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The Young Karl Marx

Original title: Le jeune Karl Marx
  • 2017
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 58m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
7.6K
YOUR RATING
August Diehl in The Young Karl Marx (2017)
At the age of 26, Karl Marx embarks with his wife Jenny on the road to exile. In 1844 Paris they meet young Friedrich Engels, son of a factory owner and an astute student of the English proletariat class. Engels brings Marx the missing piece to the puzzle that composes his new vision of the world. Together, between censorship and police raids, riots and political upheavals, they will preside over the birth of the labor movement, which until then had been mostly makeshift and unorganized. This will grow into the most complete theoretical and political transformation of the world since the Renaissance - driven, against all expectations, by two brilliant, insolent and sharp-witted young men.
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The early years of Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels and Jenny Marx, between Paris, Brussels and London.The early years of Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels and Jenny Marx, between Paris, Brussels and London.The early years of Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels and Jenny Marx, between Paris, Brussels and London.

  • Director
    • Raoul Peck
  • Writers
    • Pascal Bonitzer
    • Raoul Peck
    • Bertina Henrichs
  • Stars
    • August Diehl
    • Stefan Konarske
    • Vicky Krieps
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    7.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Raoul Peck
    • Writers
      • Pascal Bonitzer
      • Raoul Peck
      • Bertina Henrichs
    • Stars
      • August Diehl
      • Stefan Konarske
      • Vicky Krieps
    • 32User reviews
    • 70Critic reviews
    • 62Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos4

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:15
    Official Trailer
    The Young Karl Marx (2018) | Official US Trailer HD
    Trailer 2:15
    The Young Karl Marx (2018) | Official US Trailer HD
    The Young Karl Marx (2018) | Official US Trailer HD
    Trailer 2:15
    The Young Karl Marx (2018) | Official US Trailer HD
    The Young Karl Marx: Meeting
    Clip 2:06
    The Young Karl Marx: Meeting
    The Young Karl Marx: Critical Critique
    Clip 1:05
    The Young Karl Marx: Critical Critique

    Photos31

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    Top cast43

    Edit
    August Diehl
    August Diehl
    • Karl Marx
    Stefan Konarske
    • Friedrich Engels
    Vicky Krieps
    Vicky Krieps
    • Jenny von Westphalen-Marx
    Olivier Gourmet
    Olivier Gourmet
    • Pierre-Joseph Proudhon
    Hannah Steele
    Hannah Steele
    • Mary Burns
    Alexander Scheer
    Alexander Scheer
    • Wilhelm Weitling
    Hans-Uwe Bauer
    • Arnold Ruge
    Michael Brandner
    Michael Brandner
    • Joseph Moll
    Ivan Franek
    Ivan Franek
    • Mikhail Aleksandrovich Bakunin
    Peter Benedict
    Peter Benedict
    • Herr Engels
    Niels-Bruno Schmidt
    Niels-Bruno Schmidt
    • Karl Grün
    Marie Meinzenbach
    • Lenchen
    Rolf Kanies
    Rolf Kanies
    • Moses Hess
    Stephen Hogan
    Stephen Hogan
    • Thomas Naylor
    Annabelle Lewiston
    • Lizzy Burns
    Eric Godon
    Eric Godon
    • Foreman
    Henning Peker
    • Stirner
    Moritz Führmann
    Moritz Führmann
    • Bruno Bauer
    • Director
      • Raoul Peck
    • Writers
      • Pascal Bonitzer
      • Raoul Peck
      • Bertina Henrichs
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews32

    6.67.6K
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    Featured reviews

    5indiecinemamagazine

    The Young Karl Marx

    The Young Karl Marx chronicles the period when young Karl Marx meets his future long-term friend and co-author Friedrich Engels and the several following years. During the Berlinale press conference dedicated to the film Raoul Peck was asked if he read Karl Marx. He answered that he attended seminars dedicated to Marx's Capital. His film is reminiscent of such a seminar; interminable and tedious.

    There are many dialogues, questions, answers however the film completely lacks artistic vision. There is no interesting music, camera-work or a gripping plot.

    Raoul Peck tried to underline the more materialistic side of his relationship with Jenny, showing his sex life and child birth. To deprive Marx of certain romanticism is also not fair, the young philosopher was a romantic of his own kind; he was engaged for seven years to Jenny and dedicated many poems to her.

    The discussions depicted in the film are too primitive for such great thinkers such as Marx, Engels, Proudhon and Bakunin. The proletariat, on the other hand, is shown as a group of people with abject faces and feeble children, which makes the ideas of Marx about the proletariat too idealistic and not connected to reality.

