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DOWNFALL Movie Review

DOWNFALL Review

SYMPATHY FOR THE DEVIL

Naively loyal secretary is slightly clumsy audience surrogate in 'Downfall,' a German drama set during Hitler's last days

A scene from 'DOWNFALL'

"DOWNFALL" Overview

**1/2 stars

155 minutes | Rated: R
Friday, March 18th 2005


Cast and Crew

Directed by Oliver Hirschbiegel


Starring Bruno Ganz, Alexandra Maria Lara, Ulrich Matthes, Juliane Kohler, Thomas Kretschmann, Heino Ferch, Christian Berkel, Matthias Habich, Corinna Harfouch, Ulrich Noethen

 

 

 

Click for the BRUNO GANZ Gallery


For those not already versed in the lore of Adolf Hitler's final days, the intimacy, immediacy and bunker-mentality minutia of "Downfall" may make for truly engrossing cinema. A detailed, historically accurate account that bears witness as the psychotic dreams of a 1,000-year Third Reich slip away from its increasingly paranoid Fuehrer, this bravely matter-of-fact German epic features uniformly powerful performances and is an eerie, vivid realization of gray-walled claustrophobia and the terror of saturation bombing. (The camera shakes in a uniquely unsettling, knock-you-off-your-bearings way with each mortar shell.)

The fantastic Bruno Ganz (best known in the US for "Wings of Desire") plays Hitler with a broken kind of humanity that makes his evil subtler than expected, but by extension all the more chilling. His senior staff is accounted for nearly every moment of the detailed film, but none of them stands out except Ulrich Matthes as psychotically loyal propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels, and Corinna Harfouch as his wife. She has the film's most disturbing scene, poisoning her children to "save" them from growing up in a world without National Socialism.

But while director Oliver Hirschbiegel ("Das Experiment") very effectively takes you deep inside Nazi Germany's crumbling heart and brings many infamous moments acutely to life, his film doesn't offer much in the way of new insight. The script is more of a textbook play-by-play than an examination of impulses and psyches, and while the Hirschbiegel and his cast add those dimensions through their fine work, it seems the only way he could invest the audience in these events was by seeking out a sympathetic minor character -- in the person of Hitler's young secretary, Traudl Junge (Alexandra Maria Lara) -- and beef up her significance.

The film is based in part on Junge's accounts of events, and the actress rises to the occasion, but the woman's continued willful naivete, and her loyalty and affection for her Fuehrer, makes Traudl far less sympathetic than was clearly intended.



Review by

Rob Blackwelder


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