I thought of Mr. Nolte's analogy over and over again.
The film is about a ramrod strict Stasi member, Muhe, who is assigned to keep tabs on a playwright, played by Sebastian Koch. He suspects Koch of being too clean, he's so clean that he must be hiding something, and too much of a supporter of the Communist state. While spying on him he meets Koch's girlfriend, played by the luminous Martina Gedeck, who also starred in the great German film Mostly Martha which was remade by Michael Douglas's child bride. Muhe falls for both of them. He falls in love with the idea of both them and with the idea of them being free of the grinding Communist system. Muhe risks his career and his very life to help this couple stay out of trouble with the Stasi.It becomes even harder for him when Gedeck becomes involved with a petty top level bureaucrat who uses her for sex and who wants her for himself only. When she runs afoul of the bureaucrat he orders Muhe's superior to destroy her and her lover Koch. Gedeck is arrested and she becomes an informer, at one point she turns in her lover Kock to save herself from prison. Muhe however, unbeknownst to anyone, saves Koch but Gedeck is wracked with guilt over what she has become and she steps in front of a truck to atone for her sins against her lover Koch.
The film follows Muhe and Koch as they both endure the fall of the Berlin wall and they subsequent reunification of the Germanys.It's a well made brilliant piece of film making with out of this world portrayals of some of the tortured citizens of East Germany. The three leads were magnificent and it was a crime that Ms. Gedeck was not nominated in this country for an Academy Award for her performance in this movie.
As I watched this movie I could not but help see the parallels between the East German government of that time and of our present day government. The spying on their own citizens was rampant then in East Germany, it's rampant now here. They used fear and intimidation then to keep the populace in line, the Bush junta uses it here now. They claimed that their citizens were free and happy, Bush claims we're all free and happy. In East Germany they tightly controlled the media and used it to spread their propaganda, Bush and his corporate buddies do the same thing here in the USA today.
Here a couple more frightening similarities:
Bush built a wall around the White House to keep himself in and the truth out.
Former East German Communist party boss Eric Honecker sneered at people who wanted freedom and he kept right on oppressing people despite the world wide outcry against him.
Dick Cheney does the same thing today. Don't get the wrong idea about this film though, it's not as depressing as I made it sound. It's actually very good and ultimately it has an uplifting ending. I hope one day to say the same thing about our current situation.
And now because I'm a guy who loves pretty women, here are some gratuitous photos of Martina Gedeck:
8 comments:
Oh I would like to see that movie.
I saw this upsetting movie:
http://www.strangeculture.net/
I got into your review and decided I couldn't read the rest since it sounded like something I'd want to see and I didn't want to spoil it.
Thanks for reminding me about this movie. Meant to see it in the theatre but never did.
I really, really liked that film.
Masterpiece. Eternal masterpiece. And Gedeck was quite good, but for me Muehe (RIP) was the best. Loved this.
i will now add this to my netflix queue thanks for the referral.
Missy-I checked out that trailer and now I want to see that one too!
Chris-Trust the monkey, you'll love it.
Vikki-Check it out, I'm sure an intelligent gal like you will see what I am talking about in this review.
Morse-So did I!
JD-I'm inclined to agree with you. It's very close to being a masterpiece. It's like it's the flip side to "Goodbye Lenin."
Boxer-I'm glad you're going to check it out.
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