Franz 0 9 9

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  1. Franz 0 9 9 X 9
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Frantz
Directed byFrançois Ozon
Produced by
  • Uwe Schott
Screenplay by
Based onBroken Lullaby
by Ernst Lubitsch
Starring
Music byPhilippe Rombi
CinematographyPascal Marti
Edited byLaure Gardette
Distributed byMars Films (France)
  • 12 July 2016 (Paris premiere)
  • 7 September 2016 (France)
  • 29 September 2016 (Germany)
113 minutes
Countries
  • France
  • Germany
Languages
Budget$11.1 million
Box office$6.3 million[1]

Frantz is a 2016 drama film directed and co-written by François Ozon and starring Paula Beer and Pierre Niney. It is about a young German woman whose fiancé has been killed in World War I and the French soldier who comes bearing a secret about her fiancé. It was selected to compete for the Golden Lion at the 73rd Venice International Film Festival,[2] where Beer won the Marcello Mastroianni Award.[3] At the 42nd César Awards, Frantz was nominated in eleven categories, winning one for Best Cinematography.[4]

Édouard Manet's painting Le Suicidé is referenced and shown several times in the story.[5]Frantz is a loose adaptation of the 1932 Ernst Lubitsch film Broken Lullaby,[6] which in turn was based on Maurice Rostand's 1930 French play L'homme que j'ai tué.

Plot[edit]

In Quedlinburg, Germany, in 1919, Anna, a young German woman (Paula Beer) grieving over the death of her fiancé, Frantz Hoffmeister, in World War I, leaves flowers at his grave. She sees fresh flowers and discovers that Adrien (Pierre Niney), a young Frenchman, has done the same. Adrien goes to the home of Frantz's parents, Dr. Hans and Magda Hoffmeister, and tries to speak to Hans, but when Hans hears that Adrien is French, he tells Adrien that a Frenchman killed his son and, calling the French murderers, drives Adrien away. Adrien tells Hans, 'You are right. I am a murderer'. Meanwhile, Anna is rejecting the unwelcome advances of an older suitor, particularly as she cannot forget Frantz. Anna sees Adrien at the grave and sends him a invitation to the Hoffmeister home. After she tells the Hoffmeisters that Adrien was leaving flowers at Frantz's grave, they relent. Adrien visits and, upon questioning, recounts falsely that he and Frantz were students together in Paris before the war. He even describes their supposed last day together, when they visited the Louvre. Anna takes Adrien to the places she and Frantz used to go together, including the mountaintop where he proposed to her. Adrien, whose demeanour reminds them of Frantz, lifts Anna and the Hoffmeisters out of their despair. The Hoffmeisters ask Adrien, who had been a violinist, but whose hearing was damaged in the war, to play Frantz's violin for them, as Frantz used to do. Adrien asks Anna to go to the local ball with him and she accepts.

Adrien is increasingly unable to maintain the lie. After failing to attend a dinner at the Hoffmeister's he was invited to, Anna finds him at night at Frantz's grave. Adrien confesses to Anna that he lied about being Frantz's friend in Paris before the war. Actually, they met as enemy soldiers on the battlefield, face to face in a trench where Adrien killed Frantz. Frantz was a pacifist and his gun was unloaded. Adrien found Frantz's last letter to Anna on his body and, wracked with guilt, resolved to visit Germany in order to seek forgiveness. Anna, heartbroken, says that she will tell the Hoffmeisters so that Adrien does not, resolving it is better for them to remain in ignorance of Adrien's role after they have come to like him and see him as a connection to their lost son. Adrien returns to Paris and Anna sinks back into despair, attempting to drown herself. She does not reply to Adrien's letters and destroys one he enclosed for the Hoffmeisters confessing his true role. After being nursed back to health by the Hoffmeisters, Anna's spirits gradually recover and she decides to contact Adrien again. When Anna sends him a letter several months later, it is returned with no forwarding address.