    One of the positive sides of the picture is that Peck did not try to distort facts about the people in the film, however after the film finishes one feels relieved that the drawn-out seminar on Karl Marx is finally over.

    Read more at: http://indie-cinema.com/2017/02/young-karl-marx/
    9jakob13

    Marx Thinks as does Engels...a glorious collaboratopn

    Rauol Peck has never shied away from difficult subjects: Lamumba and James Baldwin. Now, he has taken on Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels in 'Young Karl Marx'. This film won't earn him much in the US, a country which has done much to suppress Marx's thoughts and has waged a ferocious campaign to emasculate its own Communist Party and wither on the vine democratic socialism. Marxism is taught drily and negatively on university campuses today, as a failure and a foil to triumphant global capitalism. Peck's film , splendid in the use of the camera, capturing as it does, the ravages of early industrialization in the textile mill the Engels owned in Manchester, the miserable condition of workers, child labor, misery of the cannon fodder that fed what Blake called 'Satanic mills', and the general impoverishment of the laboring class. In Germany, in Prussia, the reign of the feudal king who exercises the rights of a feudal lord with it heavy burden on the peasantry, but in whose university slowly burns revolutionary thought that await the flame to blaze, and in Guizot's France tightly held on a leash any attempt other than fancy theories to arouse the people as they did in 1789. Americans find in general history tiresome, being a society open to the future where the past counts little. They little tolerance for grand theory or discussions, fiery public meetings, respectful exchanges of ideas that command our attention, but mostly in the mouths of demagogues. Like the majority of Americans, they have little tolerance for philosophical discussions, and abstractions bore them no end. The millions that in slavery and wage slavery that built capitalism count for little. So, Peck's 'Young Marx' plunges into the tense, tight theories of Socialist theory of romantics and materialists in the first half of the 19 century, that left its mark even today in the 21 century. Peck's camera and his principal actors August Diehl as the spirited Marx and Stefan Kornaske ass his life long partner and collaborator in struggle as Engels, wage serious battle against Proudhon and Wietling and Bakounin for example, against the Young Hegelians, against Bauer and Feuerbach and Rugge ..names that have some resonance today, and are best read of say in the works of GDH Cole or Wilson's 'To the Finland Station'. Argumentation and debate were fierce, and Marx suffered fools not gladly, nor did Engels who had a smoother manner. Marx and Engels love and turning the other cheek in the fight for the working class whom they saw as the future, and a spearhead of equality that even today's America fear seek through the courts to weaken further so that the the coupon clipeers and the ruling finace capitalists can fully have their way and increase profits and political power and control globally in the full expression of raw exploitation. Marx insisted that 'philosophers have only interpreted the world in various ways, the point is to change it'; they have put theory on its head, but he and Engels turn it around and put it on its feet. And the fruit of their theoretical struggle and intimate knowledge of the material conditions of the working class came to fruition in the writing (jointly) of the 'Communist Manifesto' that signaled the outbreak of revolution. So on top of the moment were this pair that the Revolutions of 1848 broke only weeks later, sweeping away the vestiges of feudalism in the German Holy Roman Empire, and spurred the national struggle throughout an industrializing Europe. The 'Manifesto' is wonderfully written and still hold water today, despite attacks...even in our age of reaction. 'The Young Marx' is in three languages: German, French and English. Peck has assembled a first rate cast and with flair and much artistry conveyed the passions of the young Marx and Engels. Peck's film hasn't a wide distribution, alas. And yet, in the small art house I saw it, the 100 seats were fully occupied, by people of all ages and 'middle class' conditions. The film reviewers on the whole have sort to express impatience in seeing the 'Young Marx",making large yawns and little effort to understand Peck's cinematic vocation in tackling Marx and Engels' thinking and activism. At the end Peck has footage of how wide and vast Marx's influence is: May 1968 in France, Vietnam War protest in the USA, Lumumba, and Mandela, for example. When Marx died Engels tribute sums his life up: Marx didn't die, he ceased to think.
    9Red-125

    Karl Marx as a living, breathing young man

    Le jeune Karl Marx (2017) was shown in the United States with the translated title The Young Karl Marx. The movie was co-written and directed by Raoul Peck.

    I found this biography of Marx to be interesting. As the person introducing the film noted, most of us think of a mature Karl Marx sitting in the British Library and writing "Das Kapital." However, in this movie, we see Karl Marx (August Diehl ) in his 20's, beginning his friendship with Friedrich Engels, and proving to other socialists and communists that his thoughts were important.

