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Phoenix(2014 film)

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Phoenix
Theatrical release poster
Directed byChristian Petzold
Screenplay byChristian Petzold
Harun Farocki
Based onThe Return from the Ashes
by Hubert Monteilhet
Produced byFlorian Koerner von Gustorf
Michael Weber
StarringNina Hoss
Ronald Zehrfeld
Nina Kunzendorf
CinematographyHans Fromm
Edited byBettina Böhler
Music byStefan Will
Release dates
  • 25 September 2014(2014-09-25)(Germany)
  • 24 July 2015(2015-07-24)(United States)[1]
Running time
100 minutes
CountryGermany
LanguagesGerman
English
Box office$5.6 million[2]

Phoenixis a 2014 Germandrama filmdirected byChristian Petzold.Looselyadaptedfrom the 1961 novelLe Retour des Cendres(English:The Return from the Ashes) by French authorHubert Monteilhet,the film starsNina HossandRonald Zehrfeldas Nelly and Johnny Lenz, respectively.

Phoenixis set in Germany in the aftermath ofWorld War II,where Nelly, a Jewish woman who managed to surviveAuschwitz concentration camp,decides to go back to her husband Johnny inBerlin.She has had to have her face reconstructed owing to a bullet wound, and her husband does not recognize her. The film marks the sixth collaboration between Petzold and Hoss, as well as being the second film in which Hoss and Zehrfeld star opposite each other, afterBarbara(2012), also directed by Petzold.

Phoenixwas released in Germany on 25 September 2014, and in the United States on 24 July 2015. The film received significant critical acclaim, with praise for the film's suspenseful narrative, for its direction, for Hoss's performance, and for its production design and symbolic elements. The film was released onBlu-rayandDVDin North America byThe Criterion Collectionon 26 April 2016.

Plot

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Following the end ofWorld War II,Holocaustsurvivor and former cabaret singer Nelly Lenz returns to Berlin with damage caused by a bullet wound. Her friend Lene takes Nelly to a reconstructive plastic surgeon. Although Nelly tells the surgeon that she would like to look exactly as she used to, he is unable to recreate her old face completely, and Nelly is disappointed with the final result.

Lene finds an apartment for her and Nelly. Since Nelly's family members all died during the war, Nelly has inherited a considerable amount of money. Lene suggests to Nelly that she collect the money and that the two of them travel toPalestine.She believes they will be safe there and can help with the creation of an independent Jewish state.

Although Lene warns Nelly that her husband Johnny may have been the one to betray her to the Nazis, Nelly denies this possibility. She leaves the apartment at night to find him. She finds Johnny working in a nightclub called Phoenix. Johnny fails to recognize her, yet says later that she bears an uncanny resemblance to his late wife, Nelly. In order to obtain his wife's inheritance, he asks Nelly to impersonate his wife.

Johnny slowly transforms Nelly into an image and performer of her previous self before her arrest. Nelly goes along with Johnny's plan and keeps her true identity concealed, telling Johnny that her name is Esther. Although Lene continues to warn Nelly that Johnny was possibly complicit in her arrest, Nelly maintains a romantic view of the relationship. As Esther, she questions Johnny about his feelings for his wife and his behavior at the time of her arrest. Johnny avoids answering most of Nelly's questions, wanting her to concentrate on learning to impersonate his wife. Johnny tells Nelly that he plans to stage her "return" from the camps within the week, and invites several of the couple's old friends to meet her with him at the train station.

After spending several days with Johnny, Nelly returns to the apartment she shares with Lene. Here, the landlady informs her that Lene has killed herself, leaving behind a note for Nelly. In this note, Lene admits to Nelly that she knows that Johnny divorced Nelly the day before her arrest. She includes a copy of the divorce decree, which forces Nelly to accept Johnny's betrayal.

Nelly keeps this knowledge a secret, meeting Johnny and their old friends at the train station as planned. Later, at the home of one of her friends, Nelly invites the group to listen to her sing, accompanied by Johnny on piano. As Nelly sings, Johnny recognizes her voice and sees theidentification numbertattooed on her arm when she was a prisoner in the concentration camps. He stops playing the piano and shows strong feelings of guilt while Nelly finishes the song and walks away.

Cast

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Production

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Deviations from source novel

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The film's screenplay is loosely based onHubert Monteilhet's 1961 French detective novelLe Retour des cendres[fr](English:The Return from the Ashes), which set the story in France. The novel was freely adapted into the 1965J. Lee ThompsonfilmReturn from the Ashes.

In his adaptation, Christian Petzold decided to change the setting to Berlin shortly after the German surrender at the end of World War II.[3]The screenplay was co-written by Petzold and the artistHarun Farocki.It was the last screenplay of Farocki's career.

In the process, the scenarists changed the characters' names and occupations. They eliminated the book's narrative device, in which the survivor's daughter Fabienne discovers the story of her mother's and stepfather/lover's relationship through journal entries written by her mother. She is revealed to have died under suspicious circumstances. They also dropped a secondary plot in which Fabienne has developed a relationship with her stepfather, and thus challenges her mother for his affection when identities are ambiguous.

