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Alice in the Cities

1974 [GERMAN]

Action / Drama

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Wim Wenders Photo
Wim Wenders as Man by Jukebox in American Cafe
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
1.01 GB
1204*720
German 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 53 min
P/S ...
1.88 GB
1792*1072
German 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 53 min
P/S 0 / 8

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by secondtake9 / 10

Tender, restrained, elegiac road film about unexpected meaning...

Alice in the Cities (1974)

If there are movies, like comedies and horror films, that are better seen in a crowd, there are some movies that might be best seen alone. This is one of them, and I didn't realize until I was almost done because it had become so absorbing I was really enjoying my isolation within the movie.

The plot is simple, and I won't say how it happens, but a nine year old Dutch-German girl is left with a German man in the United States, and he takes care of her as they search for a way to find her mother or grandmother. Their first step is to fly back to Amsterdam, and then in Germany in a little car they poke around looking for her home.

It's a road movie, though unlike any other. The two main characters are about as perfect and as natural as it gets. The man is a thoughtful, drifting writer and photographer, an artist in the counter-culture way of the times. He has no real ambition, but observes the world with poetic appreciation. So when this girl is made part of his life, he takes it in stride. That's key to the mood of the film, that this very unlikely situation can continue for so long because he just goes with the flow. There is no running to the police, no panic. But there is no sense either that this is an accepted new relationship. It's for the moment, but the end of the moment is continually deferred.

The girl goes with the flow as well, and is as brilliant as the man at being natural in front of the camera, often doing nothing. She's made to be lovable, of course, but not in any coy or sentimental way. (If this were a Hollywood film we'd all be barfing by now.) All of this matters because it isn't what's happening that really matters, but it's just being together, the two of them, and then (you realize) the three of you. You wish it was you who was doing this utterly humane, deeply felt act of traveling and being supportive and seeing modern (1973) Germany.

The filming is simple black and white but brilliantly effective, down to the heart wrenching last shot (which was probably the most expensive). The setting is actually a surprise in that you never think of the ordinary middle class and industrial parts of middle Europe being so interesting. The music comes and goes, and refers to the earthy music of the time, mostly American blues based stuff.

In a little way this reminded me of "Stranger than Paradise" and when I connected the two I saw how much Jarmusch (in that film) owed to these art film experiments just a few years earlier. And now that I think of it, this one is more touching and important even if "Stranger than Paradise" is more inventive. "Alice in the Cities" makes a case for a kind of film we don't see being made now, and which might have another vogue one of these years in reaction to the general highly refined, highly artificial worlds of most movies today. I hope so.

Reviewed by hitchcockthelegend7 / 10

Odyssey.

German journalist Philip Winter is suffering from writers block as he travels across the East Coast of America, he instead chooses to snap Polaroids instead of writing, once satisfied that that will tell his story of American culture and landscapes he sets off to return to Germany. At the airport he meets Lisa and her nine year old daughter, Alice, getting flights home prove to be difficult and the three of them end up stopping overnight at some digs. Lisa disappears and leaves Alice in Phillip's care, thus sending the two on an odyssey as they travel together thru Europe in search of Alice's grandmother, but it's the journey that each of them take mentally that will be of most importance.

This is the first film of what is regarded as Wim Wenders loosely connected road trilogy, following on from this picture would be Falsche Bewegung in 1975 and then culminating with the quite brilliant Im Lauf der Zeit in 1976. Quite what Wenders intentions were with this picture is is not immediately clear, for certain his framing {obsession}with American culture comes to the fore from the off, both in the changing landscapes and the use of American pop and rock music. But as things progress it's the simple message of purpose that a chance encounter can have, our odd couple here are at first deeply suspicious of each other, not caring for each others company in the slightest, but as time moves on they begin to understand each other and tune into each of their respective mental waves. Life quite simply found a way thru two differing humans thrust together unwillingly, it's not deep or remotely profound, it's simple and warm in its execution, and the final (tremendous) pull away aerial shot that Wenders gives us crowns this accomplished and very enjoyable piece. 7.5/10

Reviewed by Hitchcoc9 / 10

A Fragile Journey

This film slowly grows on one. As the introverted, taciturn young writer/photographer bumbles around, trying to find his must, he is cast into a situation he never expected. He finds himself as the father figure to a nine-year-old girl who has basically been abandoned by her mother. She is a bit selfish and abrasive, but has a silent charm. What is interesting is that these two end up in Europe with nothing to really go on. They search for a grandmother who is obviously not part of the girl's life. Alice can't even remember her name, and this forces them to guess at villages and drive the streets in a rented Renault. What this is really about is the quiet affection that develops between them. He has probably spent his whole life answering to no one. He has a kind of writer's block which has made it impossible to move on but one wonders if he has ever felt anything worth writing about before this. From a contemporary, American perspective, this is a bit uncomfortable to watch, but he is an honorable character when it comes to the girl. We also must remember these are Europeans who have a little different view of these kinds of relationships. This a quiet, lovely little film with precious vignettes that match the photographs the principle character takes on his Polaroid camera.

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