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Das Wunder in der 8. Straße [VHS]
Format | Dolby, HiFi-Sound, PAL |
Beitragsverfasser | John McPherson, Ronald L. Schwary, S. S. Wilson, Dennis Boutsikaris, Ralph McQuarrie, Steven Spielberg, Brad Bird, Hume Cronyn, Matthew Robbins, James Horner, Brent Maddock, Jessica Tandy, Michael Carmine, Elizabeth Peña, Frank McRae Mehr anzeigen |
Sprache | Deutsch |
Laufzeit | 1 Stunde und 42 Minuten |
Produktbeschreibungen
Nur ein Wunder kann den letzten 5 Mietern eines alten Hauses in Manhattan helfen. Ringsum ist die Hölle, ein Haus nach dem anderen wird rücksichtslos dem Erdboden gleichgemacht, denn ein skrupelloser Baulöwe plant ein neues Geschäftsviertel. Faye und Frank, die in dem Haus seit Jahrzehnten eine Imbißstube betreiben, sind ratlos. Doch eines Nachts geschieht das Wunder! Zwei fliegende Untertassen, kaum größer als eine Handfläche, verbünden sich mit den Hausbewohnern und greifen in das Geschehen ein. Nun werden die Karten neu gemischt, mit außerirdischen Kräften und Tricks sorgen die kleinen Fremdlinge für allerlei Verwirrung und Chaos...
Produktinformation
- Alterseinstufung : Freigegeben ab 6 Jahren
- Sprache : Deutsch
- Verpackungsabmessungen : 18,6 x 10,64 x 2,85 cm; 170 Gramm
- Medienformat : Dolby, HiFi-Sound, PAL
- Laufzeit : 1 Stunde und 42 Minuten
- Erscheinungstermin : 1. Juli 1990
- Darsteller : Hume Cronyn, Jessica Tandy, Frank McRae, Elizabeth Peña, Michael Carmine
- Sprache, : Nicht qualifiziert (Dolby Surround)
- Studio : Universal/4 Front Video
- ASIN : B00004R65W
- Anzahl Disks : 1
- Amazon Bestseller-Rang: Nr. 246,700 in DVD & Blu-ray (Siehe Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)
- Nr. 11,585 in Science Fiction (DVD & Blu-ray)
- Nr. 47,270 in Action & Abenteuer (DVD & Blu-ray)
- Nr. 51,411 in Komödie & Unterhaltung (DVD & Blu-ray)
- Kundenrezensionen:
Kundenrezensionen
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Erfahren Sie mehr darüber, wie Kundenbewertungen bei Amazon funktionieren.Rezensionen mit Bildern
Eine Meldung einreichen
- Belästigung, vulgäre Ausdrücke
- Spam, Werbeanzeige, Werbeaktionen
- Wurde im Austausch gegen Bargeld, Rabatte verfasst
Leider ist ein Fehler aufgetreten.
Bitte versuch es später erneut.-
Spitzenrezensionen
Spitzenbewertungen aus Deutschland
Derzeit tritt ein Problem beim Filtern der Rezensionen auf. Bitte versuche es später erneut.
So, und nun zum Artikel. Das Cover: 1A. Ist sogar mit Wendecover. Die Bildqualität: Gestochenscharf. Der Ton, absolut super. Für jeden echten Filmsammler ein Muss.
Sehr empfehlenswert!😃👍
Sehr empfehlenswert!😃👍
Zur Story:
Das einst alte Juwel und glorreiche Viertel der Stadt soll abgerissen werden, um einer neuen Büromeile zu weichen. Überall wird planiert und abgerissen, nur ein altes 1930er Diner, das von seinen noch älteren Bewohnern betrieben wird (und die restlichen Mieter) halten stand, obwohl alle immer wieder von einer Gang belästigt werden, die sie zum Auszug 'überreden' soll. Just in diesem Chaos strandet ein Ufo-Pärchen (aus Altmetall?), um seine Kinder zu kriegen und das Viertel und alle Bewohner gehörig auf Trab zu bringen.
