Absolute Giganten is a 1999 German comedy drama film written and directed by Sebastian Schipper, produced by Stefan Arndt and Tom Tykwer. Set in Hamburg, it depicts how a group of young Germans react to the prospect of one of them leaving forever, and involves drinking, V8 engines, and an extraordinary game of table football.
Absolute Giganten | |
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Directed by | Sebastian Schipper |
Written by | Sebastian Schipper |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Frank Griebe |
Edited by | Andrew Bird |
Music by | The Notwist, Sophia and others |
Distributed by | X-Filme Creative Pool |
Release date |
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Running time | 80 minutes |
Country | Germany |
Language | German |
It was Schipper's first movie as a director. In the year 2000 the movie won the German Film Award in the category Outstanding Feature Film.
The film was generally well-received by German critics. The American film critic Eric D. Snider wrote that the film "has the sort of world-weary, melancholy bleakness we've come to expect from that country, while at the same time infusing energy and vigor into filmmaking as an art form. This is a pitifully touching film, uplifting for its intrinsic beauty even while evoking sadness for the characters."[1]
Films directed by Sebastian Schipper | |
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Works by Tom Tykwer | |
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Feature films |
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Short films |
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Writer only |
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Producer only |
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Television |
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General |
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National libraries |
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