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Invincible (2001)
9/10
The invincible Werner Herzog
12 November 2001
I just saw this touching movie at the Stockholm Film Festival, and I have to say Herzog is still as poignant, charming and direct in his storytelling as ever. Not afraid to cast people who just have pure feelings, no plastic acting-by-the-book moves and more than one and a half expressions on their faces.

The frame of the story is a little jewish village in Poland in 1932, where a big family lives a poor but happy life. The eldest and the youngest sons, Zishe and Benjamin, mocked by some people as the thick and the thin, lead us through thick and thin of their lives. Based on a true story, the legend of the Invincible Zishe Breitbart, played bravely and somewhat charmingly naive by Jouko Ahola (the 1997 and 1999 strongest man), still is told among the jewish people. A man who accepted his physical strength as the gift of God, and thereby felt obliged to define his goal by that call. When he gets hired at a varieté in Berlin, he finds himself confronted with the Nazis, his strange employer Jan Hanussen, played by the impressive Tim Roth, who wants to sell him off as Siegfried, a blond, germanic hero who can even lift an elephant. It is obvious that Zishe has to decide whether he wants to deny his identity or rather become a Samson and fight for who he is. A touch of romance is added by the real life concert pianist Anna Gourari, who is almost over-acting, almost resembling a silent movie actress.

A very international, very special cast. Told in a simple, poetic and beautifully photographed way, Herzog manages to make you overlook the only downside of the whole movie: the bad language, german spiced english.

For people who care more about the persons than the action, this movie comes highly recommended.
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10/10
A quite unique experience
25 July 2001
The Deer Hunter is a masterpiece. Not only because a great cast like Robert De Niro and Christopher Walken do such a great, highly believable acting job (which also is due to Michael Cimino's excellent directing) but also because the story about those people touches you so directly. Simple small town people with friends and family and rituals and traditions like we could have them, too. Like when we get to participate at length a wedding party, get to know the five men and their women, the focus becoming stronger on the two unlike brothers, Michael and Nick Vronsky (played by De Niro and Walken), who do share their affection for the same woman, Linda, played with great feeling and freshness by Meryl Streep. The five men enjoy their ritual of occasional deer hunting, presented in a touching scene when they quarrel over a banality, but it shows who is seriuos about himself and who isn't. And when the Vietnam War begins, it's only Michael and his brother Nick, and their friend Steve (gripping performance by John Savage), who go to fight for their country. This is when it get's uncomfortable. The psychological pressure, the damage to their souls and their all over health the audience is going to witness is undescribable. It's not a horror movie, but a psycho-thriller for sure.

A perfect portrait about what Vietnam did to those three small town men, that we got to meet (like it used to be in the good old movie times, hint, hint!) and feel for and therefore get touched in a way you hardly get touched without a lot of tear-quenching, boo-hoo, violin-impregnated slo-mo-crap nowadays. This is not a war movie at first, this is a gripping drama both men and women will enjoy to watch. When I first watched this movie, I was probably too young to grasp all of its depth and meaning. But it has a way to reach out to you you hardly see again. In it's very own way it will grow on you.
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