Knuddelige Mini-Ufos, die noch knuddeligere Kinder kriegen, in dem sie sie aus Blech zusammenbauen und beleben. Sicher, tricktechnisch ist das ganze ein alter Hut, aber das Ganze versprüht immer noch Charme und weiß zu unterhalten, wenn man ein bisschen Gut-gegen-Böse-Kitsch verträgt.
Und wie bei den meisten Produktionen der 80er von Steven Spielberg, wie Die Goonies, Gremlins, Explorers stehen völlig normale Menschen mit ihren alltäglichen Sorgen im Mittelpunkt. Hier die Bewohner eines alten Hauses, das neuen Hochhäusern weichen soll. Eine Schlägerbande soll sie vertreiben, doch dann erhalten die Bewohner gänzlich unerwartete Hilfe.....
Zauberhaft und niedlich triffts bei diesem Film am besten. Der ganze Streifen ist beste Familienunterhaltung und bietet eigentlich für jeden etwas. Vor allem aber viel Humor und Herz. Zwar mögen die Effekte der Ausserirdischen an wenigen Stellen heute etwas überholt wirken, doch das machen sie mit Charme und ihrer pfiffigen Art wieder wett. Nostalgiebonus inklusive. Zudem wirken die handgemachten kleinen Raumschiffe noch um einiges interessanter, als es heutige CGI-Effekte vielleicht tun würden.
Spitzenrezensionen aus anderen Ländern
*batteries not included is a delightful fantasy for the whole family presented by Academy Award® winner Steven Spielberg. When an unscrupulous real estate developer sends thugs to get rid of the last five tenants of a deteriorating apartment building, they need a miracle to save their building from demolition. One night, when all hope seems lost, tiny visitors from outer space mysteriously glide through their windows and begin to turn the tide with their magical powers. Filled with dazzling special effects, this amazing story of intergalactic warmth stars the acclaimed husband-and-wife team of Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy as a pair of feisty long-term tenants whose faith is rewarded in ways they never expected.
FILM FACT: Awards and Nominations: Saturn Awards: Win: Best Actress for Jessica Tandy. Nominated: Best Fantasy Film. Young Artist Awards: Win: Best Family Motion Picture for a Comedy. Principal photography started in New York in August 1986, but location scouting began almost a year before. "Since the story called for a solitary building amidst rubble," explained producer Ronald Schwary, "we had to find a vacant lot with burned-out buildings all around it. We finally settled on an actual building on 8th Street between Avenues C and D on New York's Lower East Side (the building no longer stands, and was probably located on the site of the current Housing Bureau substation, or the building to the east, approx. 40°43'27.33'N 73°58'40.49'W. Production designer Ted Haworth designed a three-sided, four-story tenement facade and oversaw its construction on a location that covered most of a city block. In the name of authenticity, he brought 50 to 60 truckloads of rubble to cover the once vacant lot. It was so remarkably realistic that the Sanitation Department came by and took away prop garbage one morning, potential customers stopped by to eat in the diner, and the business agent for the Plumber's Local of New York visited, demanding to know why there wasn't a permit down at City Hall for the construction."
Cast: Hume Cronyn, Jessica Tandy, Frank McRae, Elizabeth Peña, Michael Carmine, Dennis Boutsikaris, Tom Aldredge, Jane Hoffman, John DiSanti, John Pankow, MacIntyre Dixon, Michael Greene, Doris Belack, Wendy Schaal, José Angel Santana, James Le Gros, Ronald L. Schwary, Susan Shoffner, Shelly Kurtz, Joe Hamer, H. Clay Dear, Howard Renensland, Judy Grafe, Alice Beardsley, Dick Martinsen, Charles Raymond, Riki Colon, Jon Imparato, David Vasquez, John Arceri, Lorenzo Gaspar (uncredited) and Luis Guzmán (uncredited)
Director: Matthew Robbins
Producers: Frank Marshall, Gerald R. Molen, Kathleen Kennedy, Ronald L. Schwary and Steven Spielberg
Screenplay: Brad Bird, Brent Maddock, Matthew Robbins, S.S. Wilson and Mick Garris (story)
Composer: James Horner
Cinematography: John McPherson
Video Resolution: 1080p [Color by Deluxe]
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Audio: English: 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio and French: 2.0 DTS Digital Surround Audio
Subtitles: English and French
Running Time: 106 minutes
Region: All Regions
Number of discs: 1
Studio: Universal Studios Home Entertainment
Andrew’s Blu-ray Review: ‘*batteries not included’ [1987] is a quaint and miraculous tale that hits most of its notes and keeps alive the charm of ‘Close Encounters of the Third Kind,’ ‘Gremlins’ and of course, the loveable ‘E.T.’ ‘*batteries not included’ is a 1987 film produced by Steven Spielberg but actually directed by Matthew Robbins. The story was originally pitched as an episode of Steven Spielberg's TV series “Amazing Stories” before he decided to develop it as a feature film. The title is a play on "*batteries not included," a common disclaimer with electronic toys.