    Diehl is excellent, as is Stefan Konarske, who portrays Engels. Vicky Krieps does well in the role of Jenny von Westphalen-Marx, as does Hannah Steele as Mary Burns. (In the movie, for whatever reason, Mary Burns is portrayed as Engels' wife. They were lifelong partners, but never married.)

    The movie is packed with data. I believe some of it could have been left out, which would made the movie shorter and tighter. For example, much is made of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, who is considered the founder of anarchism. Proudhon and Marx did, indeed, influence each other. However, how many of us know that? We could certainly enjoy the movie without knowing it.

    We saw this film at Rochester's excellent Dryden Theatre, at the George Eastman Museum. It was the opening film of the always-impressive Rochester Labor Film Series. It will work well on the small screen.
    7treywillwest

    nope

    Given my interests, it would be very difficult for me not to have enjoyed this film, so I may not be the most neutral judge of its merit. I would say that this is a good biopic, though also the least interesting film I've seen by director Raul Peck. If Hollywood were to make a biopic of Marx and Engels, which it would never do, it would probably look a bit like this: good set-pieces, solid acting. There's a bit too much focus on the two men's love lives. (We need out watershed thinkers to be sexy!) As in almost any biopic of a creative person, there are some ham-fisted moments that attempt to depict major moments in the subject's creative development, including a rather laugh inducing one concerning the most famous quote from the Thesis on Feuerbach. On that note, the way in which it seems to me that this does stray from a Hollywood treatment is its attempt to, superficially at least, explicate some of Marx's early philosophy.
    6ferguson-6

    before the grey

    Greetings again from the darkness. When the name Karl Marx comes up, most of us recall that iconic photo of the older gentleman with the large grey beard. As with all older gents, they were once young men, and that's the focus of this film from writer/director Raoul Peck and co-writer Pascal Bonitzer.

    The story kicks off in 1843 when young Marx was the editor of "Rheinische Zeitung" and carries us through the 1848 publication of "The Communist Manifesto". We progress chronologically through Paris, Brussels and London and witness how Marx's personal life and ideological mission intertwined, leading ultimately to the birth of Communism.

    August Diehl (INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS) plays Karl Marx and Stefan Konarske plays Friedrich Engels. Their mutual admiration brought them together and their commitment, along with the support of their wives Jenny Marx (Vicky Krieps, PHANTOM THREAD) and Mary Burns (Hannah Steele), carried them through and cemented their legacies.

    With the endless string of debates and discussion, and the constant struggle with poverty for Marx and his family, the film at times seems repetitive and tedious. It does, however, succeed in making comprehensible the timeline and constant struggle to continue the fight. The process of societal-changing writing is not simple, and we see the different approaches taken by Marx and the upper-crust rebel Engels. The obvious battle between Bourgeoisie and Proletariat remains at the forefront, but we also witness the painstaking networking and research that goes into the work. The two gentlemen share a drink over this toast: "to minds that truly think".

    Today, many in their 20's, are focused on which direction to swipe, yet at the same age, Marx and Engels were committed to changing the world. The ideals and issues that so dominated their writings (and led to revolution) are every bit as relevant today. We no longer use the terms Bourgeoisie or Proletariat, but class distinction continues to be debated as a source of many global issues - both social and economic. Director Peck (Oscar nominated for last year's I AM NOT YOUR NEGRO) uses Bob Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone" over the closing credits montage of revolutions and historic turning points to ensure we understand that rebellions and convictions do still exist.

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    Related interests

    Ben Kingsley, Rohini Hattangadi, and Geraldine James in Gandhi (1982)
    Biography
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    Drama
    Liam Neeson in Schindler's List (1993)
    History

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Swiss censorship visa # 1011.821.
    • Quotes

      Pierre-Joseph Proudhon: [to Marx] Do not be like Luther who, after destroying Catholic dogma, founded an equally intolerant religion.

    • Connections
      Featured in Exterminate All the Brutes: The Disturbing Confidence of Ignorance (2021)
    • Soundtracks
      Like a Rolling Stone
      Written and Performed by Bob Dylan

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 6, 2018 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Germany
      • Belgium
    • Official site
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Languages
      • German
      • French
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Genç Karl Marx
    • Filming locations
      • France
    • Production companies
      • Agat Films & Cie
      • Velvet Film
      • Velvet Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €9,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $125,659
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $26,097
      • Feb 25, 2018
    • Gross worldwide
      • $4,870,373
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 58m(118 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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