Wim Wenders: Road Trilogy/bd - Criterion Collection - Movies - CRITERION COLLECTION - 0715515177313 - May 31, 2016
In case cover and title do not match, the title is correct

Wim Wenders: Road Trilogy/bd

Criterion Collection

Price
€ 102.99

Ordered from remote warehouse

Expected delivery Jan 8 - 15, 2025
Add to your iMusic wish list

Wim Wenders: Road Trilogy/bd

A German journalist (Rüdiger Vogler) finds his fruitless research junket through America taking a bizarre turn when a new acquaintance (Lisa Kreuzer) abandons her 9-year-old daughter (Yetta Rottländer) with him... and he's got no choice but to bring the child on his return to Europe, in Wenders' endearing effort "Alice in the Cities" (1974). A young would-be writer (Vogler) in search of life experience sets off to see Germany by train... and falls in with a pack of eccentrics who provide more fodder than he bargained for. "Wrong Move" (1975), Wenders' intriguing adaptation of Goethe's "Wilhelm Meister," co-stars Hanna Schygulla, Peter Kern, Ivan Desny, and, in her screen debut, Nastassja Kinski. As he wanders the countryside in search of work, an itinerant film projector repairman (Vogler) stops a depressed psychologist (Hanns Zischler) from committing suicide, and proceeds to show his impromptu companion what life has to offer, in Wenders' engaging buddy tale "Kings of the Road" (1976). 6 1/2 hrs. Total on four discs. In German with English subtitles.

Media Movies     Blu-ray   (Blu-ray Disc)
Number of discs 3
Released May 31, 2016
EAN/UPC 0715515177313
Label CRITERION COLLECTION CCIN2625BR
Genre Drama
Dimensions 140 × 176 × 28 mm   ·   346 g
Region code Region A   (Americas, East and Southeast Asia)
Language Original language
Subtitles English
Director Wim Wenders
Skuespiller Rüdiger Vogler
Skuespiller Lisa Kreuzer
Skuespiller Yella Rottländer
Skuespiller Hans Christian Blech
Skuespiller Hanns Zischler
Skuespiller Hanna Schygulla

Show all

More by Criterion Collection

Others have also bought

Show all

More offers: Criterion Collection & British Film Institute