Good Bye, Lenin!
Good Bye, Lenin! | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Wolfgang Becker |
Produced by | Stefan Arndt |
Written by |
Wolfgang Becker Bernd Lichtenberg |
Starring |
Daniel Brühl Katrin Saß Chulpan Khamatova Maria Simon Alexander Beyer |
Music by |
Yann Tiersen Claire Pichet Antonello Marafioti |
Cinematography | Martin Kukula |
Edited by | Peter R. Adam |
Production company |
X-Filme Creative Pool |
Distributed by | X Verleih AG (Germany) |
Release dates |
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Running time | 121 minutes |
Country | Germany |
Language | German |
Budget | DM 9.6 millon (€4.8 million) (approx. $6.5 million) |
Box office | $79,384,880 |
Good Bye, Lenin![1] is German tragicomedy film, produced in 2001 and released in 2003. Directed by Wolfgang Becker, the cast includes Daniel Brühl, Katrin Saß, Chulpan Khamatova, and Maria Simon. Most scenes were shot at the Karl-Marx-Allee in Berlin and around Plattenbauten near Alexanderplatz.
Plot
In a prologue, Alex Kerner (Daniel Brühl) recalls how proud he was as a child in 1978 when the first German to fly in outer space was the East German Sigmund Jähn.
The remainder of the film is set in East Berlin, from October 1989 to just after German reunification a year later. Alex lives with his sister, Ariane (Maria Simon), his mother, Christiane (Katrin Saß), and Ariane's infant daughter, Paula. It appears that his father abandoned the family and fled to the West in 1978. In his absence, Christiane has become an ardent supporter of the ruling Socialist Unity Party of Germany (the Party). Alex takes part in an anti-government demonstration, where he meets a girl by chance, but they are separated by the Volkspolizei before they can properly introduce themselves. When Christiane sees Alex being arrested, she suffers a near-fatal heart attack and falls into a coma. The police ignore Alexander's plea to assist his mother. They release him later that evening to go and see her.
While visiting his mother in the hospital, Alex again encounters the girl from the demonstration, Lara (Chulpan Khamatova), a young nurse from the Soviet Union who is now caring for his mother. Alex is smitten with her and asks her out. The two soon begin dating and develop a close bond.
Shortly afterward, the Berlin Wall falls. Erich Honecker resigns from office, and the East German police and military become increasingly toothless. Capitalism comes to East Berlin. Alex loses his job as a TV repairman, but is hired by a West German cable company. Alex is paired with West Berlin resident Denis Domaschke (Florian Lukas), an aspiring filmmaker with whom Alex quickly becomes good friends. Ariane leaves university to work at a Burger King drive-through. After eight months, Christiane awakens from her coma, but she is severely weakened both physically and mentally. Her doctor warns that any shock might cause another, possibly fatal, heart attack. Alex realises that the discovery of recent events would be too much for her to bear, and decides to maintain the illusion that things are as before in the German Democratic Republic.
He, Ariane and Lara revert from the gaudy decor of the west to the drab decor they previously had in the bedroom of their now bed-ridden mother in the family apartment, dress in their old clothes, and feed Christiane new Western produce they repackage in old East German jars. Their deception is successful, though increasingly complicated and elaborate. Christiane occasionally witnesses strange occurrences, such as a gigantic Coca-Cola advertisement banner unfurling on a building outside the apartment. With Denis's help, Alex edits old tapes of East German news broadcasts and creates fake reports on TV that he plays from a video machine hidden in an adjacent room to explain these odd events. As the old news shows were fairly predictable, and Christiane's memory is vague, she is initially fooled.
Christiane eventually gains strength and wanders outside one day while Alex is asleep. She sees all her neighbours' old furniture piled up in the street for rubbish collection and advertisements for Western corporations. She also sees an old statue of Lenin being flown away by a helicopter, which seems to reach out to her. However, Alex and Ariane quickly find her, take her home, and show her a fake special report that East Germany is now accepting refugees from the West following a severe economic crisis there. Christiane, initially sceptical, finally decrees that as good socialists, they should open their home to these newcomers. The family decides to go and inspect to their dacha in the countryside at Christiane's suggestion.
