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5/10
An unconvincing result of what could have been a great story
14 October 2017
Based on the true story of 'Bild' journalist Mark Pittelkau, this film tells the story of a young man in post-reunification Eastern Germany, who tries to fulfill his dream of becoming a tabloid reporter by doing a last interview with the overthrown East German leader, Erich Honecker. With no doubt, this would have made a good story for a great and interesting film. But, although containing some good approaches, the result in its entirety is rather unconvincing.

The first hour of the film is almost entirely set in the main characters' Plattenbau neighborhood. This part of the film draws a good picture of the immediate post-GDR years, with both young people and their parents' generation having to deal with the inheritances of the past and the challenges of the present at the same time. However, this picture is not always free of stereotypes, and in some cases this film's main character, Johann Rummel (Maximilian Bretschneider) reminds strongly of a second-class copy of Alex, Daniel Brühl's character in 'Good Bye Lenin', in his mixture of naivety and ever-grinning optimism.

The film's last third finally deals with Johann flying to Chile and meeting the exiled Honeckers. Erich Honecker himself is seen as an old, broken, terminally ill man, who has no other way to deal with the destruction of his life's work than repeating his memorized political phrases over and over again, until finally falling asleep. His wife, Margot Honecker, can be seen as protecting herself and her husband of the entire outside world, which includes a sharp and almost paranoid way of mistrust. While the film manages to present both characters as credible humans instead of caricatures, neither is cast in an entirely convincing way. While especially Martin Brambach definitely tries his best (and the make-up department did so as well), he is clearly too young (and too lanky) to be a convincing Honecker, a dying 80-year-old by the time this film is set.

And finally, while Johann's plan obviously is not met with enthusiasm by his own friends, the film never clearly deals with what should be the main question of this story: Is any reporter entitled to intrude into the privacy of his or her person of interest, with a pack of lies and a hidden tape recorder, even if it might be the most hated person of the entire country? Further, the film leaves no doubt that Johann is not interested at all in the political and historical dimension of the Honeckers, not even in their personal views of the world and their own lives. Nothing counts for him but a great story that would enforce his own dream career. However, the film never clearly seems to doubt that Johann has the right to do this interview, up to the point that the viewer nearly seems to be expected to cheer him for his actions.

I have mentioned 'Good Bye Lenin' before. And when thinking clearly about it, beyond the obvious, there are some deeper coincidences between the two films as well. In both films, the young, naive, but ever-optimistic main character creates an entire pack of lies to recreate communism towards a dying person. However, while Alex in 'Good Bye Lenin' is driven by love, Johann is driven by nothing but selfishness and careerism. A rather sad difference, if you ask me.
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7/10
I liked it
13 November 2006
Yes, this movie IS nonsense. I saw it yesterday. But I have to say that I don't know many movies which made me smile like that. I found it much funnier than the first one, although the plot was not very meaningful. There are MANY well-known German celebrities who make a short appearance (Udo Lindenberg, Oliver Pocher, Dirk Bielefeldt, or, having already appeared in the first movie, Christian Tramitz, Atze Schröder, Helge Schneider, and Heinz Hoenig), but I don't think that they overload it, they are just sidekicks to everything that German audience is interested in ;)) All I had wished had been some more scenes for Heinz Hoenig, who is a really great actor ;)

In fact, I really recommend this movie if you just want to have some nice and harmless fun and want to feel better after watching. :)
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Eine Liebe in Königsberg (2006 TV Movie)
7/10
A usual movie - and an unusual one
2 April 2006
At first, Wolfgang Stumph is one of my favorite actors since I watched him in "Go Trabi Go" when I was quite small. This is the "official" movie for his 60th birthday. The result is a movie that is like 1,000 other German TV movies - and, on the other hand, is special. In the last years (and even before) there were enough movies broadcast by German television which were about German family stories in relationship to the eventful history of 20th century Germany. However, this movie marks a new beginning - it is the first German movie which was filmed in the former East Prussia after the German population was expelled between 1944 and 1946. So it can be seen as a sign of the new way of Russian-German relations in the last years. And even Dresden, which is the second city featured in this movie, contains some "new beginning" mentality when the Frauenkirche is shown which was rebuilt for years and reopened some months before.
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Geboren 1999 (1992 TV Movie)
6/10
A movie with many questions and less answers
5 July 2005
Warning: Spoilers
We saw this movie at school and I thought: "What? A German science fiction movie? Yuck!" But if you think of the low possibilities of German movies (and of the lower possibilities in 1992) the result is not bad. The story is about Karl, born in 1999 ("Geboren 1999"), who was adopted by Anna and Rasmus. In the age of 16, in 2015, he tries to find his real parents and discovers that he comes from a very mysterious background - his real mother has never born him, and she did not know his real father at all. In the end he discovers that he was the first child ever to be bred in an artificial uterus. All in all, the movie raises a lot of questions about topics like surrogate mothers and artificial insemination, but it is the viewer's turn to answer them. This is not automatically a bad thing, as there are many different opinions, and so I give eight points. But I think that Julia Brendler (who plays Karl's girlfriend, Sarah) is not the best of all actresses.
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8/10
Nice movie for kids, and a good addition to Harry Potter
20 March 2005
This movie, shot in 2002, seems strongly inspired by the success of Harry Potter - for example when Rabia, the evil witch, says that young witches who live like "normal" people shouldn't get a crystal bowl. But in contrast to the Harry Potter books and movies the witches in Bibi's world are well-known to normal people and are shown on the first page of the local newspaper.

