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Lisbon Story

  • 1994
  • PG
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
5.8K
YOUR RATING
Lisbon Story (1994)
DramaMusic

The director Friedrich Monroe has trouble with finishing a silent b&w movie about Lisbon. He calls his friend, the sound engineer Phillip Winter, for help. As Winter arrives Lisbon weeks lat... Read allThe director Friedrich Monroe has trouble with finishing a silent b&w movie about Lisbon. He calls his friend, the sound engineer Phillip Winter, for help. As Winter arrives Lisbon weeks later, Monroe is disappeared but has left the unfinished film. Winter decides to stay, becaus... Read allThe director Friedrich Monroe has trouble with finishing a silent b&w movie about Lisbon. He calls his friend, the sound engineer Phillip Winter, for help. As Winter arrives Lisbon weeks later, Monroe is disappeared but has left the unfinished film. Winter decides to stay, because he is fascinated of the city and the Portuguese singer Teresa, and he starts to record t... Read all

  • Director
    • Wim Wenders
  • Writer
    • Wim Wenders
  • Stars
    • Rüdiger Vogler
    • Patrick Bauchau
    • Vasco Sequeira
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    5.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Wim Wenders
    • Writer
      • Wim Wenders
    • Stars
      • Rüdiger Vogler
      • Patrick Bauchau
      • Vasco Sequeira
    • 28User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Photos8

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    Top cast18

    Edit
    Rüdiger Vogler
    Rüdiger Vogler
    • Phillip Winter
    Patrick Bauchau
    Patrick Bauchau
    • Friedrich Monroe
    Vasco Sequeira
    • Truck Driver
    Canto e Castro
    Canto e Castro
    • Barber
    Viriato Jose da Silva
    • Shoemaker
    João Canijo
    João Canijo
    • Crook
    Ricardo Colares
    • Ricardo
    Joel Cunha Ferreira
    • Zé
    Sofia Bénard da Costa
    • Sofia
    Vera Cunha Rocha
    • Vera
    Elisabete Cunha Rocha
    • Beta
    Teresa Salgueiro
    • Self (Madredeus)
    Pedro Ayres Magalhães
    • Self (Madredeus)
    Rodrigo Leão
    • Self (Madredeus)
    Gabriel Gomes
    • Self (Madredeus)
    José Peixoto
    • Self (Madredeus)
    Francisco Ribeiro
    • Self (Madredeus)
    Manoel de Oliveira
    Manoel de Oliveira
    • Self
    • Director
      • Wim Wenders
    • Writer
      • Wim Wenders
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews28

    7.15.7K
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    Featured reviews

    10paul-1722

    Captures The Essence Of Lisbon

    As an eighteen year old in 1983, I ended up in Lisbon on a fairly aimless wander around the Iberian peninsula on the railway network, and simply fell in love with it. I stayed for a while to explore the city and surroundings and ended up with a rich mental image of the sights and sounds of this beautiful city.

    When I came across a reference to this movie, I simply had to buy the DVD. Interestingly, I see that the intention of the movie was to capture the spirit of the city, and thankfully it does not do so from a touristic point of view.

    It captures Lisbon at an interesting time for the country, some 20 years after the revolution and 8 years after Portugal joined the European Union. And also at a time where it was modernising fast. A few years prior to the shooting of this movie, there were very old buses and the old trams (Eléctricos) ran just about everywhere and up impossibly narrow and steep roads where you could reach out and touch the houses. Now, there are just a couple of heritage routes, and these are the eléctricos featured in the movie out of necessity. Today, the transport system is completely modernised and I can see the point of the movie in trying to capture the spirit of a city before it changes out of recognition.

    The use of the group Madredeus to provide the music is, I think, quite inspired. To make a movie about Lisbon could have turned into a 'yawn' if it had used a cliché of Fado. Thankfully it didn't and used something more contemporary. And what a group! The music is haunting, so much so that I have now gone off and sought out their CDs! Teresa Salgueiro reminds me of those Portuguese girls I met as a youth, she is just perfect for the part.

    As has been mentioned by another reviewer, the movie is a bit self-indulgent in an 'arty' type of way, but it IS entertaining.

    Finally, I prefer the movie with the subtitles turned off. The movie has a pan-European flavour with various languages popping up and intertwining. I suppose I benefit that I can grasp the gist of Portuguese when it is being spoken, and the German in the movie is basic enough that most of us will have absorbed some of it from movies and TV. Teresa Salgueiro's voice is very clear to understand when singing to those who are trying to understand the language, and is a real pleasure to listen to. To someone who may never have visited Portugal, the use of children who are fluent in English might seem odd, but in general, the Portuguese (well, in Lisbon, especially so) have always been good English speakers and I find it entirely natural to find Portuguese schoolchildren who speak English as well as Portuguese.
    8jonr-3

    Warm-hearted tribute to the power of art

    The first time I watched "Lisbon Story" I was disappointed and rather annoyed at what seemed a pretentious and self-indulgent experiment.

    Then several months later, I watched it again, and was captivated by it, enjoyed it thoroughly, and found it to be a good-hearted, affectionate salute to motion pictures and by extension to art in general. Though the film's humor frequently borders on being downright corny, I couldn't help enjoying even that aspect because of the obvious good will with which it was presented. It feels refreshing to have a film-maker work so hard to amuse the audience! That in itself is a token of respect.

    Wenders has made here a film that's slippery, puzzling, and that eludes the mind's grasp at every turn, yet in the end delivers a powerful and even joyful message. It takes a certain amount of courage to send a positive message to an audience these days--or even in 1994, when the film was released. I applaud Mr. Wenders and I applaud this film. I'm very glad I thought to watch it again--I will definitely see it again in future, too.
    10rooprect

    Listen to the reviewer who said "this movie is good for the soul"

    I've spent the last few days trying to come up with the perfect description for this movie, and I'm afraid another reviewer beat me to it: "This movie is good for the soul."

