The Tales of Hoffmann

The Tales of Hoffmann

Movie |

Opera | Musical

  • Duration: 2h 8min
  • Music: Jacques Offenbach,Sir Thomas Beecham,John Cox,Ted Drake
  • Award(s): Special 1951 (Won)
    Oscar 1952 (Nominated) Awards List
  • Similar To: Wicked: For Good, Z-O-M-B-I-E-S 4: Dawn of the Vampires
  • Story:
    Hoffmann is a lovelorn young man in Nuremberg who is watching his latest love, Stella, dance in the ballet. In the interval he goes to the tavern where he tells his friends the tales of the three major loves of his life. Each story forms a separate act of this filmic version of the Offenbach opera.
    Full Story
7.1/10
IMDb

The Tales of Hoffmann - Where to Stream?

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The Tales Of Hoffmann - Cast

The Tales Of Hoffmann - Crew

STORY AND RATINGS

Story
Hoffmann is a lovelorn young man in Nuremberg who is watching his latest love, Stella, dance in the ballet. In the interval he goes to the tavern where he tells his friends the tales of the three major loves of his life. Each story forms a separate act of this filmic version of the Offenbach opera.
Ratings

7.1/10

IMDb

AWARDS

Won
Silver Berlin Bear Award

Best Musical | 1951 | Michael

Nominations
Oscar Award

Best Costume Design Color | 1952

Best Art DirectionSet Decoration Color | 1952

BOX OFFICE

Box Office Collection 2,470,000 USD

TRIVIA AND POPULAR DIALOGUES

Trivia

George A. Romero, writer/director of "Night of the Living Dead (1968)" and "Dawn of the Dead (1978)" has cited this as his all-time favorite movie, saying that it was the one that originally inspired him to get into filmmaking.

A 4K digital restoration has been made by Martin Scorsese's Film Foundation. This includes some scenes that were missing from recent prints and an unseen section introducing the actors and singers. Like the other restorations they have done of Michael Powell's and Emeric Pressburger's films, this isn't just a new print. They went back to the original material, digitized and cleaned up every frame and the optical soundtrack (for a three-strip Technicolor film, that's three frames for every frame you see on screen). Then they put them all back together, checking the registration and restoring the old Technicolor look and feel. This restored version was premiered at the 2014 Venice Film Festival and has since been shown at the Lyons and London Film Festivals, followed by other festivals and cinema screenings around the world. There will also be a DVD/Blu-ray release.

Robert Rounseville (Hoffmann) and Ann Ayars (Antonia) are the only performers in the film who both appear on screen and do their own singing. Every other character is dubbed.

Antonia's island bears a strong resemblance to the island in the painting "Isle of the Dead" by Swiss symbolist artist Arnold Böcklin (1827-1901).

Michael Powell began the project after hearing Thomas Beecham playing the score on piano and singing all of the parts.

Popular Dialogues

"Chorus of Students: Some drink, drink, drink, drink, drink: do you hear us about? You lazy lout! We want some beer; we want some wine! Pour out the wine, and drink and drink till morning. Pour out the wine for drinking is divine. It is divine. We want some beer; we want some wine. We want some beer; we want some wine."