Lose My Self (2014) Poster

(2014)

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4/10
The fate of a woman who forgot her identity
Horst_In_Translation18 August 2014
Warning: Spoilers
"Vergiss mein ich" is director Jan Schomburg's newest film 3 years after "Über uns das All". The main character here is played by Maria Schrader ("Aimée & Jaguar"). Her husband is portrayed by Johannes Krisch (Foreign Language Oscar nominee "Revanche") and Sandra Hüller and Ronald Zehrfeld have an established body of work as well and should be known at least to cinephiles in the German-language countries.

The central character of the film is a successful female feminist writer, who starts losing her memory due to a brain disease. What I liked about it was that sometimes there were situations which were actually sad, but you couldn't help but smile. Lots of unintentional comedy in here, such as the scene where she says that Roman has a girlfriend or talks about her cheating as if it was the most normal thing on the planet. Or is it? After all, her man and best friend did it as well in the past and they were completely healthy and would understand the consequences. Schomburg did a good job writing and directing the film and the only big criticism I have is a subjective one. I am just not a big fan of Maria Schrader at all and to me she is nobody who can carry a drama like this convincingly. That's why the low rating. If you appreciate her more in her earlier roles, you will probably like this one more than I did.

There's really nothing truly wrong with any of the other aspects here.
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10/10
One of the best movies of 2014
SvetoslavGrigorov9 November 2015
I accidentally came upon this little German movie. It started with a blurry camera and a woman having a shocking moment of losing her identity. The story is not predictable but slowly unfolds in front of you while you question yourself fundamentals such as how society force our lives to be a web of lies. How innocence can be killed if does not play the game of survival. It's a brave movie with few explicit erotic scenes which only the European cinema can produce. There is no censorship in it, so be prepared. Needless to say it is a big psychological roundabout behind the unalloyed script and it's one of those movies like Polanski's Bitter Moon where you can always go back and find a hidden layer. A must see!
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