Leave No Trace

  • Deutschland Leave No Trace - Meine Wildnis (mehr)
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Die jugendliche Tom (Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie) und ihr Vater Will (Ben Foster), Kriegsveteran, leben seit vielen Jahren unentdeckt in Forest Park, einem riesigen Waldgebiet am Rande von Portland, Oregon. Eine zufällige Begegnung führt zu ihrer Entdeckung und zur Betreuung durch die Sozialbehörde. Sie versuchen sich an ihre neue Umgebung anzupassen, bis eine unerwartete Entscheidung sie auf einen gefährlichen Weg zurück in die Wildnis führt – und sie zwingt, sich mit dem widerstreitenden Wunsch, Teil der Gesellschaft zu sein und dem heftigen Verlangen, abseits zu leben, auseinandersetzen zu müssen. (Sony Pictures DE)

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Kritiken (5)

Goldbeater 

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Deutsch Es bietet sich hier wirklich ein Vergleich mit Captain Fantastic – Einmal Wildnis und zurück an, das zwar in einer anderen Stimmung, aber vor allem unterhaltsamer und spielerischer gedreht wurde. Es muss gesagt werden, dass Leave No Trace an einigen Stellen wirklich sehr lang ist, aber auf keinen Fall langweilig. Es fehlt hier an einer markanteren Handlung. Der Film fließt sozusagen in seinem eigenen Tempo von einem zum anderen und ebbt ziemlich schnell gegen Ende ab. Aber Hut ab vor Thomasin McKenzie, dass sie die Hauptrolle mit so viel Kompetenz und Begeisterung übernommen hat. Ben Foster steht ihr dabei direkt im Nacken. ()

POMO 

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Deutsch Ein Vater mit seiner Tochter meiden die Gesellschaft, versuchen, im Wald zu leben usw. Ist es vom Vater koscher, sie nicht einzugliedern, ihr keine andere Ausbildung als seine zu geben? Und wie lange hält die feste Beziehung, in der sie nur einander haben? Ein schöner Beziehungsfilm, der die Gesellschaft von der anderen Seite wahrnimmt, aber keine von beiden Welten kritisiert. Fast ohne Drama, mit einem ruhigen Erzähltempo. Der Film ähnelt Captain Fantastic - Einmal Wildnis und zurück, er hat aber weniger Figuren und ist nicht so bunt. [Cannes] ()

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Malarkey 

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Englisch A bit of a tramping drama in the vein of Captain Fantastic about a dad and his daughter who live in a natural way and try to become one with nature. This doesn’t go over well with people who live orthodox lives and don’t understand and condemn everything but the established norm. The Americans are terrible puritans in this regard, but in here (Czech Republic) this movie has to warm the heart of every tramp. I liked it too and I’m not even a tramp. Here in the Czech Republic, we are probably more benevolent than the people in the USA. The second half of the movie and the moments in the community with the uncle, who played American tramp songs, were really nice, radiating a feeling of well-being and freedom; just like the ending itself, which was flawless Ben Foster engraved himself into my memory thanks to this role and I am looking forward to seeing him in Medieval. ()

angel74 

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Englisch Almost all my life I've had the same approach to nature as the main characters in the film, so I was happy to be guided by them through the forest corners of the state of Oregon. If I were more courageous, I would definitely go to join them, because I increasingly see modern civilization as a necessary evil. American independent filmmaker Debra Granik tells an extremely powerful story full of a strange, wistful poetry that leaves a nostalgic feeling in the soul. Although I think I understood the mindset and motives of both the father and the daughter, I'm still a little disappointed that there remained more questions than answers at the end. (75%) ()

Matty 

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Englisch Soon after Lazzaro Felice comes another film, at the end of which I had the desire to escape into the wilderness and spend the rest of my life among wolves. Although these films are fundamentally different, Leave No Trace is, for example, far more intuitive, as events simply follow one another in a time-lapse documentary without being exposed in advance (conversely, the entire first half of Lazzaro Felice is preparation for the second half), the plot flows freely and undramatically, we are not made aware of some essential information, the narrative does not come back to many of the characters and situations (for example, the only thing that we learn about the mother is that she liked the colour yellow). The protagonists have to overcome obstacles mainly in order to get to know each other and themselves better, rather than to achieve a particular objective. Upon closer viewing, it is possible to uncover in Leave No Trace, like in Lazzaro Felice, a web of motifs connected with the theme of man’s relationship to his own nature. Both pictures turn our attention (back) to nature (and to that which is generally good and unspoiled), or rather it compels us to think about man’s relationship to nature. I think these films are more successful in this regard than are “pure” nature documentaries, to which it is more difficult to connect emotionally due to the absence of a human element. In Leave No Trace, this is aided by the fact that the film does not contain a single negative character. It is purely a clash between the system (towards which Granik is not explicitly critical) and people who want (need) to live outside of it. We understand their situation, but we are not didactically guided to accept the opinion that Walden’s way of existence is the only correct way. In a similarly ambivalent manner, the film addresses the issue of freedom. Though civilisation establishes binding norms (connected here with Christmas trees, which must all look perfect) and tries to somehow categorise everyone (as Tom places shirts in drawers in a new house), but the main female protagonist is in the forests under the ceaseless patronage of her father and cannot rely on basic life security. For better or worse, they are reminiscent of a pair of seahorses, brought to mind by a girl's pendant or an orange peel reminiscent of that animal, which mates for life and whose offspring develop in the abdominal sack of the male, rather than that of the female. Giving someone freedom can be the greatest expression of love. Though the film raises the visibility of certain issues through its story, it leaves it to us to decide what is better. Will provides similar freedom in raising his daughter. He does not lead her to accept a single dogmatic worldview (he responds with a smile rather than disapprovingly to her remark that God created frogs, as she had read in a leaflet distributed by the local Christian community), but he stimulates her curiosity. Thanks to this freedom that the film gives us, the opinion at which we arrive has even greater weight. Leave No Trace thus continues to reverberate after the disarming, maximally simple penultimate scene. 85% () (weniger) (mehr)

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