Steven Spielberg produced sci-fi fantasy starring Hollywood veterans Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy. Here we find a run-down Manhattan building where the neighbourhood is being bulldozed and thwarted by unscrupulous property developers, but where one block of tenants would rather stay put. When the developers bring in some heavy persuading tactics, the tenants led by the ageing couple Frank Riley [Hume Cronyn] and Faye Riley [Jessica Tandy] who will not vacate the building and are thrown a lifeline by tiny extra-terrestrial visitors. Neither will several of their neighbours, which include Harry [Frank McRae], a former boxer who watches TV all day; Mason [Dennis Boutsikaris] a young failed painter; and Marisa [Elizabeth Peña] a pregnant Hispanic woman. The developer's henchman has hired a local gang headed by Carlos [Michael Carmine] to terrorize the tenants into moving out, but of course one day after Frank Riley prayed for a miracle, two beautiful tiny spaceships show up to even the odds against nasty people wanting to drive them all out. As to the extra-terrestrial visitors, they are not only very friendly, they are also very sly, and very powerful, but they also reproduce something special and a joy! This unlikely 1987 fairy tale-comedy has its really wonderful beautiful emotional moments; mostly, in seeing the great old pros Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy do their grouchy and light-headed shtick, respectively.
Add equal parts of the film ‘COCOON’ and the octogenarian revamp and E.T.’s genial alien therapy, the merest sprinkling of trite robot-as-human prattling ‘SHORT CIRCUIT,’ undercook on a low creative heat and serve mentioning the fact Steven Spielberg is, unfathomably, involved at some blueprint stage. Make way for the brilliant director Matthew Robbins, who is running with an idea from Steven Spielberg, is working on the basis that making things smaller will always make them far more endearing. These flying electric tin-lids with blue headlamps for eyes are supposedly alive in some respect. At one point, they even multiply producing even more tiny hovering flying saucers, on which to lavish our aw-struck reactions from the residents of the run down building.
They are, to be fair, assisted by some talented human beings, in the form of actors Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy as the elderly couple who need saving by these hard-wired pie-dishes, give it a strange sense of plausibility, or at least, a sense of purpose. After all, it is just a harmless tale set in a bullying modern New York of nasty scowling real-estate developers, where the magic of these winking micro-bots is enough to send them packing.
‘*batteries not included’ is cute and very charming in a way that will probably go down easy for those that like heartwarming family fare. The spaceships have personalities all of their own, and are fun to watch in their own way, and they will no doubt captivate young children as well. If there is a downside, it comes in the form of some fairly intense violent scenes that occur as the story reaches its climax and young children might be susceptible to be easily frightened and may not be ready to handle the sometimes brutal turns of events, despite the film picking up with a predictable and wonderful happy ending. Decent special effects and solid performances from Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy help bolster this worthwhile experience and definitely stands up well enough on its own due to it being very good-natured and totally amusing for a modern day fairy tale for the sci-fi generation of today.
This very cute and unusual film is very compelling and all round entertainment with a haunting bitter-sweet tone, sometimes with an air of sadness and wisdom, as well as hopeful positive spirit and a touch of cute friendly little aliens. It carves its own little niche and takes its place as an out of ordinary experience in a beautiful film that should appeal to all age groups. Director Matthew Robbins [‘Dragonslayer’] shows that he is up there with the top class group of screenplay/director. With this film Matthew Robbins is in total control and is also in command with the material at hand and on top of all that Matthew Robbins fully capitalises on the set-up and with his actors, whom he uses and respects perfectly. The Industrial & Light Magic trick effects work on the film is impressive for a film released in 1987.
