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Revenge German Dubbed

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Revenge
Directed byCoralie Fargeat
Produced by
  • Marc-Etienne Schwartz
  • Marc Stanimirovic
  • Jean-Yves Robin
Written byCoralie Fargeat
Starring
  • Vincent Colombe
  • Guillaume Bouchède
Music byRob
CinematographyRobrecht Heyvaert
Edited by
Production
companies
  • MES Productions
  • Monkey Pack Films
  • Charades
  • Logical Pictures
  • Nexus Factory
  • Umedia
  • uFund
  • Cinémage 12
Distributed byRézo Films
  • 11 September 2017 (TIFF)
  • 7 February 2018 (France)
108 minutes[1]
CountryFrance[2]
Language
  • English
  • French
Budget$2.9 million
Box office$692,079[3]

Revenge is a 2017 French rape and revengeactionhorror film written and directed by Coralie Fargeat, and starring Matilda Lutz, Kevin Janssens, Vincent Colombe and Guillaume Bouchède. The plot follows a young woman who is assaulted and left for dead in the desert by three men, where she recovers and seeks vengeance upon her attackers.

Revenge had its world premiere on 11 September 2017 at the Toronto International Film Festival, as part of the Midnight Madness section. The film was theatrically released in France on 7 February 2018 by Rezo Films, and received critical acclaim, with praise for the screenplay, direction, cinematography, and Lutz's performance.

Plot[edit]

Jennifer (dubbed 'Jen') is an American socialite who is in a secret relationship with her married neighbor Richard. The two fly out to Richard's secluded home in the middle of the desert for a weekend together before his annual hunting trip with friends Stan and Dimitri; Richard's helicopter pilot gives him some peyote as a gift before he departs. However, Stan and Dimitri arrive a day early, disappointing Richard, who was hoping to keep Jen a secret. While the three men and Jen have a fun night of drinking and dancing, Richard tells Jen to hide the peyote from Stan and Dmitri; she conceals it in her necklace.

The next morning, while Richard is away, Stan tries to get Jen to have sex with him, claiming she had come on to him the night before. When she refuses, he rapes her. Dimitri sees the rape occur but chooses to actively ignore it. Richard returns, berates Stan, and offers Jen a large sum of money to forget about the incident. When Richard refuses to send Jen home and she threatens to reveal the nature of their relationship to Richard's wife, he slaps her and she runs off into the desert while the three men give chase, ending at a dead-end cliff. Richard pretends to call his pilot to take Jen home and instead pushes her off a cliff, where she is impaled on a tree during the fall. She falls unconscious and is left for dead by the three men, who promise to return later and retrieve her body and then continue their hunting trip as if nothing had happened.

Jen wakes up and uses her lighter to set the tree she is impaled on fire, causing it to break and allowing her to make her escape with a branch still stuck through her body. She wanders through the desert, trying to avoid the three men, who have since realized that she's escaped and have split up to search. Jen encounters Dimitri urinating in a river and attempts to shoot him with his own shotgun, but it is not loaded. Dimitri gains the upper hand and tries to drown Jen, but she takes his hunting knife and stabs both of his eyes. He bleeds out in the river as Jen takes his supplies.

Jen hides in a cave and uses the peyote to numb herself before removing the branch and cauterizing the wound with an aluminum beer can, branding herself with the beer's phoenix logo. After a series of nightmares of the men hunting her, Jen sets out to find them first. After Richard and Stan discover and dispose of Dimitri's body, Richard orders Stan to track Jen down in his SUV. Stan runs out of gas while in Jen's sights, and Jen shoots him in the shoulder while he attempts to refill the tank. Jen and Stan engage in a gunfight, in which Stan blows Jen's earlobe off with a rifle and Jen tricks Stan into stepping on a large piece of broken glass. After removing the glass from his foot, Stan tries to run Jen down with the SUV. However, Jen kills him with Dimitri's shotgun and takes the car for herself.

Richard returns to the house, calls the helicopter, and takes a shower, but hears a noise and searches the property for Jen. She finds him once he's given up and shoots him in the stomach. The two chase each other around the house with shotguns, and Richard knocks Jen out with his shotgun. He tries to strangle her, but she shoves her hand in his stomach wound, forcing him to drop her. Jen recovers her shotgun and shoots Richard in the chest, killing him. A bloodied but triumphant Jen walks out of the house and turns around as she hears the helicopter approach.

Cast[edit]

  • Matilda Lutz as Jen
  • Kevin Janssens as Richard
  • Vincent Colombe as Stan
  • Guillaume Bouchède as Dimitri
  • Jean-Louis Tribes as Roberto

Production[edit]

Principal photography on the film began on 6 February and wrapped on 21 March 2017.[4]

Release[edit]

The film had its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival on 11 September 2017.[5][6][7] Prior to that, Shudder acquired distribution rights to the film.[8] It was later revealed Neon would distribute the film theatrically in the United States, before its release on Shudder.[9]

The film was released in France on 7 February 2018 by Rézo Films.[10] It was released in the United States on 11 May 2018, in a limited release and through video on demand.[11]

Critical response[edit]

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 92% based on 128 reviews, and an average rating of 7.51/10. The website's critical consensus reads, 'Revenge slices and dices genre tropes, working within an exploitation framework while adding a timely – yet never less than viscerally thrilling – feminist spin.'[12] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 81 out of 100, based on 23 critics.[13]

A.O. Scott of The New York Times said, 'Blunt, bloody and stylish almost in spite of itself, Revenge is a synthesis of exploitation and feminism.'[14] Kevin Maher of The Times provides a more negative review: 'Labelled a 'feminist rape-revenge movie', it takes all the traditional tenets of that most dubious of genres and simply does them again.'[15]

Third age total war (m2 mod for mac Launch Medieval Total War 2, and in the Launcher Option window, go to the 'Advanced' tab at the top of the window.5. Move the folder 'ThirdAge3' (or something like that, the entire mod anyways) into the Mod folder where the 4 Kingdoms campaigns are (Americas, Teutonic etc).4.