    This is the perfect movie for the uninspired artist who is suffering from malaise, writer's block, disenchantment or perhaps just an overall pissy attitude toward the world. It's absolutely beautiful. The actors are endearing, the story is charming (though not without a few poignant touches of darkness & spookiness), and the music is downright hypnotizing.

    This film gave me a big smile from beginning to end. The humour is what I call "real life silly"--these are things that have happened to us all at one point or another, and to watch the characters' reactions is hilarious, because we say to ourselves, "That could've been me!"

    But overall this is a movie about love, not necessarily between people but perhaps between a person and a city or a person and a camera or a person and a microphone. It's gorgeous in its ambiguity because, like I said up front, it can inspire any of us out of our deepest rut.

    In past reviews of Wim Wenders' work I have been brutally uncomplimentary; he has often struck me as a meandering type who lacks the ability to pull his visions together coherently. But this film has given me a completely new appreciation for his lucidity and ability to convey a profound (yet abstract) thought. The two monologues at the end carry perhaps the strongest messages I've ever seen on film. Simple but resounding.

    I give LISBON STORY 10 stars, something which I rarely do even to my favourite films. But this movie is literally perfect, I can't criticize a single thing (edit: OK, after thinking real hard, I suppose there's one flaw... the guitarist's fingers don't exactly match up with what he's playing in one scene. But I think we can all agree that's nitpicking). Enjoy!
    9E Canuck

    Tribute to cinema in sight and sound

    Wenders has shot a visual gem with rich sound and music, whose story-line and entire raison-d'etre is a tribute to film-making itself. Every frame is composed, dramatic, and the complementary colour theme of blue-yellow-red (predominantly sky blue) is adhered to so closely, it's phenemonal and delectable.

    Waiting for the supposed main character Friedrich, played by Patrick Bauchau, to show up in the film, eventually becomes a metaphor for those times in life when one waits for the "main event", and it's a long time coming. Life is what happens while we're waiting for life to begin.

    Rudiger Vogler's Phillip gets to deliver a wonderful lecture to all pretentious artists everywhere who've lost their way, and to art film-makers like Friedrich, especially. We're so happy to hear him dressing down Freidrich, and doing so more articulately than we could have done, it gives this fairly slow-moving film a wonderful sense of resolution and direction.

    A very human film about the ordinary, the magic in the ordinary, and the ability of film to convey that magic. Loved it.
    10lauri3

    Haunting and beautiful

    This movie had the most tremendous impact on me when I first saw it - and now that I watch it again it does the same kind of magic to me. It gives impressions, but mostly it uses pictures, music, sounds to convey beauty.

    The depth, what makes this more than commercial of Lisbon is the true question lying under about filmmakers wrestle with himself about the worth of making a film or any film and then again a really beautiful story about love which is drawn with only the needed lines to make you see it, but without spelling the feelings out.

    The lead singer of Madredeus - Teresa Salgueiro does exceptional role without playing anyone particular - also the presence of other band members is strong - and takes the movie somewhere between real and unreal and gives the movie sleepy, dreamy like atmosphere. Wenders must have talent in casting since also the "local" people fit in perfectly and are so easy about being in front of camera.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
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    Music

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Originally intended to be a pure promotional documentary about Lisbon comissioned by the city. Director Wim Wenders added some fictional components to the film and created a story with a thin and simple plot line.
    • Goofs
      In Lisbon, Mr. Winter reads a loving air mail post card received from Teresa, touring with her musical group, Madredeus in Brazil [at around 1:09:29]. The card shows Rio and Sugarloaf Mountain. However the card is postmarked May (possibly June) 7, 1994 in Portugal.
    • Quotes

      Phillip Winter: Listen. You have to guess what this is.

      [makes sound of horse running]

      Beta: A horse! He's afraid!

      Zé: Yeah, horse!

      Vera: That's it!

      Sofia: He's running very fast! He's galloping!

      Phillip Winter: Right. And who is always on a horse?

      Zé: A cowboy.

      Phillip Winter: Right. And now...

      [makes sound of lighting a match]

      Vera: A match!

      Zé: He lights a match!

      Phillip Winter: [makes sound of fire]

      Sofia: What's that?

      Zé: He makes a fire!

      Vera: Yeah, he makes a fire!

      Phillip Winter: Mmm hmm...

      [makes sound of frying eggs]

      Zé: What's that?

      Sofia: He makes something to eat. Yes, a steak!

      Zé: A steak!

      Phillip Winter: [pauses] Nnnehh... This cowboy is... vegetarian. Listen again.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Sound of Lisbon Story (2007)
    • Soundtracks
      Guitarra
      Traditional lyrics from the poets of Fado

      Music by Pedro Ayres Magalhães and Rodrigo Leão

      Performed by Madredeus

      Produced by Pedro Ayres Magalhães for EMI - Valentim de Carvalho Música, Lda, Lisboa, Portugal

      Published by Delabel Editions / Sacem worldwide except Portugal (SPA - Sociedade Portuguesa de Autores)

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Lisbon Story?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 12, 1995 (Portugal)
    • Countries of origin
      • Germany
      • Portugal
    • Languages
      • English
      • Portuguese
      • German
      • French
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Лісабонська історія
    • Filming locations
      • Germany
    • Production companies
      • Madragoa Filmes
      • Road Movies Filmproduktion
      • Wim Wenders Stiftung
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 40m(100 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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