Voyager

1991 "Destiny is the most powerful coincidence of all."
6.7| 1h57m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 21 March 1991 Released
Producted By: Neue Bioskop Film
Country: United Kingdom
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Walter Faber has survived a crash with an airplane. His next trip is by ship. On board this ship he meets the enchanting Sabeth and they have a passionate love affair. Together they travel to her home in Greece, but the rational Faber doesn't know what fate has in mind for him for past doings.

Genre

Drama, Romance

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Director

Volker Schlöndorff

Production Companies

Neue Bioskop Film

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Voyager Audience Reviews

Console best movie i've ever seen.
Livestonth I am only giving this movie a 1 for the great cast, though I can't imagine what any of them were thinking. This movie was horrible
FirstWitch A movie that not only functions as a solid scarefest but a razor-sharp satire.
Logan By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
tomsview I thought this film sounded interesting, but as it went along I found it annoying. A film should play on different emotions within the audience, but annoyance isn't one of them.I think "Voyager" is the most pretentious piece of twaddle I've seen in a long time. And I say this because it is actually well enough made, and the filmmakers went to some trouble and expense to make it, but it takes itself incredibly seriously based on little substance.The story, which starts in 1957, is built around coincidence. On a trip from South America, an engineer, Walter Faber (Sam Sheppard), encounters a number of people with connections to his past. As he travels from place to place, the connections bring him back to a pre-WW2 relationship.Sam Sheppard plays Werner with such an air of fatalistic detachment that it is almost as though he is on heavy medication for depression. By the end of the film I felt I should get some of that for myself because there aren't many light moments in "Voyager", it's heavy going all the way.Werner has an affair with a woman who could be his daughter. This element of the story had the potential to be a bit icky, and is. The plot of "Voyager" goes into an ever-tightening spiral until Werner just about disappears up his own backside.Mind you, I don't mind a challenging movie or even an obscure one. We've had movies told from the point of view of people who didn't know they were dead, and ones where everything is seen from the viewpoint of someone suffereing from schizophrenia, but the obscurity in Voyager is heavy-handed.The film produces the unexpected death card twice. The first time was effective the second was annoying. To try the same plot device twice was simply misjudgement. The film ends with more fuzzy musings from Werner on the meaningless of his life. "I've got no use for suicide, it doesn't alter the fact that one has been in the world. What I wished was that I had never existed at all".What the? Werner's motivation throughout seems odd, but the script has him flatulently expounding on just about everything without saying anything remotely profound.Despite a great deal of technical competence, and earnest performances "Voyager" takes us on a journey where we are led around in circles. My annoyance comes mainly from the expectation that it would be a work of greater depth.
LovePythons This is what I expected.1. Sam Shepard actually inhabiting a character, not droning lines in a bored tone from a script. Even surviving a plane crash in the desert didn't interest him much.2. With a German production, a little intelligence, some plot savvy and even some sophistication.This is what I got. 1. Embarrassing performance. Dull dull dull.2. Sloppy writing, plotting and directing. Clumsiness everywhere. Ugh!If you haven't seen The English Patient, try that.
b-gaist I saw this when it came out. All I can say, is I still remember the basic plot, and the cinematography. Walter Faber is paradigmatic as the post WWII individual, still blindly devoted to the goddess of Reason in his personal attitude to life, but beset by the unconscious flood of irrational experience: a real example of Carl Jung's warning that what is not made conscious will be lived out as destiny. It is overall a wonderful, understated film, beautifully directed and shot, representing in a gentle way what European directors (and all directors) should concentrate more on - literature, myth, relationship, culture. It's only fault, if I recall correctly, was that it was not longer and deeper, because it really could have been a great film. Go ahead and watch it!
Hamadryade The american trailer ist really, really bad. Hopelessly kitsch.Schloendorff himself has a reputation as a director of "Autorenfilme" - author's films. That is exactly what "Homo faber" is supposed to be. an Adaption of a famous book. Schloendorff eradicated much of the mythological connotations, except for the obvious oedipus analogies. Just as well. you can't take everything into a movie. but to happily ignore the marvellous work of Max Frisch and thinking that the title "voyager" is substantial for the film! To compare it with other kitsch films! How sad. And Julie Delpy's acting is really not helping matters.