, "Despair" and "Alexanderplatz" are studies of characters who psychologically disintegrate and descend into madness. Fassbinder is cinema's great poet of the manic episode and the psychotic break. Dirk Bogarde is masterful as Hermann Hermann, a man consumed by discontent and partly-justified paranoia, whose obsessions drive him into progressively stranger behavior. Like many of Fassbinder's mentally ill protagonists, Hermann is both likeable and capable of awful things; the viewer sympathizes as he loses touch with reality and his world crumbles.

    Strong recommendation for Dirk Bogarde's stellar performance as Hermann Hermann, and for Fassbinder's fearless dialogue with madness and tragedy.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Liam Neeson in Schindler's List (1993)
    History

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This movie cost more than all of Director Rainer Werner Fassbinder's previous movies combined.
    • Goofs
      Though the movie is set in Weimar Germany in the early 1930s, at 1:15:15, Hermann Hermann smokes a filtered cigarette, and those were put on the market in the 1950s.
    • Quotes

      Lydia: What's that accident all about?

      Herman: What accident?

      Lydia: In America. Why should it matter to you?

      Herman: It doesn't say anything about an accident... it says just to go crash. Collapse!

      Lydia: The whole street collapsed?

      Herman: Wall Street.

      Lydia: Were people killed?

      Herman: Just a few. Mostly jumping out of windows. Nearly all of them were stock holders.

      Lydia: Oh, Hermann...

      Herman: Really, you are such a... such a stupid woman, Lydia. You've lived here for 7 years already and you still can't speak the language properly. Still, I don't mind. Inteligence would take the bloom off your carnality. No, a woman like you should keep moist and plump.

    • Connections
      Featured in Dirk Bogarde: By Myself (1992)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 20, 1978 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • West Germany
      • France
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Desesperación
    • Filming locations
      • Bavaria Studios, Bavariafilmplatz 7, Geiselgasteig, Grünwald, Bavaria, Germany
    • Production companies
      • Bavaria Atelier
      • Bavaria Film
      • Filmverlag der Autoren
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • DEM 6,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $8,144
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $11,623
      • Feb 16, 2003
    • Gross worldwide
      • $8,158
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 59m(119 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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