References[edit]

  1. ^'REVENGE (18)'. British Board of Film Classification. 1 May 2018. Retrieved 23 August 2018.
  2. ^'Revenge de Coralie Fargeat (2017) - UniFrance'. UniFrance (in French). Retrieved 30 April 2020.
  3. ^'Revenge'. The Numbers. Retrieved 30 May 2019.
  4. ^Lemercier, Fabien (1 March 2017). 'Coralie Fargeat shooting Revenge'. Cineuropa. Retrieved 20 May 2018.
  5. ^Wilner, Norman (1 August 2017). 'TIFF 2017's Midnight Madness, documentary slates are announced'. Now. Retrieved 2 August 2017.
  6. ^'Revenge'. Toronto International Film Festival. Retrieved 20 May 2018.
  7. ^Erbland, Kate (13 September 2017). ''Revenge': Inside the TIFF Midnight Madness Premiere So Intense That Paramedics Were Called'. IndieWire. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  8. ^Lang, Brent; Keslassy, Elsa (30 August 2017). 'Shudder Nabs 'Revenge' in Pre-Toronto Film Festival Deal (EXCLUSIVE)'. Variety. Retrieved 20 May 2018.
  9. ^Hipes, Patrick (23 January 2018). 'NEON Teams With Shudder On 'Revenge' Deal – Sundance'. Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 20 May 2018.
  10. ^'Revenge - Bande annonce 1 - VO - (2018)'. Orange Cinéma. Retrieved 20 May 2018.
  11. ^Collis, Clark (29 March 2018). 'A woman takes bloody Revenge against her assaulters in exclusive trailer'. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 20 May 2018.
  12. ^'Revenge (2017)'. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 28 March 2020.
  13. ^'Revenge Reviews'. Metacritic. Retrieved 9 May 2018.
  14. ^Scott, A.O. (9 May 2018). 'Review: In 'Revenge,' the Trophy Turns Hunter'. The New York Times. Retrieved 9 May 2018.
  15. ^Maher, Kevin (11 May 2018). 'Film review: Revenge'. The Times. Retrieved 21 May 2018.

External links[edit]

  • Revenge on IMDb
  • Revenge at Metacritic
  • Revenge at Rotten Tomatoes
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Revenge_(2017_film)&oldid=954095581'
Hamlet
Hamlet, Prinz von Dänemark
Directed byFranz Peter Wirth
Produced byHans Gottschalk
Screenplay byFranz Peter Wirth
Based onHamlet
by William Shakespeare
StarringMaximilian Schell
Music byRolf Unkel
CinematographyKurt Gewissen
Boris Goriup
Hermann Gruber
Rudolf H. Jakob
Edited byAdolf Schlyssleder
Release date
Running time
152 minutes
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman

Hamlet (German: Hamlet, Prinz von Dänemark, lit.'Hamlet, Prince of Denmark') is a 1961 German mysterydrama film directed by Franz Peter Wirth. The screenplay by Wirth is adapted from the William Shakespearetragedyof the same name. The film was initially broadcast on television on 1 January 1961 in West Germany before being released theatrically in the United States in 1962.

Plot[edit]

Prince Hamlet of Denmark returns home to find his father murdered and his mother remarrying the murderer, his uncle.

Cast[edit]

  • Maximilian Schell as Hamlet
  • Hans Caninenberg as Claudius
  • Wanda Rotha as Gertrude
  • Dunja Movar as Ophelia
  • Franz Schafheitlin as Polonius
  • Dieter Kirchlechner as Laertes
  • Karl Michael Vogler as Horatio
  • Eckard Dux as Rosencrantz
  • Herbert Bötticher as Guildenstern
  • Karl Lieffen as Osric
  • Rolf Boysen as Bernardo
  • Michael Paryla as Francisco
  • Alexander Engel as Geist
  • Adolf Gerstung as Schauspieler
  • Paul Verhoeven as Erster Totengräber (First gravedigger)
  • Johannes Buzalski as Zweiter Totengräber (Second gravedigger)

Reception[edit]

Bill Gibron, writing for DVD Verdict, said that 'In the literary life, you either love Shakespeare or you don't, and the Germans definitely do not. This 1960 television version of the Bard's brainchild is so cold and calculated it's like Berlin in February.'[1] FlickFilosopher wrote that 'this is a take on Hamlet that could otherwise be construed as cruel and unusual punishment.'[2]Kevin Murphy wrote, 'Leave it to Germany to turn a bleak brooding play into an even bleaker, broodinger movie-of-the-week for German television. This thing, made in the early '60s, has 'we're still really sorry for the war and feel terrible' all over it.'[3]

Dub[edit]

Hamlet was dubbed into English under the supervision of Edward Dmytryk. Schell provided his own voice: among the other actors used for the dub were Ricardo Montalbán (Claudius) and John Banner (Polonius). This dub was later featured in a season 10 episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000.[4]

Revenge German Dubbed

References[edit]

  1. ^DVD Verdict Review - Mystery Science Theater 3000 Collection, Volume 4
  2. ^to be or not to be: Maximilian Schell as Hamlet FlickFilosopher.com
  3. ^Episode 1009- Hamlet
  4. ^Episode guide: 1009- Hamlet « Satellite News

External links[edit]

  • Hamlet on IMDb
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hamlet_(1961_film)&oldid=943197221'