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Good Bye, Lenin! (2004)
Runtime: 1 hr 58 mins
Synopsis: October, 1989 was a bad time to fall into a coma if you lived in East Germany – and this is precisely what happens to Alex’s proudly socialist mother. Alex has a big problem on his hands when she suddenly awakens eight months later. Her heart is so weak that any shock might kill her. And what could be... October, 1989 was a bad time to fall into a coma if you lived in East Germany – and this is precisely what happens to Alex’s proudly socialist mother. Alex has a big problem on his hands when she suddenly awakens eight months later. Her heart is so weak that any shock might kill her. And what could be more shocking than the fall of the Berlin Wall and the triumph of capitalism in her beloved East Germany? To save his mother, Alex transforms the family apartment into an island of the past, a kind of socialist-era museum where his mother is lovingly duped into believing that nothing has changed. What begins as a little white lie turns into a major scam as Alex’s sister and selected neighbors are recruited to maintain the elaborate ruse – and keep her believing that Lenin really did win after all! Five years after his award-winning Das Leben ist Eine Baustelle (Life is All You Get), filmmaker Wolfgang Becker presents GOOD BYE, LENIN! Fast and funny, intriguing and touching, Becker tells a story that is as unique as it irresistible, an alternative history to that of the recent German past: a human story of the reunification not only of an entire nation, but of a family living in East Berlin. Cast as the two leads are performers who have each won the German Film Award, Daniel Brühl (Das Weisse Rauchen [The White Noise], Schule [No More School]) and Katrin Sass (Heidi M.). They are wonderfully supported by Russian actress Chulpan Khamatova (Luna Papa, Tuvalu), newcomer Maria Simon, Alexander Beyer (Sonneallee [Sun Alley]) and Florian Lukas (Absolute Giganten [Gigantic]). GOOD BYE, LENIN! also features original music by the French composer Yann Tiersen (Amelie, The Dreamlife of Angels). [More]
Genre: Comedies
Starring: Katrin Sass, Daniel Bruhl, Chulpan Khamatova, Alexander Beyer, Florian Lukas
Screenwriter: Wolfgang Becker, Bernd Lichtenberg
Producer: Stefan Arndt
Composer: Yann Tiersen
DVD Info
Release:
Oct 8, 2004
DVD Features:
- Region 1
- Keep Case
- Widescreen
Audio:
- Dolby Digital - German
Reviews
The backdrop is snatching at random political significance, and the plot just turns into a stupid and pointless comedy of errors.
An intriguing concept, hampered only by the curse of all farce: after taking us to the brink of absurdity, it's difficult to reel us back in for the emotionally fraught conclusion.
Succeeds as a comedy, as a glimpse at a tumultuous time in European history, and as a thoughtful look at the great lengths to which people will go for important relationships.
The real story is how ideologies melt when it comes to affairs of the heart. In that way, the movie has an appeal that goes way beyond its country's borders.
Un film qui propose à la fois une réflexion intelligente sur la chute du mur de Berlin, un divertissement amusant et un récit touchant.
A political comedy that reaches you right down in your soul, reminding us without any Benigni-ish moral frivolity that life sure is complicated, but it is also beautiful.
An enjoyable comedy about keeping a big thing secret from someone and an interesting drama about family ties and values and politics.
Non-Germans will certainly get the essence of the humor but may find the movie long and repetitive.
This is an unusual and tender story about the love of a family for each other.
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