While they are there along with Lara and Ariane's new Western boyfriend, Rainer (Alexander Beyer), Christiane reveals her own secret; her husband had fled because the Party had been increasingly oppressing him, and the plan had been for the rest of the family to join him in West Berlin. However, Christiane, fearing the government would take Alex and Ariane away from her if things went wrong, chose to stay in the East. She has come to regret the decision over the years.
Christiane relapses shortly afterward and is taken back to the hospital. After meeting his father, Robert (Burghart Klaußner), for the first time in years, Alex sees that he has remarried and fathered a second family, but welcomes meeting Alex again. Alex convinces Robert to see Christiane one last time, stating he should say he was moved to return East to see his dying wife. Under pressure to reveal the truth about the fall of the East, Alex creates a final fake news segment, convincing a taxi driver whom he believes to be Sigmund Jähn to act in the false news report as the new leader of East Germany and to give a speech promising to make a better future including opening the borders to the West. However, it is suggested that Christiane already knows the truth (Lara tried to convince her about the real political developments earlier the same day). Nevertheless, she reacts fondly to her son's effort, without mentioning anything.
Christiane dies peacefully two days later: she outlives the GDR, passing away three days after full official German reunification. Alex, Ariane, Lara, Denis, and Robert scatter her ashes in the wind using an old toy rocket Alex made with his father during his childhood.
Cast
- Daniel Brühl as Alexander "Alex" Kerner
- Nico Ledermüller as 11-year-old Alex
- Katrin Saß as Christiane Kerner
- Chulpan Khamatova as Lara
- Maria Simon as Ariane Kerner
- Florian Lukas as Denis Domaschke
- Alexander Beyer as Rainer
- Burghart Klaußner as Robert Kerner
- Michael Gwisdek as Klapprath
- Christine Schorn as Frau Schäfer
- Jürgen Holtz as Herr Ganske
- Jochen Stern as Herr Mehlert
- Ernst-Georg Schwill as the taxi-driver
- Stefan Walz as a Sigmund Jähn look-alike taxi-driver
- Eberhard Kirchberg as Dr. Wagner
- Hans-Uwe Bauer as Dr. Mewes
Soundtrack
The film score was composed by Yann Tiersen, except the version of "Summer 78" sung by Claire Pichet. Stylistically, the music is very similar to Tiersen's earlier work on the soundtrack to Amélie. One piano composition, Comptine d'un Autre Eté: L'Apres Midi, is used in both films.
Several famous GDR songs are featured. Two children, members of the Ernst Thälmann Pioneer Organisation, sing Unsere Heimat (Our Homeland). Friends of Christiane (living in the same building) follow with Bau Auf! Bau Auf! (Build Up! Build Up!), another anthem of the Free German Youth. The final fake newscast with Sigmund Jähn features a rousing rendition of the GDR national anthem, Auferstanden aus Ruinen.