Magda Hoffmeister, who had encouraged a romance between Anna and Adrien, encourages her to go to Paris to find him. Anna eventually tracks down Adrien at his mother's estate and forgives him, though he says he will never forgive himself. She also discovers that Adrien is about to enter an arranged marriage with a childhood friend, Fanny. Anna realises that the romance she had imagined developing between her and Adrien had all been in her head; all he had wanted from her was forgiveness. She kisses Adrien goodbye at the railway station and leaves. She continues writing to the Hoffmeisters as if she and Adrien are now together. In reality, she is living her own life in Paris, having finally started living again following Frantz's death, as Frantz said she should in his last letter to her.

Cast[edit]

  • Paula Beer as Anna
  • Pierre Niney as Adrien
  • Ernst Stötzner as Doktor Hoffmeister
  • Marie Gruber as Magda Hoffmeister
  • Johann von Bülow [de] as Kreutz
  • Anton von Lucke [de] as Frantz
  • Cyrielle Clair as Adrien's mother
  • Alice de Lencquesaing as Fanny

Reception[edit]

Critical response[edit]

Frantz received generally positive reviews from critics. Weather guru 2 1 – accurate weather forecasts. Ty Burr of The Boston Globe said, 'Frantz is pleasurable slow going, developing its themes at an amble but with a measure of suspense, sympathy toward its characters, and a lasting faith in filmmaking craft.'[7]Peter Travers of Rolling Stone also gave praise, stating that 'Francois Ozon's post-WW1 period piece about a German widow and a French soldier takes on xenophobic hatred that's as timely as Trump, making Frantz a film of its time .. and ours.'[8]

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AlloCiné, a French cinema website, gave the film an average of 3.7/5, based on a survey of 33 reviews, indicating 'generally favorable reviews'.[9] On review aggregatorRotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 91% approval rating based on 135 reviews, with an average rating of 7.4/10. The website's critical consensus states: 'Frantz finds writer-director François Ozon thoughtfully probing the aftermath of World War I through the memories and relationships of loved ones left behind.'[10] At Metacritic, which assigns a rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the film received a score of 73 out of 100, based on 28 critics, indicating 'generally favorable reviews'.[11]

Accolades[edit]

Awards
AwardDate of ceremonyCategoryRecipients and nomineesResult
Australian Film Critics Association[12]13 March 2018Best International Film (Foreign Language)FrantzNominated
Belgian Film Critics Association[13]7 January 2016Grand PrixFrantzNominated
Venice Film Festival10 September 2016Marcello Mastroianni AwardPaula BeerWon
Golden LionFrançois OzonNominated
César Awards[14]24 February 2017Best FilmFrantzNominated
Best DirectorFrançois OzonNominated
Best ActorPierre NineyNominated
Most Promising ActressPaula BeerNominated
Best AdaptationFrançois OzonNominated
Best CinematographyPascal MartiWon
Best EditingLaure GardetteNominated
Best SoundJean-Paul Mugel, Alexis Place, Cyril Holtz, and Damien LazzeriniNominated
Best Original MusicPhilippe RombiNominated
Best Costume DesignPascaline ChavanneNominated
Best Production DesignMichel BarthélémyNominated
National Board of Review[15]28 November 2017Top Five Foreign Language FilmsFrantzWon

References[edit]

