The Red Baron [Der Rote Baron] Movie Review
The Red Baron [Der Rote Baron] Review

"The Red Baron [Der Rote Baron]" Overview

Rating: 12
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Nikolai MuellerschoenProducer : Dan Maag, Nikolai Muellerschoen, Roland Pellegrino, Thomas Reisser
Screenwiter : Nikolai Muellerschoen
Starring : Matthias Schweighofer,Lena Headey,Til Schweiger,Joseph Fiennes,Volker Bruch,Tino Mewes,Axel Prahl,Ladislav Frej
This is an ambitious attempt to tell the story of World War I's most notorious
fighter pilot. But while the events are truly momentous, with thrillingly
rendered aerial combat, the film is let down by lacklustre writing and
direction.
By 1916, 23-year-old Baron Manfred von Richthofen (Schweighofer) has become the
most feared German pilot. With his lurid red plane, he has no interest in
catching the Allied forces by surprise: he wants to scare them. But he's also a
gentleman, engaging in sport and refusing to be cruel. He's also a strong
leader to his fellow pilots, including best pal Voss (Schweiger) and little
brother Lothar (Buch). And even Allied pilots like the Canadian Roy Brown
(Fiennes) respect him.
This respectful style of engagement is fascinating from today's perspective,
when shock and awe has replaced the fact that real people are dying. This film
catches this beautifully, reflecting the WWI experience realistically in both
the air and the trenches, including the yawning gulf between the aristocratic
officers and everyone else. The story also includes Manfred's frank encounters
with Kaiser Wilhelm (Frej), which are much more engaging than the half-baked
romance he has with a Belgian nurse (well-played by Headey).
Sadly, this romantic storyline takes over the film and feels increasingly
far-fetched, especially when the script strains to create a love triangle with
Roy after he's shot down by Manfred and vice versa. And then there's the scene
when they both crash and spend a day together in no man's land. Although it
could have happened, none of this feels even authentic, partly because everyone
speaks English but mostly because the dialog has no life in it.
Much of what these characters say to each other is either a non sequitor or a
stirring speech. At one point, you think Headey is going to say, in all
earnestness, "Did you ever know that you're my hero?" This kind of corny
writing simply flattens any emotion, especially when it's directed like a
lifeless TV-dramatisation. So it's a good thing that the real story is so
intriguing and the dogfights so exciting to watch. The effects work is truly
stunning, and makes wading through the drama worthwhile.
|
Review by Rich Cline
|






