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Run Lola Run

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Wikipedia article




'Run Lola Run' (, lit. "Lola Runs") is a 1998 German experimental thriller film written and directed by Tom Tykwer. The story follows a woman named Lola (Franka Potente) who needs to obtain 100,000 Deutschmarks in twenty minutes to save the life of her boyfriend Manni (Moritz Bleibtreu).

'Run Lola Run' screened at the Venice Film Festival, where it competed for the Golden Lion. Following its release, the film received critical acclaim and several accolades, including the Grand Prix of the Belgian Syndicate of Cinema Critics, the Audience Award at the Sundance Film Festival, Best Film at the Seattle International Film Festival, and seven awards at the German Film Awards. It was also selected as the German entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 71st Academy Awards, though it was not ultimately nominated.

Plot



) where the three episodes begin

Manni, a bagman responsible for delivering 100,000 Deutschmarks, frantically calls his girlfriend Lola. Over the phone, Manni explains that he was riding the subway to drop off the money and fled upon seeing ticket inspectors, before realizing that he had left the money bag behind; he saw a homeless man examining it as the train pulled away. Manni's boss Ronnie will kill him in 20 minutes unless he has the money, so he is preparing to rob a nearby supermarket to replace the funds. Lola implores Manni to wait for her and decides to ask her father, a bank manager, for help.

Lola hangs up and runs down the staircase of her apartment building past a man with a dog. At the bank, her father is having a conversation with his mistress, who discloses her pregnancy. When Lola arrives, her conversation with her father turns into an argument. He tells her that he is leaving her mother and that Lola is not his biological daughter. Lola runs to meet Manni but arrives too late and sees him entering the supermarket with a gun. She helps him rob it of 100,000 marks, but on leaving, they find it surrounded by police. Surrendering, Manni throws the money bag into the air, which startles a police officer who accidentally shoots Lola dead.

Events restart from the moment Lola leaves the house. This time, she trips over the man with the dog and now runs with a limp, so she subsequently arrives late to the bank, allowing her father's mistress to add that he is not the father of her unborn child. A furious Lola overhears the conversation, grabs a security guard's gun, holds her father hostage, and robs the bank of 100,000 marks. When police mistake her for a bystander, she is able to leave and meet with Manni in time, but a speeding ambulance that Lola had distracted moments earlier fatally runs him over.

Events restart once more. This time, Lola leaps over the man and his dog, arriving at the bank earlier but not triggering an auto accident as she did the first two times. Consequently, her father's colleague arrives before her and takes him away from the office. Lola now wanders aimlessly before entering a casino, where she hands over all her cash and plays roulette with a single 100-mark chip. She bets it on the number 20, which wins. Roulette pays 35 to 1, so she wins 3,500 more marks, which she immediately adds to her original chip on 20. She now shrilly screams, causing 20 to come up again. She leaves with a bag containing 129,600 marks, and runs to Manni's rendezvous point. Meanwhile, Manni spots the homeless man from the subway passing by on a bicycle with the money bag. Manni steals back the bag at gunpoint, exchanging his gun. A dishevelled and perspiring Lola arrives to witness Manni handing off the money to Ronnie. As the pair walk along, Manni casually asks Lola about her bag.

Cast



* Franka Potente as Lola

* Moritz Bleibtreu as Manni

* Herbert Knaup as Lola's dad

* Nina Petri as Frau Hansen

* Armin Rohde as Herr Schuster

* Joachim Krl as Norbert von Au

* Ludger Pistor as Herr Meier

* Suzanne von Borsody as Frau Jger

* Sebastian Schipper as Mike

* Julia Lindig as Doris

* Lars Rudolph as Herr Kruse

* Ute Lubosch as Mama

* Monica Bleibtreu as the blind woman

* Heino Ferch as Ronnie

* Hans Paetsch as Narrator

Themes



The film touches on themes such as free will vs. determinism, the role of chance in people's destiny, and obscure cause-effect relationships. Through brief flash-forward sequences of still images, Lola's fleeting interactions with bystanders are revealed to have surprising and drastic effects on their future lives, serving as concise illustrations of chaos theory's butterfly effect, in which minor, seemingly inconsequential variations in any interaction can blossom into much wider results than is often recognized. The film's exploration of the relationship between chance and conscious intention comes to the foreground in the casino scene, where Lola appears to defy the laws of chance through sheer force of will, improbably making the roulette ball land on her winning number with the help of a glass-shattering scream.

