...it is a movie of incredible moral obtuseness.
The Reader (2008)
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Reviews Counted:180
Fresh:111
Rotten:69
Average Rating:6.4/10
Consensus: Despite Kate Winslet's superb portrayal, The Reader suggests an emotionally distant, Oscar-baiting historical drama.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for some scenes of sexuality and nudity.
Runtime: 2 hrs 4 mins
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:Dec 10, 2008 Limited
Box Office: $34,111,418
Synopsis: Though THE READER may boast the typical pedigree of a Holocaust film--acclaimed actors, a literary source, and an Oscar-baiting end-of-the-year release date--this drama has a significant... Though THE READER may boast the typical pedigree of a Holocaust film--acclaimed actors, a literary source, and an Oscar-baiting end-of-the-year release date--this drama has a significant difference: it focuses on a perpetrator, rather than the victims. Kate Winslet takes on the hefty supporting role of Hanna Schmitz, a woman who has an affair with Michael Berg (German actor David Kross), a 15-year-old boy in 1950s Germany. They spend their brief romance alternately making love and focusing on literature, with Michael reading everything from Chekov to Homer to his lover. Soon, Hanna abruptly disappears, and Michael returns to his normal life. Almost a decade later, Michael is studying law, when he sees Hanna again; she is on trial for her crimes as an S.S. guard during the war. Michael is torn between a desire for justice and his knowledge of a secret that may save Hanna. THE READER makes full use of hindsight and historical perspective. Based on the bestselling novel by Bernhard Schlink, the story is framed by an older Michael (Ralph Fiennes) who deals with both his personal history and the collective past--and guilt--of the German people. This is a complex film that doesn't give the audience any easy answers; Hanna is undoubtedly guilty of horrific crimes, but she is a multilayered character who is always fascinating and always human, thanks to the terrific performance of Winslet, who plays Hanna over four decades. Director Stephen Daldry earned an Oscar nomination for his work on another literary adaptation, THE HOURS, and he deserves more praise for this polished film. [More]
Starring: Kate Winslet, Ralph Fiennes, David Kross, Anthony Minghella
Starring: Kate Winslet, Ralph Fiennes, David Kross, Anthony Minghella, Lena Olin, Bruno Ganz, Jeanette Hain, Susanne Lothar, Matthias Habich
Director: Stephen Daldry
Director: Stephen Daldry
Screenwriter: David Hare
Producer: Anthony Minghella, Sydney Pollack, Donna Gigliotti, Redmond Morris
Composer: Nico Muhly
Studio: Weinstein Company
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Release:
Apr 14, 2009
DVD Features:
- O-Sleeve
- Widescreen
Audio:
- Dolby Digital - English
- Subtitles - Spanish
Additional Release Material:
- Deleted Scenes
- Trailers
- Making Of: A Masterpiece: The Making of THE READER
Featurette:
- 1. A Conversation with David Kross & Stephen Daldry, Kate Winslet on the Art of Aging Hanna Schmitz
- 2. A New Voice: A Look at Composer Nico Muhly
- 3. Coming to Grips with the Past: Production Design Brigitte Broch
Reviews for The Reader
The Reader is the most undeserving of the five Academy Award nominees for Best Picture. A nice quality for a movie to have is if it has one or more characters to whom one can relate. In The Reader the two main characters are clods.
...for the life of me I cannot figure out how the Academy Award voters could consider this film as year's most elite. Heck, I can't even understand how The Reader received five Oscar nominations.
The Reader remains schematic, and ultimately reductive. It really is about literacy, which proves to be a dismayingly small answer to the enormous questions posed by Hanna's dark past.
Relies too much on coincidence and, in an even more puzzling turn, seems to suggest that illiteracy might be a valid excuse for the worst of human behavior.
The film doesn't shove its message down your throat, and its prestige pic status belies its subtle intelligence.
'The Reader' suggests -- what? That Nazis might have been nicer if they'd spent more time reading instead of burning books?
The Reader is a scrupulously tasteful film about an erotic affair that turns to love.
Like a good book with missing pages, The Reader seems stripped of essential meaning.
Like the main character's feelings about themselves and each other, I too have mixed feelings about this film.
I believe the movie may be demonstrating a fact of human nature: Most people, most of the time, all over the world, choose to go along. We vote with the tribe.
Winslet is brilliant, fearless and shows other actresses how to play real people without compromising. Kidman and Jolie, I'm speaking directly to you. You are movie stars, Winselt is an actress.
It is the kind of movie that will have you questioning your reactions and is a skilful piece of emotional manipulation from Billy Elliot director Stephen Daldry. But what really makes The Reader a must-see are the performances of Winslet and Kross.
Watching Daldry try to tuck the horrors of Nazi Germany into neat little hospital corners made for a singularly unsatisfying (however tidy) experience.
David Hare's sensitive treatment of a challenging, nuanced subject is adroitly directed by Stephen Daldry, full of the textures, subtleties and complexities that make this story so compelling and memorable
Despite the efforts of [all involved], the Holocaust remains the elephant in the room that deadens the elements of surprise and suspense we have been conditioned to expect in screen narratives.
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April 13, 2009:
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February 17, 2009:
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February 13, 2009:
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