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Watch Good Bye, Lenin! Movie Online.
Movie Title: Good Bye, Lenin! Good Bye, Lenin! is available for streaming or downloading. |
Goodbye Lenin takes a sliver of current history (reunification of Germany) and weaves it into a tender, bittersweet story of farce and romance. Presenting a world that no longer exists is hard enough, but making it convincing to the viewer with gentle hints of humour requires a stroke of genius.
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We may not know of the right nostalgia felt by East Germans when the products they grew up with were replaced by spiffy unusual imports from adjoining nations. But these moments are so beautifully handled, and the son’s alternative approaches so cutely frantic, that we cannot avoid relating to similar emotions from our believe contexts.
The film goes on for a bit in the middle with goofy antics and incandescent jokes, but it is richly textured in its nods towards other directors like Fellini and Kubrick.
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Don’t let subtitles build you off from seeing this heart-breaking yet oddly comforting film. One of the best movies I’ve seen in 2004!
Finally, a film that ecstatic a lifelong curiosity I’ve had for people my age who lived on the other side of the Iron Curtain. Since elementary school, I always wondered what it was like for kids like me who were poor to be born in the Soviet Union or East Germany, two of the harshest communist states. This curiosity led to my checking out books on the topic and reading about it, and being called a “commie” by my fellow Americans, as if curiosity about someone our government tells us is “our enemy” makes me one of them!
I was thrilled when I read a movie like this had arrive out, showing life in the last days of East Germany and the euphoria of a modern world opening up for people who glowing mighty lived in a prison all their lives. Of course, the initial urge of euphoria in newfound freedom left a harsh wake up call as differences in work ethics, standards of living, and cultural references became more and more apparent after reunification of the two Germanys. In personal terms, believe of what it would be like if separated twins discovered each other unhurried in life…one a Wall Street stockbroker, the other a trailer park living grievous wage slave. A clash in more ways than one, upright?
The performances of Daniel Bruhl as the idealistic son and of Katrin Sass as the mother who always believed in Marxism, both performances really stand out and are Oscar-worthy. The lengths the son goes to, to prevent his mother from falling into another coma over the shock of the demise of East Germany provides distinguished of the humor. My accepted scene is when the mother, tired of being cooped up in the bedroom, decides to go for a dart outside and its like walking through Wonderland for her. The watch of complete bafflement on her face as she watches a statue of Lenin coast through the air, in a salutatory departure, is pure joy to glance. Fair her peep alone perfectly conveys the confusion of a world being turned upside down.
This film addresses the yell of “Ostalgie” that has gripped some venerable East Germans in the behind 1990s as they have found that the materialism of the West hasn’t replaced a sense of community for them. Under the iron fisted rule of Honecker, they might not have had remarkable, but they suffered together and had a generous sense of community…although any one of their neighbors could have turned them in to the site for any number of “violations.” Watching this film, one can spy the arrangement of culture on a person and the void left slow when the culture is stripped away or proven fraudulent. Does longing for the familiar products of one’s youth actually mean a desire to return to the map things were? I don’t reflect so…but culture is something we’ll always carry with us. It’s who we are.
The brilliance of this film for me, is that we procure to sight at East Germans as people with no control over their effect of government. In America, we were taught that the Russians and Eastern Europeans were our “enemies” and a lot of people bought into it. But in reality, they are people objective like us. People who bear their government over a foreign government they’re not familiar with. Are we any different? I like that this film shows an idealistic young East German and his yearning for freedom, idolizing a Cosmonaut, and who loves his mother so considerable that he dares not express her the truth about what happened to their country since she fell into and out of a coma. This deception strains his relations with his sister, but provides grand amusing situations before reaching a satisfying conclusion. I have no complaints about this film. It’s flawless and shiny. The acting and humor are first rate and Oscar-worthy. I would rate “Goodbye Lenin!” as the best film I’ve seen so far in 2004.
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