Reception
The film received strong positive reviews, holding a rating of 90% on Rotten Tomatoes.[2] Empire gave the film four stars out of five with a verdict of, "An ingenious little idea that is funny, moving and—gasp!—even makes you think."[3]
Awards and nominations
- Best Film not in the English Language (nominated – lost to In This World)
- Best Actor (Brühl, won)
- Best Actress (Saß, nominated – lost to Charlotte Rampling, Swimming Pool)
- Best Director (Becker, nominated – lost to Lars von Trier, Dogville)
- Best Film (won)
- Best Screenwriter (Lichtenberg, won)
- Outstanding Actor (Brühl, won)
- Outstanding Actress (Saß, nominated – lost to Hannelore Elsner, Mein letzter Film)
- Outstanding Direction (Becker, won)
- Outstanding Screenwriter (Lichtenberg,won)
- Outstanding Editing (Adam, won)
- Outstanding Film (won)
- Outstanding Music (Tiersen, won)
- Outstanding Production Design (Holler, won)
- Outstanding Supporting Actor (Lukas, won)
- Outstanding Supporting Actress (Simon, nominated – lost to Corinna Harfouch, Bibi Blocksberg)
- Best Foreign Language Film (nominated – lost to Osama)
- Best European Film (Becker, won)
- Best Foreign Language Film (won)
- Empire magazine's "The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema" in 2010
- Ranked #91[4]
References to other films
- Denis's T-shirt appeared to bear the green glyph pattern from The Matrix. The Matrix appeared in 1999, while the film was set between 1989 and 1990. A deleted scene on the DVD featured Denis, an amateur film-maker, telling Alex about his idea for a film, where people are enslaved by machines to produce energy while they are trapped in a computer dream world – a reference to The Matrix.
- Alexander Beyer plays a character whose behavior is the exact opposite of the one he portrayed in the earlier blockbuster "Ostalgie" film, Sonnenallee (1999).
- Ariane solemnly plays a dirge on a child's plastic recorder while her comatose mother lies beside her. The tune is a variation on Zbigniew Preisner's "Song for the Unification of Europe", which is heard in a similar hospital scene in Krzysztof Kieślowski's Three Colors: Blue.
- The film includes scenes from East German children's programs including Sandmännchen.
- There are at least two homages paid to Stanley Kubrick; the scene with the bunch of flowers turning into a birthday cake is a direct reference to the famous bone/spaceship scene in 2001: A Space Odyssey, with Denis mentioning it as such; also, the scene when Alex and his friend set up his mother's bedroom is a reference to the sex scene in A Clockwork Orange, with Rossini's William Tell Overture played on both occasions. The name of the main character in A Clockwork Orange is also Alex, while Kubrick's widow is also named Christiane.
- The scene with a flying Lenin statue recalls a similar scene with flying Jesus in Fellini's film La Dolce Vita and a scene with a Lenin statue being carted away in Kieślowski's The Double Life of Véronique.
- In the scene where Christiane leaves the apartment for the first time after her coma, the way the elevator door opens and light shines from it into the dark corridor echoes Alan Parker's Angel Heart. In that film the elevator symbolises the main character's descent into hell.
- The recurring references to Coca-Cola recall Billy Wilder's One, Two, Three, also set in Berlin, in 1961, the year the wall was erected.
- Alex and his girlfriend (significantly named "Lara") enter an abandoned apartment and wipe the dust off the mirrors and furniture as in Dr. Zhivago Yuri and Lara enter an abandoned dacha and wipe away the snow.
See also
- Spreewald gherkins, one of the foods Christiane wants
- Ostalgie, nostalgia for East Germany
References
- ↑ Official website
- ↑ "Good Bye, Lenin!". rottentomatoes.com. 27 February 2004. Retrieved 15 October 2015.
- ↑ "Empire's Good Bye Lenin! Movie Review". empireonline.com. Retrieved 15 October 2015.
- ↑ "The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema". Empire.
Further reading
- Kapczynski, Jennifer M. (2007). "Negotiating Nostalgia: The GDR Past in Berlin is in Germany and Good Bye, Lenin!". The Germanic Review 82 (1): 78–100. doi:10.3200/GERR.82.1.78-100.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Good Bye, Lenin! |
- Official website (Germany)
- Official website (US)
- Good Bye, Lenin! at the Internet Movie Database
- Good Bye, Lenin! at AllMovie
- Good Bye, Lenin! at Box Office Mojo
- Good Bye, Lenin! at Rotten Tomatoes
Awards | ||
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Preceded by The Pianist |
Goya Award for Best European Film 2003 |
Succeeded by Head-On |
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