Rijndri
Load of rubbish!!
Tacticalin
An absolute waste of money
FirstWitch
A movie that not only functions as a solid scarefest but a razor-sharp satire.
Nayan Gough
A great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.
Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de)
"Emil und die Detektive" or "Emil and the Detectives" is a West German German-language movie from 1954, so this one is already way over 60 years old. The writer and director is the prolific Robert A. Stemmle, one of the most successful German filmmakers of his time and here he adapted the work by Erich Kästner, who wrote the famous children's book, and Billy Wilder who worked on the script of the 1930s black-and-white film with the same name. I guess they really wanted a color version and that was one of the main reasons why this one was made. To put in in a perspective of time by the way, this one is exactly from the year when Germany won the Soccer World Cup for the first time. It runs slightly over 90 minutes and has Peter Finkbeiner star as the title character. For Finkbeiner, it was the beginning of a career that was very short as he made his final performance only two years later, but thanks to this film here, he is not entirely forgotten. Little Emil gets drugged and sedated by a man in the train to Berlin (actually a pretty dark plot reference for a kids movie) and his briefcase is stole, but thanks to new friends in the city, he manages to turn the thief's live into a true nightmare. I watched the 1930s film a while ago too and I was not impressed by that one either. The only thing better here is obviously the use of color, but in terms of the story and execution I found it just as forgettable. I guess the material is just not for me. I cannot say how close this is to Kästner's original work as I have not read that one. One thing I did not like early on is that Emil gets away with the same "crime" that his friends at school are punished for and this is one reason why I never found the character as likable as they wanted me to find him. Also, what happened to this part of the plot at the very end when he returns home? It's completely absent. And this is not the only part that does not make entirely sense. I know it is a children's book and film and all, but some realism is truly necessary. I did not think this was a good film. Thumbs down.
suchenwi
Common wisdom says remakes are rarely better than the original. In this case, the 1954 version can stand up proudly against the 1931 version.There are more: in addition to the 2001 latest German version, Emil has been put to film in Argentina, Brazil, Japan, UK (1935) and US (1964). Makes eight. Such world-wide attention is not so frequent, for a children's book no less.But back to 1954. It sticks quite close to the 1931 script (by Billie Wilder), but pads it - love interests are added for Emil's mother and Grundeis, and parents for Polly. The subplot of the sleeping pills in the coffee (dangling in 1931) was brought to comedic conclusion.But what made this movie most lovable for me were the period details, especially street scenes - both in 1931 and 1954. The 1954 version gains much by using the ruins of Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gedächtniskirche as backdrop (briefly seen, intact, in 1931). Interesting that the money amounts (140 marks stolen, 1000 marks reward) needed not to be updated.All in all, a well-done update, and at 54 years of age a venerable museum piece itself. I had seen it years ago, but enjoyed a re-watch (and that an hour after watching the 1931 version). Both are very good, for different reasons.
larry1-1
A charming Saturday matinée film. As a learner of German I watched it for that purpose, but was well entertained by the plot and action, a children's/family film, it avoids being sickly 'Disney'. Naturally the viewer has the choice of English subtitles.The acting of the children is good. It is quite free and not self-conscious or cool. The scenes of hundreds of children on foot, roller skates and with scooters and bikes, chasing after the 'bad guy' through central Berlin is well directed.The shooting beautifully captures the centre of Berlin in the mid fifties and shows something of life at the time. A visitor to Berlin today would find many of the locations familiar. A lot of the scenes have some really nice shots.Some may find the music a little overpowering at times, but representative of the orchestration of films of the era and therefore fitting.There have been earlier and later film versions. Most recent is 2001. After the remake of Wim Wenders 'Wings of Desire' (Der Himmel Über Berlin) I am a bit reluctant to race out and view the latest version.Watching the post-wall, cooler 'children' of Berlin 2001, using mobile phones and computers in their quest, would have a very different feel to it.In contrast, the 1954 version is set in a post-war Berlin several years before the wall and refreshingly long before it's now just as omnipresent and depressing Graffiti.Have some fun and do your German homework at the same time!
dvd-2
Erich Kastner wrote the story about a young boy who is drugged and robbed of some money which was pinned into his clothing by his mother. He is, of course, horrified, and rather than tell her the truth, he enlists the help of an army of young detectives. It reminds me of the pursuit of the psychotic child killer Peter Lorre in M, 1931. Later remakes are universally boring and tepid.