  1. ^'Frantz'. Box Office Mojo. IMDb. Retrieved 18 September 2016.
  2. ^Tartaglione, Nancy (28 July 2016). 'Venice Film Festival: Lido To Launch Pics From Ford, Gibson, Malick & More As Awards Season Starts To Buzz – Full List'. Deadline Hollywood. Penske Business Media. Retrieved 28 July 2016.
  3. ^Tartaglione, Nancy (11 September 2016). 'Venice Film Festival: Golden Lion To 'The Woman Who Left'; Tom Ford's 'Nocturnal Animals', Emma Stone Take Major Prizes – Full List'. Deadline Hollywood. Penske Business Media. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  4. ^'Annonce des Nominations pour les César 2017'. César Awards (in French). Académie des Arts et Techniques du Cinéma. 25 January 2017. Archived from the original on 27 January 2017. Retrieved 28 January 2017.
  5. ^Jourdain, Alexandre (7 September 2016). 'Frantz - la critique du film'. Avoir à lire. Retrieved 23 October 2016.
  6. ^Holden, Stephen (14 March 2017). 'Review: 'Frantz,' a Mysterious Frenchman and the Wounds of War'. The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
  7. ^Burr, Ty (29 March 2017). 'There's love and regret to spare in postwar 'Frantz''. The Boston Globe. Boston Globe Media Partners. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  8. ^Travers, Peter (16 March 2017). ''Frantz' Review: French WWI-Era Mystery Takes on Modern Nationalism'. Rolling Stone. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  9. ^'Frantz'. AlloCiné. Webedia. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  10. ^'Frantz (2017)'. Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
  11. ^'Frantz Reviews'. Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  12. ^'The 2018 AFCA Awards'. Australian Film Critics Association. Archived from the original on 14 March 2018. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  13. ^Staff (7 January 2017). ''Carol' désigné film de l'année 2016 par les critiques belges'. 7sur7 (in French). De Persgroep. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  14. ^Tartaglione, Nancy (24 February 2017). 'César Awards Winners: 'Elle' Best Film, Isabelle Huppert Best Actress – Full List'. Deadline Hollywood. Penske Business Media. Retrieved 25 February 2017.
  15. ^'2017 Award Winners'. National Board of Review. Retrieved 27 December 2017.

External links[edit]

  • Frantz at IMDb
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frantz_(film)&oldid=1003644733'
Franz
PronunciationGerman: [fʁants]
GenderMasculine
Language(s)German
Name dayJanuary 24
April 2
September 8
December 3
Origin
Language(s)1. Latin
2. German
Word/name1. Franciscus
2. Franziskus
Region of originGerman-speaking countries
Other names
Cognate(s)Francis
Related namesFerenc, Francisco, François, Frans, František, Frantz
See alsoFrantz (given name)
Franz (surname)
Popularitysee popular names

Franz is a German name and cognate of the given name Francis. Notable people named Franz include:

Nobility[edit]

Austria-Hungary[edit]

  • Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor (1708–1765)
  • Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor (1768–1835), founder of the Austrian Empire
  • Franz Joseph I (1830–1916), Austrian Emperor
  • Franz Ferdinand, Archduke of Austria, heir to the thrones of Austria-Hungary, whose assassination in 1914 sparked World War I
  • Franz Karl, Archduke of Austria (1802–1878), father of two emperors
  • Franz Salvator, Archduke of Austria (1866–1939), Tuscan branch of the House of Habsburg
  • Franz, Duke of Hohenberg (1927–1977), head of the House of Hohenburg
  • Franz, Prince of Kohary (1760–1826), Imperial Chancellor
  • Franz, Prince of Thun and Hohenstein (1847–1916), Governor of Bohemia
  • Franz, Count of Deym (1838–1903), diplomat
  • Franz, Count of Meran (1839–1891), Austrian Count
  • Franz, Count of Gyulai (1798–1868), Governor of Lombardy-Venetia
  • Franz, Count Széchényi (1754–1820), Hungarian Count
  • Franz Anton von Kolowrat-Liebsteinsky (1778–1861), statesman from Prague
  • Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf (1852–1925), Chief of the General Staff
  • Franz Moritz von Lacy (1725–1801), Field Marshal
  • Count Franz Philipp von Lamberg (1791–1848), soldier and statesman

Germany[edit]

  • Franz, Duke of Bavaria (born 1933), head of the House of Wittelsbach
  • Franz, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (1750–1806), member of the House of Wettin
  • Prince Franz of Bavaria (1875–1957), member of the House of Wittelsbach
  • Prince Franz-Josef of Bavaria (born 1957), member of the House of Wittelsbach
  • Prince Franz Joseph of Thurn and Taxis (1893–1971), head of the House of Thurn and Taxis
  • Prince Franz Wilhelm of Prussia (born 1943), member of the House of Hohenzollern
  • Prince Franz Joseph of Battenberg (1861–1924), member of the House of Hesse
  • Franz, Count of Erbach-Erbach (1754–1823), nobleman and art collector
  • Franz von Waldeck (1491–1553), Prince-Bishop of Münster

