|
Quicknation Lola rennt
|
|
Lola rennt Lola rennt is a 1998 film by German screenwriter and director Tom Tykwer, starring Franka Potente as Lola.
It is an unconventional film, in that it covers the same twenty-minute span of time three times, each differing in small details that in turn lead the story to radically different outcomes. The follows a spiral structure. Spirals are also frequently used as a visual motif, partially as an homage to Alfred Hitchcock's , which Tykwer admires. The film, particularly with its time limit and "multiple lives" concept, also owes something to video games. While most German films in English speaking countries are subtitled, this film is one of the few German films to have been dubbed into English, alongside . However, the English dub was widely panned, and it was generally recommended to watch the original German version. tableLola's boyfriend, Manni, is involved in a smuggling operation. Manni's final role in a particular job is the transport of 100,000 marks to his boss, Ronnie. Lola was supposed to drive Manni to the meeting, but her motorcycle was stolen earlier in the day. Manni resorts to public transportation when Lola doesn't appear, but he accidentally leaves the money on a subway train. He places a frantic phone call to Lola and explains the situation: if he doesn't have the money when he meets Ronnie at noon, Manni will be killed. Lola vows to find the money by then, but noon is only twenty minutes away. - With little time and no vehicle, Lola runs through the streets of Berlin to get to her father's bank, trying to get money from him. When he refuses, she and Manni rob a grocery store, and Lola is accidentally shot by a police officer shortly afterward. - As she dies, the film suddenly seems to start over; it jumps back to the end of her phone call from Manni, and again she tries to get the money from her father. However, a small detail near the beginning changes, and so the outcome is wildly different: she ends up robbing her father's bank at gunpoint. She brings the money to Manni, but he is run down by an ambulance as he crosses the street. - The story starts a third time. She gets to her father's bank only to see him driving away. She then runs through the town, asking for divine help. She comes to a casino, gets a single 100 mark chip, and finds a roulette table. She bets on 20 and wins. She leaves her winnings on 20 for the next spin, winning again. She has the money, but she still has to catch up with Manni by noon. She hitches a ride in an ambulance, which is carrying a security guard from her father's bank; he presumably suffered a heart attack. What Lola doesn't know is that Manni has already recovered his original bag of money, which had been picked up by a homeless man, and given it to Ronnie. The movie ends with Manni asking Lola what's in her bag.Throughout the film, Lola bumps into people, talks to them, or passes them by entirely. Details of that person's future are subsequently shown in a series of still frames. The futures are widely divergent from encounter to encounter. In one scenario, a woman whom Lola accidentally bumps into wins the lottery and becomes rich; in a different scenario, she remains poor and her child is taken away by social workers. The encounters with Lola differ only slightly, so the vastly changed futures in the "flash forwards" are an example of the butterfly effect. is the painting on the back wall of the casino. Tykwer disliked the empty space on the wall behind the roulette table and commissioned production designer Alexander Manasse to paint a picture of Kim Novak as she appeared in . Manasse could not remember what she looked like in the film and so decided to paint her from behind. The painting took fifteen minutes to complete.Other movies are referenced more obliquely. The store robbery scene is sometimes described as an homage to tales. There are also several references to German culture in the film. The most notable is the use of Hans Paetsch as a narrator for the scene. Paetsch is a very famous narrator of children’s stories in Germany, whose voice anyone who'd listened to his children’s stories growing up would recognize. Two quotes by German football legend Sepp Herberger, "The ball is round" and "The game lasts 90 minutes", are spoken by the guard in the first scene in the film. The soundtrack of the film, also by Tykwer, includes numerous musical quotations of the sustained string chords of "The Unanswered Question", an early 20th century chamber ensemble work by American composer Charles Ives. In the original work, the chords are meant to represent the music of the spheres. makes clear references to the movie. The triple timeline approach was used in an episode of Johnny Bravo, which also including pictures of people's possible lives. The music video for Quarashi's "Mr. Jinx" was a homage to the movie, starring Hössi Olafsson, one of the members of the Icelandic rap group, as himself, trying to get to a Quarashi gig at a club on time. |
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer) Donate to Wikimedia