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Divided We Fall (2001)
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Reviews Counted:61
Fresh:55
Rotten:6
Average Rating:7.3/10
Consensus: Divided We Fall takes a complex look at World War II, skillfully balancing humor and gravity.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] for some violence and sexual content
Runtime: 2 hrs 3 mins
Genre: Comedies
Theatrical Release:Jun 8, 2001 Limited
Synopsis: This dramatic story of a hero against his will is set in a small Czech town occupied by German forces during the last years of the Second World War. Josef and Marie Cizek are a childless couple.... This dramatic story of a hero against his will is set in a small Czech town occupied by German forces during the last years of the Second World War. Josef and Marie Cizek are a childless couple. She yearns for a baby, but unfortunately her husband is sterile. By chance one day they come across a young Jewish man named David, and they offer him refuge in their home. From that moment they begin a dramatic fight for survival. To divert the attention of the German authorities and thereby protect the whole street from the danger of execution, the couple becomes more and more entangled with the representatives of power and arbitrary rule. To make matters worse, Czech-German Horst Prohaska, a Nazi collaborator, often comes to see Marie, and his frequent visits increase the danger of David being discovered. During one tragicomic scene, Marie sternly refuses the repeated advances of this unsavory parasite, and Prohaska decides to take revenge on the Cizeks. He plans to move a Nazi official, Albrecht Kepke, into the room the Cizeks had planned for their own child. To prevent this from happening, Cizek persuades his wife to become pregnant by their hidden fugitive. In this rather paradoxical way, David repays his debt to those who have saved his life. The story culminates in May 1945 when the baby is about to be born. The family is once again threatened-this time by self-appointed judges and those who want to punish Nazi collaborators. In the closing, bizarrely absurd scene a strange gathering of Fates stands around the new-born child: a Czech soldier who fought in the Soviet Union, a Russian front-line soldier, a Slovak partisan, the Jewish refugee David, the Czech-German Horst Prohaska and Cizek, the new 'father' and hero against his will. . . . Divided We Fall is a black comedy full of unexpected twists which tells a tale of heroes motivated by compassion, of decent people and traitors, of apathetic passivity and the thirst for life. In this story based on real events, lives are saved for a wide variety of (sometimes controversial) reasons, and all the main characters manage to survive. Here, heroism and collaboration, generosity and cowardice overlap, making it difficult, if not impossible, to pass categorical judgments. -- © 2001 Czech TV [More]
Starring: Bolek Polivka, Csonger Kassai, Jaroslav Dusek, Anna Siskova
Starring: Bolek Polivka, Csonger Kassai, Jaroslav Dusek, Anna Siskova
Director: Jan Hrebejk
Director: Jan Hrebejk
Screenwriter: Petr Jarchovsky
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
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Reviews for Divided We Fall
The comic elements are handled with a delicacy so that they do not overwhelm the dramatic underpinnings.
Director Jan Hrebejk gives it a provocative and daring twist, perching farcical mischief, wit, and pragmatism on the edge of the Holocaust.
Attempts a mix of subtle drama and tragedy, but loses much if not all meaning in the process.
Has the literary richness, depth of character and tone that such a morally difficult, powerful narrative requires.
Comedic touches mix with drama to make this 2001 Academy Award nominee a particularly poignant story.
"Divided We Fall" is a vital reminder of the kinds of dramatic choices made by millions of peopled victimized by Nazis and traitors in a war that was fought at all costs.
The stories should be heartfelt and real ... not just half-hearted attempts at comedy.
Brings to vivid life the tribulations and even the joys of normal people whose loyalties are tested in abnormal times.
A well-acted, thoughtful piece that shows what it may have been like living in Nazi-occupied portions of Europe, particularly in ethnically mixed Czechoslovakia.
A film which has little to say, and even less idea of the most appropriate way to say it.
Hrebejk furthers his country's reputation for cinematic absurdity as the only sane artistic reaction to political insanity.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 44% 44% | Night at the Museum: B… |
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| 95% 95% | Star Trek |
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| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 83% 83% | Harry Potter and the H… |
| 67% 67% | Public Enemies |
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