Well-cast and sporadically gripping.
The Tunnel (2005)
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Reviews Counted:25
Fresh:21
Rotten:4
Average Rating:6.9/10
Consensus: The Tunnel is both a tension-filled thriller and a riveting history lesson.
Theatrical Release:Apr 29, 2005 Limited
Synopsis: Based on incredible true events, THE TUNNEL tells the story of Harry Melchior, a champion East German swimmer at odds with the Communist government under which he has already been imprisoned for... Based on incredible true events, THE TUNNEL tells the story of Harry Melchior, a champion East German swimmer at odds with the Communist government under which he has already been imprisoned for his beliefs. Though required to remain in East Germany after his release from prison, Harry narrowly escapes just as the Berlin Wall is being completed. He successfully flees the oppressive Communist regime, but his beloved sister and her family are unable to join him. Harry is determined to rescue them, and aided by his best friend— engineering genius Matthis Hiller — the idea of the tunnel is born. The project, however, is fraught with complications. Harry and Matthis first rent an abandoned building right next to the Wall, but struggle with the massive logistics and costs of their task. Quickly realizing that it will take years to complete the tunnel on their own, they enlist several helpers, all motivated by the prospect of rescuing their own families and friends. However, with additional helpers comes more risk...for any new member could be a potential traitor. The pacing is brisk and tensions rise as the threat of the tunnel collapsing weighs constantly on the protagonists' minds. They worry that their tunnel could open in the wrong place, or worse, that the brutal East German police will discover their plans for escape. Matters are complicated even further by the arrival of the beautiful 'Fritzi,' whose passionate chemistry with Harry upsets the dynamics of the team. An interesting, factual side note: the NBC television network became involved in this project and actually helped finance the tunnel's construction. The network originally planned a fictional film about tunneling through the wall, then scrapped this idea to record the real heroes as they completed their nine-month long mission. It was broadcast as an NBC White Paper in 1961. -- © Home Vision Entertainment [More]
Starring: Heino Ferch, Sebastian Koch, Alexandra Maria Lara, Nicoleete Krebitz
Starring: Heino Ferch, Sebastian Koch, Alexandra Maria Lara, Nicoleete Krebitz, Uwe Kockish
Director: Roland Suso Richter
Director: Roland Suso Richter
Screenwriter: Johannes W. Betz
Producer: Ariane Krampe, Nico Hofmann
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Reviews for The Tunnel
A true story few people will know, and it's told with a warm, crafty efficiency that makes for wonderful entertainment.
The Tunnel combines fact and fiction, but is never less than completely engrossing.
It's a gripping great-escape yarn of the sort we don't see much anymore.
Based on a true story from the late 1950s, this thrilling drama looks at the extraordinary lengths taken by a group of West Berliners to dig a tunnel under the city's barbed-wire border with East Berlin.
As the edge-of-the-seat narrative unfolds, every performance is layered, every shot by cinematographer Martin Langer is effectively streamlined and a plot that could easily have been predicable ripples with suspense.
It's all a bit reminiscent of Wolfgang Petersen's Das Boot -- different war, but a similar stylistic economy and claustrophobic mood.
Either as history at its most inspiring or moviemaking at its most exciting, The Tunnel is a trip.
The film picks up steam as the tunnel nears completion -- thanks, in part, to a Hollywood film crew that pays for the rights to the tunnelers' story, providing them with the money to finish the project.
Richter makes wonderful if obvious use of the wall and the tunnel as built-in metaphors for our struggle for human connection and dread of helplessness and change.
Roland Suso Richter's darkly atmospheric film recounts the effort of a group of people to dig a tunnel under the Berlin Wall.
Though its story is universal enough to leap across cultural boundaries, it's not deep enough to justify the leap to the big screen.
Director Roland Suso Richter maintains tension for 2 1/2 hours, even though the resolution is almost surreal.
Genuinely gripping, balancing the travails of constructing the tunnel against the characters' stories with considerable skill.
It's so well told that you'll be biting your nails until the film's final few minutes.
If it weren't for subtitles, Roland Suso Richter's The Tunnel would be indistinguishable from a polished made-for-TV timewaster from anywhere in the world such things are produced.
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