The Castle (1968) Poster

(1968)

User Reviews

Review this title
10 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
10/10
Best movie about Kafka's last unfinished novel
brutal_bruegel_bagel29 January 2008
Saw this movie one time only in June 1983 and have never forgotten it. Have been looking for it for years after. Even have been, every year or so, suggesting to the Criterion Collection that they may buy the rights to release this long lost gem. No luck so far on either account ....

I am a retired U.S. government employee, and can tell you there is, in this movie, apt illustrations of the way it can sometimes be within a sometimes inefficient bureaucracy.

Maddening truths. Brilliant portrayal.

If anyone has an in on this flick, please let me know when, where, how.

Thanks,

Greg
10 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
enigmatic atmosphere
daoo1020 March 2003
I was really lucky to find and see this movie.It has proved to me that as the art of cinema is followed by stars,awards,promotional work and glamourous appearances there are also "hidden diamonds"."Das scloss" until this time is my greatest example of this meaning.Besides M.Schell and the famous Kafka's "Castle" all the other members of this production are unknown and without any career highlights.(R.Noelte seems to me like..a ghost with one brilliant film and no other appearance,at all,in movie making.From the beginning of this film you feel that the atmosphere is covered with mystery.A kind of mystery absolutely different than the types you can find in classic mystery movies.An enigmatic atmosphere that becomes out from the magnificent music score,the great photography,especially at the snow scenes,the short phrases from Schell,the bureaucracy that paralyzes every desire that "k" has and every action he does in order to be a member of the castle.But most of all this film shows the unexplained suspicion that is created in a group of people who have their own rules and beliefs and they cannot accept in our society any other person.Also shows the man,the lonely person who is frustrated by other people,by fate,shows Kafka. There isn't any end,this story couldn't end.It's just a screaming at the snows,in the place that this story began.Amazing...
12 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Sober, serious adaptation of Kafka
hokeybutt5 May 2005
THE CASTLE (2 outta 5 stars) I guess you movie is alright if you *really* need to see a dull, lifeless screen translation of Franz Kafka's prose. It always strikes me when I read passages from Kafka's "The Castle" that all the characters in it should have been played by The Marx Brothers. The endless circular dialogues and ridiculous bureaucracy... it is really funny stuff! But, of course, Kafka is a "serious" author and so, we get this "serious" film adaptation. It's not that terrible, I guess... there are a few well-done scenes... and Maximilian Schell does a fair job of portraying a newly-hired land surveyor who can't seem to gain admittance to "the castle" where he is supposed to report for work. It's all very soberly acted and directed... what it really needs is more of a Monty Python-esquire quality. Maybe Terry Gilliam needs to give this material a shot?
9 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Bleak, Stunning, Brilliant
Cinemafou29 October 2009
The protagonist is called to a castle somewhere to do some work as a land surveyor. A small village is outside the castle, which is where he stays while attempting to make contact with various officials attached to the castle in some way, so he might know just what he is supposed to do.

It is winter. The landscape is snow covered. The castle, massive and forbidding, dominates the top of the hill. The seat of government is supposedly in the castle. Various officials and government workers of varying descriptions are around and about. The land surveyor asks questions, official procedures are described, leading to more questions...