But it is not right to say that Bibi Blocksberg is a Harry Potter copy. She was invented by Elfie Donnelly in the 1970s (?) and had a high success on cassettes, in comics and cartoons a long time before the rise of Harry Potter. It is very good that Elfie Donnelly wrote the script of the movie herself, so that no one else could destroy Bibi's world.

Besides the young actors like Sidonie von Krosigk and Maximilian Befort famous German actors like Katja Riemann, Ulrich Noethen, Corinna Harfouch and Monika Bleibtreu make this movie worth seeing.

In fact, Germany tried to remember his own magicians after the Harry Potter hype and made a worth seeing wizard movie for families.
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Picknick im Schnee (1999 TV Movie)
10/10
Not a movie to laugh, but to feel good
13 March 2005
This is not a movie to laugh at loudly. But it's the right film to watch when you feel depressed - there's always something you can still experience! The story is about a rich banker, whose business partner sleeps with his wife and brings their bank nearly to ruin. So he wants to commit suicide in the night of New Year's Eve. But when he wants to jump from a tower block he meets the punk girl Frankee, who also wants to jump because her boyfriend has left her.

Together with Frankie he spends the best night of his life - he comes into a disco for the first time, he takes drugs and they even go to prison. And so this night is the start of a new life ... a life that contains more than business and glamor parties with boring people ... the REAL life.
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7/10
Good if you want nothing else than to have fun
13 March 2005
If you want entertainment with any deeper meaning, this is the wrong film for you. This movie is comedy and nothing else. If you know Dieter Hallervorden as an excellent artist from the political revue, you will be disappointed. The Hallervorden of the 1980s was a slapstick comedian who called himself "Didi" and made one film after the other with a similar plot.

But if you just want to have fun, perhaps when watching TV with your children in the afternoon, you will enjoy this. Most scenes are like in comics or cartoons, with gangsters, wild chases, explosions, breaking glasses etc. I give seven points.
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9/10
This film should be the last of Olsenbanden - fortunately it wasn't!
11 March 2005
This 6th Olsenbanden movie was planned to be the last. But after the great success that also this movie had in Denmark, Erik Balling and Henning Bahs sat down behind their typewriters again to make another film.

In my eyes, movie no. 6 is the first Olsenbanden movie that is really perfect. Now they have every details that the later films made good - Bjorn Watt-Bolsen as the big businessman with criminal background, or Ove Verner Hansen as Boffen.

In the movie Egon has to steal the famous "Bedford Diamonds" out of a safe in Switzerland for Holm-Hansen Jr. But he is cheated, and now he and his gang try to get the diamonds, which Holm-Hansen wants to sell to an Arabian prince, for themselves...

As I said, the best Olsenbanden film until that day. It had been very sad if it had stayed the last one. But fortunately Balling and Bahs made their best movie ever in the year after, "Olsen-banden pa sporet". But I think also "Olsen-bandens sidste bedrifter" belongs to the Top 3 Olsenbanden movies.
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Go Trabi Go (1991)
9/10
No one knows it, but it is one of my favorite films
10 March 2005
This movie is one of my favorite films because I also come from East Germany and I like Trabis! If you don't know a Trabi: "Trabi" is the short form of "Trabant", a little car that nearly Everyone had in the GDR, even it was not very comfortable. Udo Struutz, the main character of the film, loves his Trabi, calls it "Schorsch" and treats him like a real family member. So in the first summer after the Berlin Wall has fallen he travels to Naples with his wife Rita and their 17-year-old daughter Jacqueline. Their guide is "Italienische Reise" (Italian Voyage) by the famous German writer Johann Wolfgang von Goethe from the year 1787. Of course their holidays are not without complications. The fact of the film that I really find fascinating is that it is not shot in a later time as other "Wende" films like Good Bye Lenin, but it is really from that time (it was shot in Summer 1990) and so it catches the real wall fall feeling - the neighbors in GDR who have now all cars from the west and laugh about Udo and his Trabi; Rita's sister and her family in West Germany who make a business out of the fall of the Iron Curtain (they rent out their caravan to refugees from Eastern Europe), or Udo himself who tries to speak Russian to the people in Rome. And I also like the music, which contains lots of styles, from girlie pop over rock to techno. I give the movie nine points.
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3/10
rather childish and not very logical, but you can bear it
10 March 2005
I saw the movie on a regional German TV program when zapping around, and I can say that you can bear it when you are very bored or when you find it by chance, but it is not worth to miss another program when it's on TV. The story, which seems to be largely inspired by American high school comedies, is quite simple: The main male character loves Sina, but she is not interested in him. So he begins to date her best friend to make her jealous. This story is mixed with lots of extremely childish gags, like the teacher played by Karl Dall (who is a popular German entertainer) demolishing Miss Meise's car; or a wild chase with an old women in her wheelchair. The film contains also a few nude scenes, so I think the ideal audience for the film are some giggling 13-year old teenagers with a low intelligence.

It is conspicuous that many characters seem to be dubbed; for example, one is dubbed by Arne Elsholz, the German voice of Tom Hanks. The movie is not as bad as the German school comedies of the 1960s and 1970s, but still far away from a good film. I think the best in it is the Music, if you are a fan of the 1980s German pop music.
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