IMDb RATING
6.0/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
A reinterpretation of the Nibelungen saga centering on Hagen von Tronje, a Viking who allies himself with the ancient gods and takes up arms against an unscrupulous ruler.A reinterpretation of the Nibelungen saga centering on Hagen von Tronje, a Viking who allies himself with the ancient gods and takes up arms against an unscrupulous ruler.A reinterpretation of the Nibelungen saga centering on Hagen von Tronje, a Viking who allies himself with the ancient gods and takes up arms against an unscrupulous ruler.
- Awards
- 1 win & 3 nominations total
Béla Gabor Lenz
- Gernot
- (as Bela Gabor Lenz)
Featured reviews
This movie is far better than presented in imdb (even the plot summary is plainly wrong). For centuries-literally centuries-Hagen von Tronje has been the villain of Germany's most famous saga (yes, Wagner and all that). This movie retells the saga from a different perspective-an apology for Hagen-that alters some details, omits certain parts, and adds others. What you get is still a saga (they travel to Iceland in what may be a 15th-century carrack, 400 years before the Vikings dared cross the gap between Sweden and England), but it all comes together coherently.
It's also well-crafted from a technical standpoint, with good visuals and entertaining scenes. It never felt "long." I believe it's solid if you don't know the story, but if you do, it's at least very good.
Kriemhild isn't a main character, nor is Brunhild or the women's quarrel; it might seem that both characters seem a bit one-dimensional. However, I'd call this a deliberate technique to clarify that the story isn't about them for viewers who might expect otherwise. Alberich the dwarf plays a larger role, and boy-they are properly creepy.
All in all, if you know the book (yes, the old one!), "Hagen" will create a tension between the adaptation and the original. This allows you to better observe themes like "old world heroics versus courtliness", "individual glory versus greater good", and "who's at fault versus who's at shame." These themes are already present in the 13th-century book but are now brought into the spotlight for discussion.
It's also well-crafted from a technical standpoint, with good visuals and entertaining scenes. It never felt "long." I believe it's solid if you don't know the story, but if you do, it's at least very good.
Kriemhild isn't a main character, nor is Brunhild or the women's quarrel; it might seem that both characters seem a bit one-dimensional. However, I'd call this a deliberate technique to clarify that the story isn't about them for viewers who might expect otherwise. Alberich the dwarf plays a larger role, and boy-they are properly creepy.
All in all, if you know the book (yes, the old one!), "Hagen" will create a tension between the adaptation and the original. This allows you to better observe themes like "old world heroics versus courtliness", "individual glory versus greater good", and "who's at fault versus who's at shame." These themes are already present in the 13th-century book but are now brought into the spotlight for discussion.
German fantasy productions have become rare, so I was glad someone decided to once again use the Song of the Nibelungs, the classic German hero tale, as a source for inspiration - even if the movie itself is based on a book by Wolgang Hohlbein.
Visually this is an impressive looking production, with lush setdesign and inspiring costumes.
But the acting is wooden - all around, I'd say. Main protagonist Hagen f.e. Never goes on any kind of classic "Hero's Journey". He just stays his stoic, usual self throughout the entire film, often coming off as a person looking "into the film", while more interesting stuff happens to other characters.
It also can't seem to answer its own question whether or not to lean into the really outlandish fantasy elements of the story it is based on. That must explain why I never could shake the feeling off that entire scenes were simply missing, especially in the first act, because the film does a horrible job introducing characters and story. You'd be lost without at least basic knowledge of the Nibelungs.
See it for the visuals. Otherwise there's nothing really memorable here.
Visually this is an impressive looking production, with lush setdesign and inspiring costumes.
But the acting is wooden - all around, I'd say. Main protagonist Hagen f.e. Never goes on any kind of classic "Hero's Journey". He just stays his stoic, usual self throughout the entire film, often coming off as a person looking "into the film", while more interesting stuff happens to other characters.
It also can't seem to answer its own question whether or not to lean into the really outlandish fantasy elements of the story it is based on. That must explain why I never could shake the feeling off that entire scenes were simply missing, especially in the first act, because the film does a horrible job introducing characters and story. You'd be lost without at least basic knowledge of the Nibelungs.