This 1968 effort by Maximilian Schell to put Franz Kafka's novel on film is for me one of the pinnacles of cinematic achievement. This is a film where I think it would be impossible to write spoilers into a review. This is very far away from most films in style, narrative and delivery. It is not perhaps accessible to everyone, hence the decidedly negative reviews also found here. But it blows me away not for being so different, but for being so so true, so prescient.
8 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
The material just isn't really working for me Warning: Spoilers
"Das Schloß" or "The Castle" is a West German film from 1968, so this one will have its 50th anniversary 2 years from now. Writer and director here is Rudolf Noelte and it is probably his most (maybe only) somewhat known film from his body of work. The name is not too known anymore today. But the name of lead actor and Oscar winner Maximilian Schell certainly is. So if there is any reason to watch this film, then it is for Max, who is also in almost every scene from start to finish of this 90-minute movie. But not even he (and I like him usually) could really make the material of Kafka's novel here interesting to me. The only thing that stays on my mind is the bureaucracy depicted in here and we all known how annoying it can be. i don't think it's Noelte's or even Schell's fault as I also watched the Haneke film starring Ulrich Mühe that is a bit newer and despite liking these two as well, it did extremely little for me too. Maybe Kafka just isn't my preferred choice. So yeah, overall I say Schell is good makes this watchable at times, but from my very subjective standpoint, it still was not an interesting, let alone compelling watch. Only check it out if you have read and really liked Kafka's base material.
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
An engrossing essay on futility and frustration.
Tom Murray9 October 2000
Franz Kafka died without finishing the book but that makes no difference; the story is never-ending. The whole story is about the efforts of a professional man, who has been hired to work in the castle, to actually get in. The bureaucracy in the adjacent village must be dealt with before he can enter but it is wholly without any ambition to succeed at anything. This is an essay on futility and frustration but it is totally engrossing. The film is similar in nature to Johnny Depp's Dead Man, except that he is faced with anarchy rather than bureaucracy.
7 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Not for everyone, but a masterpiece who love art films
pcdoctorhousecalls1 January 2020
Warning: Spoilers
I saw this on Canadian Public Television over 35 years ago and loved it. I found the musical score very haunting, and wanted to find a copy of this film for many years. I recently purchased it as a used VHS cassette from Amazon, the only one I have ever seen (with English voice over). It is by Palisades Entertainment #9103. You can just feel the total frustration of this land surveyor as he deals with the mindless bureaucracy of the mysterious "castle" that he is never able to enter. On top of that, we see the utter corruption of this narrow society in the village: the laziness, the narrow minds, the cruelty and inhospitable atmosphere. We see some recognition by the barmaid that he represents something far better than the men in the village. And in one telling scene, a school boy comes out of the classroom to tell the land surveyor that he wants to grow up to be like him, meaning a man willing to confront the insanity and cruelty in this society. Sadly, in the end, the exhausted land surveyor runs off in the fog of the winter snow towards the castle, and we are never sure if he will truly be appointed to the position he thought he was called to do.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
A Kafkaesque experience - in the most pedestrian meaning of the word
Thom-Peters22 September 2022
This is a TV movie, made at a time, when the "Theatre of the Absurd" still managed to entertain people. The TV people probably thought: "The story doesn't make any sense at all, but it is completely absurd. So we are good."

The story: A stranger comes into a village with secretive, hostile and bureaucracy obsessed residents. Everything turns out to be deceptions and lies. Or just utter nonsense. He doesn't achieve anything. Still he is hellbent on staying there.

Watching this screen adaption of Kafka's novel is like reading one of the absurdist plays by Eugène Ionesco. It's a pointless chore done for school. It is bleak, dull and every kind of meaning people attribute to it is completely arbitrary. But it is also a product of its time and not without value. It shows how not to do a screen adaption, especially if you want to create a work that can be enjoyed without knowledge of the source material. 4/10.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
A Film I was Forced to Watch in the Army
tim_the_bald4 August 2000
When did I see this film? As a new recruit in the IDF, January 1977. Before I even started basic training I was sent to an army Hebrew course to improve my Hebrew. One night the corporal informed us we would get to see a movie, "The Castle." As the movie unfolded in its incomprehensible complexity, most of the soldiers wanted to leave, but the corporal would not let us. So I had to see the entire movie, which has very little plot, and no sense at all.

Why didn't the young man simply leave when he found out how crazy the village was? Why does he insist on staying there? I would have run from this place as if the Hound of Hell was after me.
4 out of 24 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
A film that never starts
Systematicer20 October 2004
It doesn't work. No. It definitely doesn't work as a film. It's pointless. I feel pretty messed around right now. Maximilian Schell did well. But that's it. There were two nice scenes. But that's it.

The film is creating its own reality just to deliver the right message. If you want to tell a story that delivers these messages it tries to deliver...then tell a better one!

The film is quite terrible. It never really starts and it's over before it comes to any relevant point. I didn't like it. Just watch it if you're really into Franz Kafka's story.

3/10 because it tries to deliver a great message but fails miserably.
1 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed