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König Drosselbart
A king has a daughter, Princess Isabella of Geranium, who is so beautiful that kings and princes come from miles around in hopes of winning her hand in marriage. But although she is beautiful, she is also proud and arrogant, and constantly insults and rejects her suitors. She even rejects noble Prince Richard of Begonia, and mocks him as "King Thrushbeard," even though she secretly likes him. Finally, her father loses patience with his rude daughter and declares that since she has rejected every man who has come to court her, she will be married to the first beggar who comes to the gate.
Release : | 2008 |
Rating : | 6.6 |
Studio : | |
Crew : | Director, Author, |
Cast : | Jasmin Schwiers Ken Duken Felicitas Woll Hubert Mulzer Arthur Brauss |
Genre : | Family |
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Reviews
the audience applauded
That was an excellent one.
The film creates a perfect balance between action and depth of basic needs, in the midst of an infertile atmosphere.
It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.
"König Drosselbart" or "King Thrushbeard" is a German television film from 2008 that was directed by Sibylle Tafel and written by Anja Kömmerling and Thomas Brinx. These three names are very closely linked to the wave of recent German small screen adaptations of fairy tales (mostly by the Brothers Grimm). Two more years and this one here will have its 10th anniversary. Like most of the others, it is not really that long, runs for slightly under an hour, but that's not a problem. Better this way than many insignificant scenes. It's probably between this one here and the GDR version from the 1960s starring Manfred Krug as the title character in terms of which version is the most known today. I personally think the old one is still slightly better, but this one here was also a decent watch. And there are certainly some difference. This newer version included the title character's sister who was non-existent in the old film and also it's more of the emotional state of Drosselbart while the old one is almost entirely about the transformation of the princess. This new movie here has some solid actors that German movie buffs will know, such as Duken, Schwiers and Woll, also some more in the smaller roles. All of these did a good job, even if I personally felt that the sister added very little and I say this as somebody who likes Woll. More than Schwiers for sure and I think Schwiers worked best in the first half as she is just better in playing unlikable characters and not likable ones. And Duken I am not too big a fan of and he wasn't great here, but did what he had to I guess. Still he has nothing on Krug in my opinion. A decent watch for fairy tale film fans. Go see it.