As to the composed film music score for ‘*batteries not included’ that might seem another of James Horner's slapdash, everything-but-the-kitchen-sink scores, but while it does embrace an eclectic array of styles and approaches, this slight but charming musical offering effort helps with the off-the-wall plot, where sentient UFOs are stranded on Earth and affords James Horner the opportunity to explore considerable ground, and he responds with themes that span from effervescent big-band tributes "Café Swing" to the dark, dissonant soundscapes, with the six-minute "Arson" score. What keeps it all together is the pure Hollywood classicism of James Horner's vision. ‘*batteries not included’ beautifully captures the sense of imagination and wonder so central to the cinematic experience, with none of the emotional bludgeoning that hampers so much of James Horner the composer's music which is brilliant brought to life throughout the film to enhance the film magical performance.
Blu-ray Video Quality – Universal Studios Home Entertainment has brought to you at last this fantastic magical film in glorious 1080p encoded image and the equally 1.85:1 aspect ratio is equally impressive. The film has plenty of rich textures abound, and frequently presents each one with very impressive clarity and also nice definition. Urban rubble is particularly well textured and tangible, but so too are the more fatigued accents around the apartments, worn down surfaces in the diner, and fine bits of scrap and random trash and treasure alike. The clothing textures capture a great deal of detail, and finer skin tone details on the younger and older characters alike, reveal every intimate essence that look really nice and natural. The grain of the film remains intact at times and especially with the darker scenes. Colours are very nice looking and the dreary brown colours dominates, but splashes of colours on the clothing is good, as well as all the colour paints stand out with considerable nuance, as well as natural vibrancy. All in all it is a very attractive film-quality presentation so full marks to Universal Pictures.
Blu-ray Audio Quality – Universal Studios Home Entertainment brings to you at last this fantastic beautiful film in a wonderful rich technical 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio presentation. The composed musical definition sound is really nice and enjoyable, but mainly staying with the front speakers, but enjoying a wide-breadth presence across the three main speakers. With the more up-tempo musical presentation, we find a little more positive energy, lots of instrumental clarity and depth. Heavier sound effects are minimal, except the building demolition at the start of the film, for example with lots of tossing of the debris into the back speakers, but fizzes out rather than offer some sort of prolonged present of weight one might expect with such a moment. Smaller little details, various crashes and clanks on a much smaller in scale, and sometimes offers some definition, but don't often stray very far from the centre speaker. Dialogue is very well defined, clear, centre-grounded, and expertly prioritised for a film made in 1987.
Blu-ray Special Features and Extras:
Theatrical Trailer [1987] [408i] [1.33:1] [1:24] This is the Original Theatrical Trailer for the film ‘*batteries not included.’ This is such a shame that the trailer is not shown in the 1.85:1 aspect ratio, despite this it still presents to the audience the magic of the film they were going to see when it was released in the cinema in 1987.
Finally, ‘*batteries not included’ has left us a legacy that embodies good-spirited movie magic. This beautiful well thought out, that is built around a simple premise that becomes totally fantastical and serves to only reinforce core human values, with hopes and dreams thrown in for good measure. It is totally and brilliantly very well made, enjoying lots direction, with lots of twist and turn qualities and performances that accentuate its profound humanity. Universal Pictures Blu-ray release is sadly and disappointingly absent of any meaningful extras, which I am sure Universal Studios Home Entertainment must have in their vaults or even Steven Spielberg’s own private collection, but the video and audio presentation are very nice and nothing short of a revelation for those who grew up watching the film like me, either at the cinema or when broadcast on the television and such a revelation over the inferior DVD presentation and is one of my all-time favourite film, I could watch time after time and still get very emotional each time I watch the film. Very Highly Recommended!
Andrew C. Miller – Your Ultimate No.1 Film Aficionado
Le Cinema Paradiso
United Kingdom
Details zur Produktsicherheit
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