The thematic exploration of free will vs. determinism is made clear from the start. In the film's brief prologue, an unseen narrator asks a series of rhetorical questions that prime the audience to view the film through a metaphysical lens touching on traditional philosophical questions involving determinism vs. philosophic libertarianism, as well as epistemology. The theme is reinforced through the repeated appearance of a blind woman who briefly interacts with Manni in each alternative reality, and seems to have supernatural understandings of both the present and potential futures in those realities. The film ultimately seems to favor a compatibilist philosophical view to the free will question as evidenced by the casino scene and by the final telephone booth scene in which the blind woman redirects Manni's attention to a passerby, which enables him to make an important choice near the film's climax.

Several moments in the film allude to a supernatural awareness of the characters. For example, in the first reality, Manni shows a nervous Lola how to use a gun by removing the safety, while in the second timeline she removes the safety as though she remembers what to do. This suggests that she might have the memory of the events depicted in the previous timeline. Also, the bank's guard says to Lola "you finally came" in the third timeline, as if he remembered Lola's appearances in the previous two.

The theme of desire is expressed through the film as a driving force for Lola's actions. In Ingebord Majer O'Sickey's essay "Whatever Lola Wants, Lola Gets (Or Does She?): Time and Desire in Tom Tykwer's Run Lola Run" she argues that "what Lola really wants is to get into time sync with Manni in sexual terms". The conflict in the plot is driven by the initial phone conversation following Lola being late, leading to their timing to be out of sync. After the end of the first "episode", the bedside questioning by Lola reveals her dissatisfaction with the relationship, leading Manni to ask "Do you want to leave me?". O'Sickey makes the argument that each repeated return to the day is driven by Lola's continual attempt to adjust Manni's timing. The entirety of the film portrays Lola as "postmodern heroine who could leap over traditional time-constraints" giving the expectation that she ultimately would get what she wants. By the third arrival in the film, O'Sickey argues that "Lola not only loses her super heroine status, but her desire to desire". She claims the ending portrays "the tradition of classical Hollywood cinema's economy of desire". With Manni having reacquired the money, Lola's desire to be "in sync" disappears as she watches Manni's "metamorphosis from a bungling and fairly ineffective lover to a man in control of the situation". O'Sickey makes the claim that this deflates Lola's heroine status in the final act.

Allusions to earlier films



The film has drawn numerous comparisons to Polish director Krzysztof Kielowski's 'Blind Chance' (1982), which also features three scenarios, the outcome of which depends on split-second timing. After Kielowski's death, Tykwer would go on to direct his planned next film, 'Heaven'.

'Run Lola Run' features two allusions to Alfred Hitchcock's film 'Vertigo'. Like that film, it features recurring images of spirals, such as the Spirale bar behind Manni's phone box, the spiral staircase down which Lola runs and the spirals on the bedsheet. In addition, the painting on the back wall of the casino of a woman's head seen from behind is based on a shot in 'Vertigo': Tykwer disliked the empty space on the wall behind the roulette table and commissioned production designer Alexander Manasse to paint a picture of Kim Novak as she appeared in 'Vertigo'. Manasse could not remember what she looked like in the film; therefore, he decided to paint the famous shot of the back of her head. The painting took fifteen minutes to complete.Tom Tykwer, commentary on the DVD edition of the film. The bed sheets in the red scenes also feature spiral designs which add to the allusion.

The Lola character is often compared to the Lara Croft character of the 1996 video game Tomb Raider. (247 pages)

Production



Soundtrack

The soundtrack of the film, by Tykwer, Johnny Klimek, and Reinhold Heil, includes numerous musical quotations of the sustained string chords of 'The Unanswered Question', an early 20th-century chamber ensemble work by American composer Charles Ives. In the original work, the chords are meant to represent "the Silences of the Druidswho Know, See and Hear Nothing."

