A riveting re-creation of three world-changing collapses: those of the Nazi party, of militarized Germany as a whole, and of the Führer who guided them into self-destructive ruin.
Downfall (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:129
Fresh:118
Rotten:11
Average Rating:8/10
Consensus: Downfall is an illuminating, thoughtful and detailed account of Hitler's last days.
Runtime: 2 hrs 36 mins
Genre: Foreign Films
Theatrical Release:Sep 16, 2004 Limited
Box Office: $5,475,810
Synopsis: When writer-producer Bernd Eichinger read the galleys of historian Joachim Fest's book "Der Untergang" ("The Downfall: Inside Hitler's Bunker, The Last Days of the Third Reich"), he knew he had... When writer-producer Bernd Eichinger read the galleys of historian Joachim Fest's book "Der Untergang" ("The Downfall: Inside Hitler's Bunker, The Last Days of the Third Reich"), he knew he had found the dramatic key to a film he had wanted to make for decades, but never thought possible due to its scope. Fest's book focuses on the final days of the Reich, and Eichinger saw that the horrifying epic of Hitler and his people during his twelve years in power was reflected in those last twelve days in the bunker. "The final days tell us a lot about how the mass fanaticism functioned in the regime's earlier years and how it continued to reign until the bitter end," says Eichinger. Eichinger read another very important book around the same time: the memoirs of Traudl Junge, Hitler's private secretary ("Until the Final Hour: Hitler's Last Secretary"). He recounts, "Fest gave me the time frame, Traudl Junge gave me the character who could hold it all together." DOWNFALL is the first German film to broach the subject of Hitler straight-on since G.W. Pabst's 1956 film "DER LETSTE AKT" ("The Last Act") which was told from the point of view of an ordinary German soldier, played by Oskar Werner. Says director Oliver Hirschbiegel, "In terms of German film history, we are breaking new ground here, since there is no cinematic frame of reference. After reading the book, it was clear to me that if I committed myself, then it would have to be a total and complete commitment, meaning that I was going to spend two years of my life in the Third Reich, with all of those characters and that primitive ideology… My hair stood on end. My wife advised me against it. Yet I noticed that it just wouldn't leave me in peace, and in my heart, before accepting the project, I knew that I had already opened myself up to it." -- © Newmarket Films [More]
Starring: Bruno Ganz, Alexandra Maria Lara, Juliane Kohler, Thomas Kretschmann
Starring: Bruno Ganz, Alexandra Maria Lara, Juliane Kohler, Thomas Kretschmann, Ulrich Matthes, Heino Ferch, Christian Berkel
Director: Oliver Hirschbiegel
Director: Oliver Hirschbiegel
Screenwriter: Bernd Eichinger
Producer: Bernd Eichinger
Studio: Constantin Film
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Reviews for Downfall
Downfall is not only terrific cinema, it is also a history lesson, a gripping psychological study, and a dire warning.
You feel privy to mysterious secrets and a monumental unraveling... It's impossible to look away.
Dramatizes how Hitler tapped the gnashing urge of his anger and built it into a force field, shutting out all that he didn't want to see.
Downfall may be grimly self-important and inescapably trivializing. But we should be grateful that German cinema is more inclined to normalize the nation's history than rewrite it.
Tour-de-force acting by Bruno Ganz in this taut story of Hitler's final days.
Well worth seeing for all the nuances and variations we know little about.
An exhausting soap opera of doom that cuts back and forth between what seems like 100 speaking parts and conveys a chilling vision of rats being slowly flushed down a toilet.
Downfall is not the first movie about Hitler or the last days of Nazism, but it’s certainly the most illuminating and revelatory.
As Hitler, Bruno Ganz ignites the screen with every appearance: his rages against traitors and betrayal (perceived and real) are delivered with ugly conviction ....
There should have been another hour dramatizing the collapsing military situation and the futile defenses of the German people, military and civilian.
A fabulously well-crafted motion-picture. (...) as close to being in the bunker oneself as one can get.
Hitler's final days are brought to horrifying life in Downfall, a movie that's not a whole lot of fun, but commands one's unflinching attention for 150 straight minutes
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