Liechtenstein[edit]

Franz
  • Franz I, Prince of Liechtenstein (1853–1938), sovereign of Liechtenstein
  • Franz Joseph I, Prince of Liechtenstein (1726–1781), sovereign of Liechtenstein
  • Franz Joseph II, Prince of Liechtenstein (1906–1989), sovereign of Liechtenstein

Other people[edit]

A–F[edit]

  • Franz Abt (1819–1885), German composer and Kapellmeister
  • Franz Ackermann (born 1963), German painter and installation artist
  • Franz Adam (1815–1886), German painter of military subjects
  • Franz Alt (mathematician) (1910–2011), Austrian-born American mathematician and computer scientist
  • Franz Anton Basch, Nazi executed for war crimes
  • Franz Bauer (1748–1840), Austrian microscopist and botanist
  • Franz Beckenbauer, German football player and manager
  • Franz Behr (1837–1898), German composer
  • Franz Benda (1709–1786), Czech violinist and composer
  • Franz Beyer (disambiguation), several people
    • Franz Beyer (general) (1892–1968), German General in World War II
    • Franz Beyer (musicologist) (1922–2018), German musicologist
    • Franz Beyer (pilot) (1918–1944), German fighter pilot
  • Franz Binder (1911–1989), Austrian football player and coach
  • Franz Boas (1858–1942), German-American anthropologist considered the 'Father of American anthropology'
  • Franz Boos (1753–1832), Austrian botanist and explorer during the Enlightenment
  • Franz Bopp (1791–1867), German linguist
  • Franz Brunner (1913–1991), Austrian handball player who competed in the 1936 Summer Olympics
  • Franz Burda I (1903–1986), German publisher
  • Franz Büchner (pathologist) (1895–1991), German pathologist
  • Franz Bürkl, Gestapo officer in Nazi-occupied Poland, assassinated in Operation Bürkl
  • Franz Calustro, Bolivian football player
  • Franz Defregger (1835–1921), Austrian painter
  • Franz Josef Degenhardt (1931–2011), German poet, novelist and singer-songwriter
  • Franz-Benno Delonge (1957–2007), designer of German-style board games
  • Franz von Dingelstedt (1814–1881), German poet, dramatist, theatre administrator
  • Franz Engel (1834–1920), German explorer
  • Franz Joseph Feuchtmayer (1660–1718), German artist, patriarch of the Feuchtmayer family
  • Franz Xaver Feuchtmayer the Elder (1698–1763), German Baroque artist and plasterer
  • Franz Xaver Feuchtmayer the Younger (1735–1803), German Baroque artist and plasterer
  • Franz Fuchs (1949–2000), Austrian terrorist

G–Z[edit]

