Mephisto (1981 film)
Mephisto | |
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File:Mephisto DVD.jpg
DVD cover
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Directed by | István Szabó |
Written by | Péter Dobai Klaus Mann (novel) István Szabó |
Starring | Klaus Maria Brandauer Krystyna Janda Ildikó Bánsági |
Release dates
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Running time
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144 minutes |
Country | Hungary |
Language | English Hungarian German Esperanto |
Mephisto is the title of a 1981 film adaptation of Klaus Mann's novel Mephisto, directed by István Szabó, and starring Klaus Maria Brandauer as Hendrik Höfgen. The film was a co-production between companies in West Germany, Hungary and Austria.
Story, Morale & Backgrounder
The film adapts the story of Mephistopheles and Doctor Faustus by having the main character Hendrik Höfgen abandon his conscience and continue to act and ingratiate himself with the Nazi Party and so keep and improve his job and social position.
The plot's bitter irony is that the protagonist's fondest dream is to play Mephisto - but in order to achieve this dream he in effect sells his soul, and realises too late that in reality he is Faustus; it is the Nazi leader having a major role in the film (modeled on Hermann Göring) who is the true Mephisto.
Both the film and Mann's 1936 novel mirror the career of Mann's brother-in-law, Gustaf Gründgens, who is considered by many to have supported the Nazi Party and abandoned his previous political views for personal gain rather than conscience. (Playing Mephisto was indeed the peak of Gründgens' career, though in reality this was long after the fall of the Nazis.) However, Mann's book is satirical, making Höfgen more a lampoon than a character in his own right, while the film offers a more realistic exploration of a flawed but recognisably human character.[citation needed]
Cast
- Klaus Maria Brandauer as Hendrik Hoefgen
- Krystyna Janda as Barbara Bruckner
- Ildikó Bánsági as Nicoletta von Niebuhr
- Rolf Hoppe as Tábornagy
- György Cserhalmi as Hans Miklas
- Péter Andorai as Otto Ulrichs
- Karin Boyd as Juliette Martens
- Christine Harbort as Lotte Lindenthal
- Tamás Major as Oskar Kroge, színigazgató
- Ildikó Kishonti as Dora Martin, primadonna
- Mária Bisztrai as Motzné, tragika
- Sándor Lukács as Rolf Bonetti, bonviván
- Martin Hellberg as Professor Reinhardt
- Ágnes Bánfalvy
- Judit Hernádi as Rachel Mohrenwitz, drámai szende
- Vilmos Kun as Ügyelõ
Awards
Mephisto was awarded the 1981 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film; the film was submitted to the Academy by Hungary.[1] To date it is the only Hungarian film to win the Foreign Language Oscar.
At the 1981 Cannes Film Festival the film won the Best Screenplay Award and the FIPRESCI Prize.[2]
See also
- List of submissions to the 54th Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film
- List of Hungarian submissions for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film
References
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External links
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Mephisto at IMDb
- Mephisto at AllMovie
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- Pages with reference errors
- Pages with broken file links
- 1981 films
- Articles with unsourced statements from February 2007
- 1980s drama films
- Hungarian drama films
- German drama films
- Austrian drama films
- Hungarian films
- West German films
- East German films
- Austrian films
- German-language films
- Hungarian-language films
- Political drama films
- Films about actors
- Films about Nazi Germany
- Films set in the 1930s
- Films based on German novels
- Films directed by István Szabó
- Best Foreign Language Film Academy Award winners
- Works based on the Faust legend
- Works set in theatres and opera houses