The Tin Drum (film)

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The Tin Drum

original movie poster
Directed by Volker Schlöndorff
Produced by Franz Seitz
Anatole Dauman
Written by Volker Schlöndorff
Jean-Claude Carrière
Franz Seitz
Adapted from the Novel The Tin Drum by Gunther Grass
Starring Mario Adorf
Angela Winkler
David Bennent
Katharina Thalbach
Charles Aznavour
Release date(s) Flag of West Germany May 3, 1979
Flag of the United States 11 April 1980
Running time 142 min
Country Flag of Germany Germany
Flag of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia
Language German
Polish
Russian
IMDb profile

The Tin Drum (German: Die Blechtrommel) is a 1978 film adaptation of the novel of the same name by Günter Grass. It was directed and co-written by Volker Schlöndorff.

The film won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes film festival and the 1979 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.

Contents

David Bennent plays Oskar, the young son of a German rural family, circa 1925. On his third birthday, Oskar receives a shiny new tin drum. At this point, rather than mature into one of the miserable specimens of grown-up humanity that he sees around him, he vows never to get any older or any bigger. Whenever the world around him becomes too much to bear, the boy begins to hammer on his drum; should anyone try to take the toy away from him, he emits an ear-piercing scream that literally shatters glass. As Germany degenerates towards Nazism and war in the 1930s and 1940s, the unageing Oskar continues savagely beating his drum.

The Tin Drum was one of the most financially successful German films of the 1970s and won the 1979 Academy Award for Best Foreign Film.

The film features a scene in which Bennent, then 11 years old and playing a stunted 16-year-old, appears to perform oral sex on a 16-year-old girl (played by actress Katharina Thalbach, who was 24 years old at the time).

In 1980, the film version of The Tin Drum was first cut, and then banned as child pornography by the Ontario Censor Board in Canada.[1]

Similarly, on June 25, 1997, following a ruling made by State District Court Judge Richard Freeman, who had reportedly only viewed a single isolated scene of the film, The Tin Drum was banned from Oklahoma County, Oklahoma, citing the state's obscenity laws for portraying underage sexuality. All copies in Oklahoma City were likewise confiscated and at least one person who had rented the film on video tape was threatened with prosecution. Michael Camfield, leader of a local chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, filed a lawsuit against the police department on July 4, 1997, alleging that the tape had been illegally confiscated and his rights infringed.

This led to a high-profile series of hearings on the film's merits as a whole versus the controversial scene, and the role of the judge as censor. The film emerged vindicated and most copies were returned within a few months.[1] [2]

  1. ^ http://www.cbc.ca/thecurrent/2004/200404/20040419.html

Preceded by
Get Out Your Handkerchiefs
Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film
1979
Succeeded by
Moscow Does not Believe in Tears
Preceded by
The Tree of Wooden Clogs
Palme d'Or
1979
tied with Apocalypse Now
Succeeded by
All That Jazz
tied with Kagemusha
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