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Zentropa
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List Price: $19.99
Our Price: $9.99
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Product Details
- Starring: Jean-Marc Barr, Eddie Constantine, János Herskó, Cæcilia Holbek Trier, Henning Jensen
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- Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
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- Binding: VHS Tape
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- EAN: 9786302722550
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- Format: Black & White, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, NTSC
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- ISBN: 6302722551
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- Label: Walt Disney Video
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- Manufacturer: Walt Disney Video
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- Number of Items: 1
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- Product Group: Video
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- Publisher: Walt Disney Video
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- Release Date: 1996-09-11
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- Studio: Walt Disney Video
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- Theatrical Release Date: 1992-05-01
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- Title: Zentropa
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- UPC: 717951599032
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Avg Customer Rating: 
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Customer Reviews
Amazing Surrealism!
I first rented this from my library and I liked it so much that I had to purchase it. This film is very surreal and grabs one and takes one on a wild ride through post-WWII Germany via the railway. The ending is also not what it seems. This is truly a find in a world of international films!
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Unjustly Neglected Masterpiece
Zentropa is one of those rare films of which it truly can be said: it's unlike any movie you will see. It's a bloody shame this is not currently available as this is one of those films that deserves a much wider audience. As a personal aside, everyone I've shared this film with - and what a widely disparate assortment of folk that is - has been astonished by it. von Triers pays homage to the great expressionist filmmakers who went before him and he does them proud.
von Triers realizes the medium of film and applies the qualities of a true gesumkunstwerk - every element, from script to lighting, to sounds to visual images and beyond has been carefully, masterfully calculated for its total effect. The entire movie is not unlike a trip and the ultimate destination of Zentropa is both expected and mindbogglingly shocking.
Let's hope Zentropa gets put back out soon for re-release on DVD - maybe with some extras from von Triers.
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Brilliant Artistic and Enigmatic Tale of a Broken Europe...
The voice of Max von Sydow hypnotizes the audience by stating, "You will now listen to my voice..." as he continuous to count to ten, which pulls the viewer into a nightmarish dream. Simultaneously the opening shot of railroad tracks is flashing by, which visually puts the viewer in a trance as the screen turns black. This beginning incites the audience participation as the film definitely requires a high level of cognitive participation, unlike most films made where the story is driven by the scripted dialogue. Zentropa becomes a visual and aural journey that mesmerizes the audience in a highly artistic manner.
Comparisons have been made with David Lynch's Eraserhead (1977), Hitchcock's Notorious (1946), and the director Wim Wender's cinematic creations. Despite the previous comparisons, Lars von Trier creates a unique cinematic experience that could be compared to an artistic and political journey into the aftermath of World War II. Cities lay in ruin and people suffer from starvation as the artery, the railroads of Zentropa, of the recovering Europa continues its exploitation of the people as it carted off millions to a certain death in the Auschwitz, Buchenwald, and Dachau during the war. This creates a tense Machiavellian atmosphere where fear, paranoia, and anxiety have a firm grip of the people. This causes most people to alienate themselves from society.
The cinematic journey begins with German-American Leopold Kessler (Jean-Marc Barr) who departs United States after the end of World War II for Germany. When Leopold arrives to the shattered Germany he is greeted by Uncle Kessler (Ernst-Hugo Järegård) who gets him a job as a train conductor on one of the luxurious sleeping-cars of Zentropa. Through work Leopold meet Katharina Hartmann (Barbara Sukowa), the daughter of the owner of Zentropa, with whom he falls in love. However, Leopold's desire for Katharina drags him into a dangerous affair of terrorism, politics, friendship, and murder.
The pacifist Leopold tries to balance his life through abstention of politics, avoidance, not choosing sides, and minding his own business, which is also suggested by his Uncle Kessler. However, no matter how hard Leopold tries to follow his own policy he is forced into situations where he must choose a side as it would otherwise have a catastrophic affect on the people for which he cares. Eventually Leopold finds out the hard way that choices must be made based on his own conscious.
Lars von Trier plays with the visuals throughout the film as a painter would with a new innovative color that would revolutionize art forms. The film is shot in black and white with occasional insertions of color, which enhances the cinematic importance of moment. Von Trier also uses trick photography and double exposures in order to artistically magnify the shot, which creates personalized imprints in the audience's cinematic experience. Ultimately, von Trier pushes the envelop as his message is decoded through his brilliant enigmatic tale of a broken Europe where unity is the sole answer for the continent.
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Hypnotic
Surely one of the GREATEST directors of all time, this is his masterpiece. Armed with the most hypnotic narration I've ever heard & an extraordinarily abstract form, the story is constantly propelled forward by Max Von Sydow's unmistakable voice. Along with DANCER IN THE DARK, DOGVILLE & BREAKING THE WAVES, ZENTROPA is an unforgettable journey. Please plead with this film's distributor to give it the beautiful widescreen DVD release it deserves.....
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TOO CONVOLUTED TO ENTHRALL, BUT TOO BEAUTIFUL TO IGNORE
In his typical scattered narrative, von Trier crafts a hypnotic tale of an American in the post-WWII rubble of Germany, as he gets entangled with a stunning local woman. Problem is, the woman is revealed to have been a dangerous operative during the war with far-from-simple roots. Sounds like a fairly comprehensible theme to wrap a thriller around, but no, not under the sly lens of von Trier! His screenplay copiously employs his characteristic symbolism, effortlessly morphing between black & white and technicolor, using double-exposures, backprojections, and some fascinating trick photography such as superimpositions. The resulting murky, obscure atmosphere of psychological disorientation may lead a casual viewer to much the same frustrations as the film's protagonist -- of never quite finding a footing in the surrealistic, trancy goings-on. But if you prefer ambitious enigmas to lacklustre boxoffice hits, then give this truly challenging film a chance.
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