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Alone in Berlin (2016)
War films are stories writ large about aggression between nations. Few of them explore small-scale human undercurrents of suppressed dissent inside the countries at war. Alone in Berlin (2016) does this by looking at an ordinary working-class couple and their compulsion to express feelings about Hitler’s dictatorship at time when dissent meant certain death. It is also an essay on parental grief struggling to voice pain and loss.
Based on real events, the story opens in a small flat in Berlin where Otto Quangel (Brendan Gleeson) and his wife Anna (Emma Thompson) learn that their son has died in battle. In a long marriage that is under strain, the news pushes them further apart as they cannot console each other in grief. Otto had encouraged his son to join the Nazi army and now Anna blames him for their loss. Desperate to voice his rage against Hitler’s regime, he painstakingly writes postcards and secretly leaves them on stairwells and doorways where they can be seen by passers-by: he calls them “small grains of sand in Hitler’s machine”. Initially he keeps Anna away from his dangerous mission, but she insists on being involved and they both become clandestine resistance fighters whose weapons are simple messages about the evils of Nazism. They manage to write and distribute over 260 cards despite extensive investigative efforts to stop them. In the process, they resurrect their marital relationship. After almost two years of card-writing they are caught and together face Nazi justice.
This film has two parallel narratives that start in opposition and end in convergence: one is Otto and Anna’s actions, the other is the investigation. The first is focused on the smallness of the couple’s actions in contrast to the enormous risk they are taking, like a pair of mice squeaking at roaring lions. The filming, colour palette and period setting are drab and lifeless; the atmosphere is paranoid with suspicion and mistrust; and the acting is subdued and understated. Brendan Gleeson and Emma Thompson are actors with broad performance repertoires but here they are minimalist in expression and Spartan in dialogue, with much being conveyed through furtive glances or avoided eye-contact. It is a slow-moving story, observant of small details in an alienated world. This has the effect of amplifying the intensity of Otto and Anna’s actions. Close-ups of a pen leaving a trail of outrage on a small white card become powerful portraits of bravery that are ultimately futile as most of the cards were handed in to authorities. The couple’s nemesis is a young German investigator (Daniel Bruhl) who pursues his work with ideological fervour for the Fuhrer but whose success turns into the film’s most devastating moments of despair.
This is a joyless story about humble heroism. Otto and Anna are emblematic of ordinary people dealing with tragedy and anger inside a world of fear and danger. Far from being mere victims, their small protests seriously unsettled the Nazi hierarchy and the closing scenes are a tribute to the power of two human “grains of sand”.
Director: Vincent Perez
Stars: Brendan Gleeson, Emma Thompson, Daniel Bruhl
Excellent review and I very much enjoyed the movie. Thank you.
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Shame that they did not use German actors or less well known ones. Probably put me off going to the film.
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Gleeson and Thompson speak with German accents that have been criticised in some circles. I do not believe this impacts negatively on the film in the slightest. Its a serious film for serious viewers so I would keep it on your list of films worth seeing.
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Thanks for the review. It’s good sometimes to get the views on less well-marketed films as there are often hidden gems out there that miss the multiplexes. Plus, Brendan Gleeson and Emma Thompson (despite the German accents) are always good value for money.
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So you saw it Paul; what did you think of it?
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Oh no I haven’t seen it yet so I was thanking you for the review as I shall seek it out now.
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Please come back with your thoughts Paul
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Absolutely!
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Saw this today with a friend. We were both very moved. It is not an action film, as so many war movies are, but it was certainly a tense film throughout. Checking on the background, I was surprised to learn that Otto and Elise Hampel were executed in Plötzensee Prison, as were von Stauffenberg and several others implicated in the plot to assassinate Hitler. I visited there in the late 70s, and while I learnt much about the latter, I never heard about the Hampels. How different this film is from Valkyrie!!! (thank goodness).
Anyone worried about the German accents should not be concerned, they do not intrude as you are absorbed into the minute detail of this film. On the other hand, the violence, although it should expected, comes as such a shock whenever IT intrudes into the daily life of these ordinary people. It was also interesting to see how the SS used the regular police (not just the investigator) to “legitimise” their extreme actions, even against their fellow Germans.
Oh, and the ultimate measure from me: the book on which it is based has been added to the To Read list.
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I was also moved by this film. Its greatest achievements are in immortalising two very ordinary heros and in showing how two small ‘grains of sand’ could be such irritants to the massive Nazi war machine. The closeness that Otto and Anna found in their final hours was touching. Thanks for your thoughts on this film.
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Interesting film! Thanks for the review!
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What a tragic story. The film seems to do less with dialogues and more with facial expressions. And as you say, the small white cards, play a more powerful role in the movie.
I heard of this movie, sometime ago; I’d love to watch it!!
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I hope you; I’l be looking for your review. Thanks for commenting.
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