Moscow in New York
Movie | |
---|---|
German title | Moscow in New York |
Original title | Moscow on the Hudson |
Country of production | United States |
original language | English |
Publishing year | 1984 |
length | 117 minutes |
Age rating | FSK 12 |
Rod | |
Director | Paul Mazursky |
script | Paul Mazursky , Leon Capetanos |
production | Paul Mazursky |
music | David McHugh |
camera | Donald McAlpine |
cut | Richard Halsey |
occupation | |
| |
Moscow in New York (Original title: Moscow on the Hudson ) is an American comedy film directed by Paul Mazursky from 1984. The German premiere was on November 2, 1984.
action
Saxophonist Vladimir Ivanov worked for the Moscow Circus in the early 1980s before perestroika . He feels unhappy, lives in an overcrowded apartment with his whole family. He has to crouch towards his superior, he has to stand in line for hours for shoes. In order to buy gasoline for his small car on the black market, he repeatedly roams the streets. One would like to see his grandfather behind bars for shouting anti-Soviet slogans out of the window.
The circus is sent to New York . Vladimir's friend Anatoly, who had been talking about weaning the whole time, changed his mind. Vladimir, who has been trying all the time to talk his friend out of his plan, does, however, withdraw. At Bloomingdale’s he hides behind the counter in the perfume department. There he met the saleswoman Lucia. While still in the department store, he asks for asylum in the USA. The black security guard Lionel Witherspoon has sympathy with the refugee and lets him live with him in Harlem.
However, Vladimir imagined life in New York to be different. He has to find a job, he speaks little English, he is lonely and afraid of being deported. The neighborhood is terrible and the work he finds poorly paid. Ultimately, Vladimir finds out that the American way of life is not what it appears to be. But that's freedom. Finally, Vladimir plays the saxophone in the street.
background
The circus scenes were in each specific case in the "Russian" or "American" reshaped Munich Cirkus- Kronebau rotated. Udo Kier had a cameo as a gay, but was not mentioned in the credits.
In 1977 film editor Richard Halsey won an Oscar for his work on Rocky . Albert Wolsky also came to the set with an Oscar award. In 1980 he was honored for his costume design for Behind the Spotlight . In 1992 he got another Oscar for Bugsy .
Artist Saul Steinberg successfully sued production company Columbia Pictures for copyright infringement. Steinberg was able to convince the court that his poster "View of the World from 9th Avenue" (cover picture of The New Yorker Magazine ) served as the basis for the film poster.
Reviews
"A comedic fairy tale told with restrained, discreet irony about the human longing for freedom, self-determination and meaning in life", wrote the lexicon of international films .
Awards
At the awards ceremony of the Golden Globe Awards 1985 Robin Williams was in the category protagonist Best - Musical or Comedy nomination.
synchronization
The German dubbed version was created by Interopa Film GmbH, Berlin, with the dialogue book and the dialogue direction by Thomas Keck .
role | actor | Voice actor |
---|---|---|
Vladimir Ivanov | Robin Williams | Jürgen Kluckert |
Lucia Lombardo | María Conchita Alonso | Monica Bielenstein |
Lionel Witherspoon | Cleavant Derricks | Wolfgang Condrus |
Orlando Ramirez | Alejandro Rey | Frank Glaubrecht |
Boris | Saveli Kramarov | Uwe Paulsen |
Anatoly | Elya Baskin | Joachim Tennstedt |
Yuri | Oleg Rudnik | Ortwin Speer |
Web links
- Moscow on the Hudson in the Internet Movie Database (English)
- Moscow on the Hudson at Rotten Tomatoes (English)
- Moscow in New York at Metacritic (English)
- Moscow in New York in the online film database
Individual evidence
- ^ Moscow in New York. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed June 10, 2018 .
- ^ Moscow in New York. In: synchronkartei.de. German synchronous index , accessed on July 26, 2018 .