The techno soundtrack established 'dialectical relation' between motives of the movie: 'Rhythm', 'Repetition', and 'Interval' among various spatio-temporal logics. This produces unification of contradictions like 'Time and Space' or 'The cyclical and the linear'.[https://books.google.com/books?id=T7Ofq366vYUC&lpg=PP1&dq=Puzzle%20films%3A%20complex%20storytelling%20in%20contemporary%20cinema&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false Puzzle films: complex storytelling in contemporary cinema], by Warren Buckland, Wiley-Blackwell, 2009, pages 137138

Filming locations

, which served as the filming location for Manni's and Lola's robbery.

'Run Lola Run' was filmed in and around Berlin, Germany.

Reception



Critical reception

, the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports that 93% of critics gave the film positive reviews based on 83 reviews, with an average rating of 7.70/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "More fun than a barrel of Jean-Paul Sartre, pic's energy riffs on an engaging love story and really human performances while offering a series of what-ifs and a blood-stirring soundtrack." On Metacritic, the film has an average score of 77 out of 100, based on 29 reviews, stating the film as having "generally favourable reviews".

In contrasting reviews, 'Film Threat's Chris Gore said of the film, "[It] delivers everything great foreign films shouldaction, sex, compelling characters, clever filmmaking, it's unpretentious (a requirement for me) and it has a story you can follow without having to read those annoying subtitles. I can't rave about this film enoughthis is passionate filmmaking at its best. One of the best foreign films, heck, one of the best films I have seen", while Jonathan Rosenbaum of 'The Chicago Reader' stated, "About as entertaining as a no-brainer can bea lot more fun, for my money, than a cornball theme-park ride like 'Speed', and every bit as fast moving. But don't expect much of an aftertaste."

Box office

The film was the highest-grossing German film released in 1998 with a gross of $13.8 million. It grossed $7.3 million in the United States and Canada and $22.9 million worldwide.

Accolades

The film was nominated for dozens of awards, including the BAFTA Award for Best Film Not in the English Language. It won several, including the Grand Prix of the Belgian Syndicate of Cinema Critics, the Audience Award at the Sundance Film Festival, Best Film at the Seattle International Film Festival, and seven separate awards at the German Film Awards. 'Lola Rennt' was ranked number 86 in 'Empire' magazine's "The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema" in 2010. It was also nominated for the Golden Lion at the 55th Venice Film Festival, and a European Film Award in 1998.

'Run Lola Run' was selected as the German entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 71st Academy Awards, but not ultimately nominated.Margaret Herrick Library, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences

Home media



The film was released on DVD on 21 December 1999 and on Blu-ray on 19 February 2008.

Legacy



The music video for "It's My Life" by Bon Jovi, released in 2000, was inspired by the film.Alex Gernandt: 'Bon Jovi', 2. edition, Goldmann, Mnchen 2001, , p 261 The music video for "Ocean Avenue" by Yellowcard is also seen by some to have been inspired by the film, as is the opening scene of 'Buffy The Vampire Slayer' episode "Beneath You", where a pink-haired girl is seen running through a German street to techno music reminiscent of the movie.

The film was the initial inspiration for the three-day cycle in 'The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask', a video game also released in 2000.

The movie has been referenced in various animated series. 'The Simpsons' parodies 'Run Lola Run' in 2001's "Trilogy of Error", 'Phineas and Ferb' features a 2011 episode titled "Run, Candace, Run", and a 2021 'Pinky and the Brain' segment of 'Animaniacs' (2020present) called "Run Pinky Run" (season 2, episode 3). In the parody, Pinky must acquire $100,000 to save Brain, who is being held hostage after losing the bag with the money he was going to use to buy a rare isotope to power his latest invention.

The series 'SMILF' includes a 2017 episode ("Run, Bridgette, Run or Forty-Eight Burnt Cupcakes & Graveyard Rum") which references the film. The music video for "Walk Me to the Bridge" (2014) by Manic Street Preachers directly references the movie.

Remake



A Hindi remake titled 'Looop Lapeta' was released on Netflix on 4 February 2022.

See also



* List of submissions to the 71st Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film

* List of German submissions for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film

* 'Remedial Chaos Theory'

* 'Sliding Doors'

References






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