Toni Erdmann: Toni Erdmann A reluctant woman (Sandra Hüller) must spend time with her estranged father (Peter Simonischek) who tries to reconnect with her by creating an outrageous alter ego and
posing as her CEO's life coach.
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posing as her CEO's life coach.
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Toni Erdmann
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Toni Erdmann | |
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Theatrical release poster
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| Directed by | Maren Ade |
| Produced by |
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| Written by | Maren Ade |
| Starring |
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| Music by | Patrick Veigel |
| Cinematography | Patrick Orth |
| Edited by | Heike Parplies |
Production
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Release date
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Running time
| 162 minutes[2] |
| Country | |
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| Budget | |
| Box office | $8.3 million[4] |
Toni Erdmann is a 2016 German-Austrian comedy-drama film directed, written and co-produced by Maren Ade. It stars Peter Simonischek and Sandra Hüller.
The film, which premiered in competition at the Cannes Film Festival,[5][6] was named the best film of 2016 by Sight & Sound and other respected cinema magazines.[7][8][9]
It won five awards at the 29th European Film Awards: Best Film (a first for a film directed by a woman), Best Director, Best Screenwriter, Best Actor, and Best Actress.[10] It also won the European Parliament LUX Prize.[11] It was nominated for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 89th Academy Awards and was considered the strong favourite for the award; it lost to The Salesman.[12][13]
Plot[edit]
Winfried Conradi is a divorced music teacher, an old-age hippie of sorts, with a passion for bizarre pranks involving several fake personas. Following the death of his beloved dog, he decides to reconnect with his daughter, Ines, who is pursuing a career in business consulting. Ines is currently posted in Bucharest, Romania, where she works on an outsourcing project in the oil industry. She is consumed by her work and seems to have little time for her family, least of all her father.
Winfried spontaneously travels to Bucharest and waits for Ines in the lobby of an office complex. After several hours, she finally appears, accompanied by several of her client's board members and on the way to a meeting. Winfried puts on sunglasses and fake teeth as a playful disguise, and approaches her from the side while hiding behind a newspaper. Ines completely ignores her father, but meets with him briefly after work and invites him to a business reception.
In the evening, Winfried accompanies Ines to the reception at the American Embassy, where they meet Henneberg, a German oil company CEO with whom Ines wishes to secure a consulting contract. Ines tries desperately to gain Henneberg's attention, but Henneberg seems more interested in her father. Winfried tells Henneberg that he has hired a replacement daughter because Ines is always busy. To Ines' surprise, Henneberg invites Winfried and Ines for drinks, along with his entourage. At the bar, Henneberg once again brushes aside Ines, and makes fun of Winfried.
After several days, Ines and Winfried are struggling to get along. Ines is consumed by work-related stress and oversleeps a planned rendezvous with clients, blaming her father for not waking her up. Winfried, feeling alienated and unwanted, leaves in a taxi for the airport. Ines continues with her work as normal, and several days later arranges to meet two female friends at a bar. While Ines and her friends are chatting, a man approaches and introduces himself as "Toni Erdmann". The man is clearly Winfried, disguised in a wig and with false teeth, but Ines does not let on. Ines' two friends politely engage "Erdmann" in conversation, and he explains that he is a life coach and consultant visiting Bucharest to attend the funeral of his friend's turtle.
Ines is increasingly frustrated and unfulfilled in her work and personal life, but continues to encounter "Erdmann" sporadically at parties or outside her office. At first Ines is angry with her father, and accuses him of trying to "ruin" her. However, as time goes on she comes to see the worth of her father's interventions in her life, and plays along with the "Erdmann" ruse. "Erdmann" accompanies her on a night out with her work friends, and eventually even comes to a business meeting with her. In turn, "Erdmann" takes Ines to a Romanian family's Easter party, where he forces her into a reluctant and comical, yet powerful, performance of Whitney Houston's "Greatest Love of All". After her performance, Ines promptly rushes off.