  • Franz Grillparzer (1791–1872), Austrian writer and poet
  • Franz Halberg (1919–2013), one of the founders of chronobiology
  • Franz Hein (1892–1976), German chemist
  • Franz von Hipper (1863–1932), German World War I admiral, commander of High Seas Fleet
  • Franz Hofmeister (1850–1922), German protein scientist
  • Franz Hössler (1906–1945), Nazi officer at Auschwitz executed for war crimes
  • Franz Jägerstätter (1907–1943), Austrian conscientious objector during World War II
  • Franz Josef Jung (born 1949), German politician
  • Franz Kafka (1883–1924), Bohemian novelist, one of the major writers of the 20th century
  • Franz Kindermann, German merchant
  • Franz Klammer (born 1953), champion Austrian alpine ski racer
  • Franz Kleffner (1907–1945), SS officer in World War II
  • Franz Kline (1910–1962), American abstract painter
  • Franz Konrad (SS officer) (1906–1952), German SS officer executed for war crimes
  • Franz König (1905–2004), Austrian Cardinal of the Catholic Church
  • Franz Lachner (1803–1890), German composer and conductor
  • Franz Langoth (1877–1953), Austrian nationalist politician
  • Franz Lehár (1870–1948), Austrian composer
  • Franz Lidz (born 1951), American writer and journalist
  • Franz Liszt (1811–1886), Hungarian composer and piano virtuoso
  • Franz Machon (born 1918), German sailor in World War II and sole survivor of U-512
  • Franz Marc (1880–1916), principal painter of the German Expressionist movement
  • Franz Erdmann Mehring (1846–1919), German publicist, politician and historian
  • Franz Müntefering (born 1940), German politician and industrialist
  • Franz Nachbaur (1835–1902), German opera tenor
  • Franz Xaver Nachtmann (1799–1846), German painter
  • Franz von Papen (1879–1969), Chancellor of Germany in the Weimar Republic
  • Franz von Paula Schrank (1747–1835), German botanist and entomologist
  • Franz Rademacher (1906–1973), Nazi diplomat and author of the Madagascar Plan
  • Franz Reichleitner (1906–1944), Austrian Nazi SS concentration camp commander
  • Franz Rosenzweig (1886–1929), German-Jewish theologian and philosopher
  • Franz Schafheitlin (1895–1980), German film actor
  • Franz Schalk (1863–1931), Austrian conductor and founder of the Salzburg Music Festival
  • Franz Schall (1918–1945), German World War II fighter ace
  • Franz Schieß (1921–1943), German World War II fighter ace
  • Franz Scholz (1909–1998), German priest and theologian
  • Franz Schubert (1797–1828), Austrian composer
  • Franz Heinrich Schwechten (1841–1924), German architect
  • Franz Schwede (1888–1960), Nazi Gaulieter of Pomerania
  • Franz Schädle (1906–1945), commander of Adolf Hitler's personal bodyguard
  • Franz Wilhelm Seiwert (1894–1933), German constructivist painter and sculptor
  • Franz Joseph Spiegler (1691–1757), German Baroque painter
  • Franz Stangl (1908-1971), Austrian-born Nazi SS concentration camp commandant
  • Franz Stofel (1915–1945), German Nazi concentration camp commander executed for war crimes
  • Franz Josef Strauss (1915–1988), German politician
  • Franz von Suppé (1819–1895), Austrian composer
  • Franz Taurinus (1794–1874), German mathematician
  • Franz Thonner (1863–1928), Austrian taxonomist and botanist
  • Franz Treichler, Swiss rock musician and singer of The Young Gods
  • Franz Unger (1800–1870), Austrian botanist, paleontologist and plant physiologist
  • Franz Vranitzky (born 1937), Austrian politician
  • Franz Werfel, (1890–1945), Austrian-Bohemian novelist, playwright and poet
  • Franz Ziereis (1905–1945), German Nazi SS concentration camp commandant

Fictional characters[edit]

  • Franz, a German enemy character in the 1989 video game Human Killing Machine
  • Hans and Franz, characters of the television show Saturday Night Live
  • Franz Bibfeldt, fictitious theologian and in-joke among American academic theologian
  • Dr. Franz Eldemann, character from House of Dracula
  • Franz Heinel, character in the Japanese anime series Future GPX Cyber Formula
  • Franz Hopper, character from the French-produced animated series Code Lyoko
  • Franz Kemmerich, character in the war novel All Quiet on the Western Front
  • Franz Liebkind, character in The Producers
  • Franz Oberhauser, James Bond character professionally known as Ernst Stavro Blofeld
  • Franz Sanchez, character in the 1989 James Bond film Licence to Kill
  • Franz, guard in Franz Kafka's novel The Trial
  • Baron Franz d'Épinay, friend of Albert de Morcerf in Alexandre Dumas's novel The Count of Monte Cristo

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Franz 0 9 9

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Franz_(given_name)&oldid=948347620'




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