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Recommended The Lives of Others

Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck, 2006

Star Review

It isn't often the Motion Picture committee selects a great or even distinguished film for the 'Best Foreign Language Film' award but earlier this year they themselves proud when, against expectations, they plumped for Florian Von Donnersmarck's remarkable debut 'The Lives of Others'.

The Lives of Others has been one of the most talked about European movies of the last year. Most comments have focussed on the assured handling of the picture set in pre-unification East Germany, a notable feat for a first-time director. Others, of whom Anna Funder is perhaps the most prominent, have baulked at the film's basic premise which involves a loyal and committed Stasi captain suffer a crisis of conscience when he is asked by his superior to spy on a talented young theatre director. The conscience is compromised by the fact that the commanding officer has personal and rather selfish reasons for wanting to destroy the life of the artist, namely the artist's wife.

Funder, author of acclaimed novel 'Stasiland'argues that this simply could not have happened during the Stasi's years of control over internal state security matters and who are we to argue. She, after all, had bitter, first-hand experience of the Stasi's ruthlessness in dealing with dissent, both real and imagined.

Whilst one can accept the cavils of Funder and others as carrying a good deal of authoritative weight, we should not lose sight of the fact that The Lives of Others is, first and foremost, a thriller; one that is sharp, intelligent and often coolly obsevered. Its strength lay in its ability to draw the audience in completely into a strange world where paranoia is part of the daily routine and state repression is a wholly and bizarrely bureaucratised as though it were a Pension's Department.

Von Donnersmarck's film illustrates superbly that the German Democratic Republic of the 1980's was a place where, more often than not, a person's life would be ruined with a one-page typed letter and a rubber stamp. The physical violence of other oppressive regimes is hardly present in this movie for as Von Donnersmarck persuasively suggests, the DDR exerted control by creating an atmosphere quiet menace and denuding its citizens of confidence. Capturing this atmosphere of psychological oppression is no easy business but Von Donnersmarck pulls it off with commendable aplomb.

The Lives of Others proves thinking cinema is still alive.

Mike Whitworth on 19th September 2007

View all 9 of Mike Whitworth’s reviews

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By Mike McCahill on 17th August 2007

The Lives of Others works foremost as a powerful and involving thriller, enormously relevant to an age where surveillance is omnipresent, and where individual libertie... more >

 

By Howard Schumann on 8th July 2007

Winner of the Oscar for Best Foreign Film, the The Lives of Others is a haunting look at the paranoia of the East German security apparatus in the year 1984, a paranoi... more >

 

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DVD Extras
  • Making of
  • Interviews with Cast and Crew
  • Audio Commentary by Writer / Director
  • Deleted Scenes
  • Extended Scenes
  • Original Stasi spying instruments photo gallery.
Film Details

Director

Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck

Year

2006

Country

Europe, Germany

Cast

Martina Gedeck, Sebastian Koch, Ulrich Muhe

Technical Details

Certificate

15

Length

137 mins

Label

LGATE

Format

DVD Colour

Region

2

Aspect

16:9 Anamorphic Wide Screen

Cat No

LGD93901

Main Language

German with English subtitles.

Subtitles

English

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