Back at her flat, Ines is preparing to host a business team-building brunch to celebrate her birthday. She struggles to zip up her tight dress, realizes her shoes don't match, and attempts to change clothes. The doorbell rings. Instead of redressing, or changing her outfit, she opens the door naked. Spontaneously, she decides to tell her guests that her birthday brunch is a "naked party". Each of them reacts differently, with some leaving in disgust while others self-consciously strip off. As the party becomes increasingly awkward, Winfried arrives dressed in a full-body Bulgarian kukeri costume. The costume frightens Ines' colleagues, but when Winfried leaves the party Ines follows him. Outside in a public park, father and daughter hug and share a moment of intimacy—despite Winfried's impractical and incongruous costume.
Months later, Ines returns to Germany for her grandmother's funeral. She explains that she has quit her job in Bucharest and will shortly begin a new job in Singapore with McKinsey & Company. After the funeral, Winfried and Ines play with some funny hats in the garden of her grandmother's house, and reflect on the nature of happiness.
Cast[edit]
- Peter Simonischek as Winfried Conradi / Toni Erdmann
- Sandra Hüller as Ines Conradi
- Ingrid Bisu as Anca
- Lucy Russell as Steph
- Michael Wittenborn as Henneberg
- Thomas Loibl as Gerald
- Trystan Pütter as Tim
- Hadewych Minis as Tatjana
- Vlad Ivanov as Iliescu
- Victoria Cocias as Flavia
Production[edit]
The character of Winfried was loosely based on Ade's own father who wore a pair of fake teeth she gave him as a gag gift to play practical jokes.[14]
Release[edit]
Toni Erdmann had its world premiere at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival.[5][6] The film was originally accepted into the less prestigious Un Certain Regard section of the 2016 Cannes Film Festival. The night before the press conference in April Ade and her producer received an email that the film had been selected to compete for the Palme d'Or.[15] Shortly after, Sony Pictures Classics and Soda Pictures acquired U.S, Latin American and UK distribution rights to the film, respectively.[16][17]
The film went on to screen at the Filmfest München on 23 June 2016.[18] Sydney Film Festival on 15 June 2016.[19] Karlovy Vary International Film Festival on 3 July 2016.[20] Telluride Film Festival on 2 September 2016.[21] Toronto International Film Festival on 8 September 2016.[22][23] New York Film Festival on 2 October 2016.[24][25] and the BFI London Film Festival on 8 October 2016.[26]
The film was released in Germany on 14 July 2016,[27] Austria on 15 July 2016,[28] and Switzerland on 21 July 2016.[29] The film was released in the United States on 25 December 2016.[30]
Reception[edit]
While described by some critics as a comedy-drama film, Sandra Hüller has commented that "it isn't a comedy – I'm not really sure why people think it is."[31]
Box office[edit]
Toni Erdmann opened on July 14, 2016, in Germany and was watched by 752,000 domestic viewers that same year. The movie was widely advertised through all public media channels and became the 40th most watched movie in Germany in 2016.[32]
Critical response[edit]
The film received universal acclaim from critics. It holds a 92% approval rating on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 172 reviews, with an average rating of 8.3/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Toni Erdmann pairs carefully constructed, three-dimensional characters in a tenderly funny character study that's both genuinely moving and impressively ambitious."[33] On Metacritic, the film holds a rating of 93 out of 100, based on 36 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".[34]
The film was named as the best film of the year by the French magazine Cahiers du cinéma.[8] The British film magazine Sight & Sound also named Toni Erdmann as the best film of 2016 in its poll of 163 critics worldwide.[35] It also topped the American magazine Film Comment's Best Films of 2016 poll.[9] The New York Times’s chief film critics, A. O. Scott and Manohla Dargis, included it in their own lists.[36]
Accolades[edit]
Toni Erdmann received the FIPRESCI Award for Best Film In Competition at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival.[37]
In August 2016, the film won the FIPRESCI (International Federation of Film Critics)'s Grand Prix for best film of the year, and making it the first time this accolade has been awarded to a female filmmaker.[38][39]
Later that year, in November 2016, the film was awarded the European Parliament's Lux Prize, annually awarded to facilitate the diffusion of European films in the European Union.[40]
Notes[edit]
- ^ Tied with Annette Bening for 20th Century Women )

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