See it for the visuals. Otherwise there's nothing really memorable here.
II was so looking forward to seeing this old German saga made into a movie and was disappointed
Language : did they always speak so stiltedly ? Since it's a fiction story, could the people involved have spoken as normal people? Screenplay: tried to be modern, not very plausible text.
Actors: trying very hard to appear "historical". What did the director tell them ? Speak nobly and behave as if you are high-born ? I don't want to offend anyone , but the director asked for too little emotion . Only Niewöhner makes an effort .
Camera : static and boring Soundtrack : without memorable melodies , when I think of the soundtrack to Gladiator for example , I have to cry . PS : the riding of the actors could have been trained instead of inserting fake pictures . It is sad how this great saga was processed . The result at the box office confirms my assessment .
Actors: trying very hard to appear "historical". What did the director tell them ? Speak nobly and behave as if you are high-born ? I don't want to offend anyone , but the director asked for too little emotion . Only Niewöhner makes an effort .
Camera : static and boring Soundtrack : without memorable melodies , when I think of the soundtrack to Gladiator for example , I have to cry . PS : the riding of the actors could have been trained instead of inserting fake pictures . It is sad how this great saga was processed . The result at the box office confirms my assessment .
Germany has some pretty awesome folklore and mythology. Germans also developed and built some of the best film equipment in the world. Unfortunately, Germany doesn't seem to have any talented people to bring those two together.
HAGEN is a tremendous waste of crew talent and money, and it is even more sad when you occasionally see a glimpse of what this could have been in the hands of somewhat capable filmmakers. The script delivers a boring, incoherent story that fails to take its audience on any journey. The characters are astonishingly bland, and Hagen himself stumbles through this film in complete apathy.
It is a special gift to make the ancient German equivalent of Severus Snape be so terribly boring, but somehow the writers-directors accomplished this seemingly impossible feat. His actor is amongst the best of the entire film, but still fails to carry it, actively being stripped of any charisma and/or actual things to do in the scene. The rest of the actors are mostly embarrassing, especially Kriemhild and Siegfried. What a farce.
And so, this is another fine example of how millions of euros get burned to produce embarrassingly bad films and shows and keep a small elite of "filmmakers" on top of the game. It doesn't even matter how bad and ill-received these productions are - somehow, it's always still the same names, the same production companies, the same incompetence.
HAGEN is a tremendous waste of crew talent and money, and it is even more sad when you occasionally see a glimpse of what this could have been in the hands of somewhat capable filmmakers. The script delivers a boring, incoherent story that fails to take its audience on any journey. The characters are astonishingly bland, and Hagen himself stumbles through this film in complete apathy.
It is a special gift to make the ancient German equivalent of Severus Snape be so terribly boring, but somehow the writers-directors accomplished this seemingly impossible feat. His actor is amongst the best of the entire film, but still fails to carry it, actively being stripped of any charisma and/or actual things to do in the scene. The rest of the actors are mostly embarrassing, especially Kriemhild and Siegfried. What a farce.
And so, this is another fine example of how millions of euros get burned to produce embarrassingly bad films and shows and keep a small elite of "filmmakers" on top of the game. It doesn't even matter how bad and ill-received these productions are - somehow, it's always still the same names, the same production companies, the same incompetence.
I loved it! The movie had all that is needed to be epic. Intriguing characters, a strong storyline, astonishing settings and of course a lot of Hagen. Although I imagined him being more talkative instead of being a german version of Ned Stark, I loved it anyway. It is an experience in cinema, that shouldn't be missed. The must-see movie of the year. A tribute to the old tale of the Nibelungen and a rare pearl within the German movie landscape. It's love story breaks with old stereotypes. It is not full of unnecessary sex scenes and the fight scenes are well shot. I cannot wait to see this movie again.
Did you know
- TriviaThis will be released as both a film and a series
- How long is Hagen?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Hagen - Im Tal der Nibelungen
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $1,305,655
- Runtime
- 2h 19m(139 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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