Soundtrack

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The film features theKurt Weill/Ogden Nashsong "Speak Low"(1943), andCole Porter's "Night and Day".

Release

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Home media

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Phoenixwas released onBlu-rayandDVDin Germany byIndigoon 27 March 2015.[4][5]

In the United Kingdom, the film was released on Blu-ray and DVD bySoda Pictureson 31 August 2015, with the Blu-ray including a 21-minute "making-of" featurette and the film's trailer.[6][7]

On 26 April 2016, the film was released byThe Criterion CollectionforRegion 1on Blu-ray and DVD using a 2K digital master. Both include a conversation between director Christian Petzold and actress Nina Hoss, a new interview with the film's cinematographer Hans Fromm, and a documentary featuring interviews with the cast and crew from 2013, as well as the film's original trailer, and a new English subtitle translation. Exclusive to the Blu-ray is 5.1 surroundDTS-HD Master Audiosoundtrack for the film. The new Blu-ray and DVD cover is made by Nessim Higson.[8][9]

Reception

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Box office

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Phoenixwas given a limited release in two theaters underSundance Selectson 24 July 2015, where it grossed $28,210 during the weekend.[1]As of 30 October 2015the film has earned a gross of $3,143,677 in North America, making it one of the highest-grossing German films in the United States in recent years.[2]Audiences surveyed byCinemaScoregave the film an average grade of "A–" on an A+ to F scale.[10]

Critical response

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Phoenixreceived acclaim from critics. The review aggregator websiteRotten Tomatoesreported a 98% approval rating with an average rating of 8.1/10 based on 121 reviews. The website's critical consensus reads: "Tense, complex, and drenched in atmosphere,Phoenixis a well-acted, smartly crafted war drama that finds writer-director Christian Petzold working at peak power. "[11]OnMetacritic,the film has a weighted average score of 89 out of 100, based on 30 reviews from mainstream critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[12]

The A.V. Club's A.A. Dowd describedPhoenixas a "noir psychodrama for the ages", and Nina Hoss as "an actress of old-school glamour and modern nuance". He wrote: "Petzold has made an expertly tuned genre piece, one whose pulpiness—guns, face changes, a danger-laced nightlife—doesn't conflict with its more serious aims, and whose deep real-world resonance doesn't compromise its dramatic economy. No scene is unnecessary. No shot is wasted."[13]At the end of 2019,Phoenixwas ranked No. 26 onThe A.V. Club's list of 100 best films of the 2010s,[14]and was No. 6 onTime's top 10 films of the decade compiled byStephanie Zacharek.[15]

TheNational Board of ReviewnamedPhoenixas one of the Top 5 Foreign Language Films of 2015.[16]

References

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  1. ^abBrooks, Brian (26 July 2015)."'Phoenix' And 'Samba' Bow Decent As 'Irrational Man' And 'Mr. Holmes' Expand Solidly: Specialty Box Office ".Deadline Hollywood.Penske Business Media.Retrieved27 July2015.
  2. ^ab"Phoenix (2015)".Box Office Mojo.IMDb.Retrieved4 October2015.
  3. ^Jenkins, David (23 July 2015)."Survivor's Song: Christian Petzold onPhoenix".Filmmaker(Summer 2015).Retrieved27 July2015.
  4. ^"Phoenix (2014) (Special Edition)".CeDe-Shop AG.Retrieved20 January2016.
  5. ^"Phoenix Blu-ray (Germany)".Blu-ray.Retrieved20 January2016.
  6. ^Errigo, Angie (31 August 2015)."Phoenix DVD".Movie Mail UK.ScreenOne. Archived fromthe originalon 2 August 2016.Retrieved20 January2016.
  7. ^Atanasov, Svet (11 September 2015)."Phoenix Blu-ray Review".Blu-ray.Retrieved20 January2016.
  8. ^"Phoenix (2014)".The Criterion Collection.Retrieved20 January2016.
  9. ^"Criterion Announces April Titles".Blu-ray.15 January 2016.Retrieved20 January2016.
  10. ^Tom, Brueggemann (July 26, 2015)."Arthouse Audit: Is 'Phoenix' This Year's 'Ida'? 'Mr. Holmes' Stays Strong".IndieWire.RetrievedFebruary 22,2023.
  11. ^"Phoenix (2015)".Rotten Tomatoes.Fandango Media.Retrieved23 August2018.
  12. ^"Phoenix Reviews".Metacritic.CBS Interactive.Retrieved21 January2016.
  13. ^Dowd, A.A. (23 July 2015)."Phoenix is a postwar Vertigo, a noir psychodrama for the ages".The A.V. Club.The Onion.Retrieved17 November2015.
  14. ^"The A.V. Club's 100 best movies of the 2010s".The A.V. Club.18 November 2019.Retrieved12 January2020.
  15. ^Zacharek, Stephanie(13 November 2019)."The 10 Best Movies of the 2010s".Time.Retrieved12 January2020.
  16. ^"National Board of Review Announced 2015 Award Winners".National Board of Review.December 2015.Retrieved1 December2015.
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