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Taking Sides (2003)
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Reviews Counted:53
Fresh:41
Rotten:12
Average Rating:6.8/10
Consensus: A complex, well-acted meditation on moral obligation and human loyalty, Taking Sides features noteworthy performances from Harvey Keitel and Stellan Skarsgard.
Theatrical Release:Sep 5, 2003 Limited
Synopsis: After Hitler took over power in 1933, many Jewish artists were forced to leave Germany, persuading others to protest through voluntarily exile. Wilhelm Furtwängler, arguably the most distinguished... After Hitler took over power in 1933, many Jewish artists were forced to leave Germany, persuading others to protest through voluntarily exile. Wilhelm Furtwängler, arguably the most distinguished conductor of his generation, chose to stay, serving as one of the Nazi`s foremost cultural assets. Though never a member of the Party, Furtwängler was the recipient of government honors and appointments, associated with party members, and conducted at party functions, including Hitler's birthday. He was named Prussian Privy Council by Goering and Vice-President of the chamber of Music of the Third Reich by Goebbels. However, Furtwängler's concerts represented pockets of resistance from inside Nazi Germany, and the conductor often used his position and contacts with the abject regime in order to save hundreds of Jewish musicians from the concentration camps, at his own risk. Should he be punished for staying in his country and accepting to compromise or should his efforts to oppose the evil regime from within be recognized? The American Denazification Committee gave Major Steve Arnold the task of carrying out the pre-trial investigation, with orders to contribute to the extermination of Nazism in Germany. For Major Arnold and his hierarchy, Furtwängler represents the moral weakness and cowardly complicity of the German people who enabled the emergence and establishment of a fascist regime. His mission is to make an example of Furtwängler in order to try to eradicate the evil. The American major, an insurance claims investigator in civilian life, is aided in his enquiries by lieutenant David Wills, liaison officer with the Allied Cultural Affairs Committee, and Emmi Straube, a concentration camp survivor whose father was executed as one of the plotters in a failed assassination attempt against Hitler in 1944. While Major Arnold is obsessed with simplistic, absolute justice, his young assistants hold Furtwängler in high esteem as an artist instead of condemning him outright for his collaboration with the Nazis. Two worlds collide therefore: on the one hand the tattered remains of the damaged culture and morals of an ill continent which is desperately trying to survive the catastrophe of WWII and which has to build a new world out of the ruins of the old, and on the other, the winner from the other side of the Atlantic, convinced of the superiority of their society and eager to have the rest of the world march to their tune. The question of the artist's political responsibility within a totalitarian regime remains open to this day – whether to stay and serve one's own people or to leave the homeland. While Arnold's investigation is aimed at providing proof for the prosecution of the way in which Furtwängler's artistic genius contributed to the Nazi propaganda machine and their destructive ideology, Furtwängler answers the Major's accusations by limiting his responsibility to purely artistic motives - he chose to stay in the fatherland to bring comfort to the German people with his music, and not to serve the Nazis. Like a master conductor, director István Szabó orchestrates the debate from cat-and-mouse intensity to volcanic confrontation to an intriguing finale, making Taking Sides that rare film that demands the audience to engage in a dialogue with the characters and take a position on an issue: in this case, the complicity or innocence of Dr. Wilhelm Furtwängler, the world-famous conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic during the Third Reich. -- © New Yorker Films [More]
Starring: Harvey Keitel, Stellan Skarsgaard, Moritz Bleibtreu, Birgitt Minichmayr
Starring: Harvey Keitel, Stellan Skarsgaard, Moritz Bleibtreu, Birgitt Minichmayr, Hanns Zischler, August Zirner, Armin Rohde, Jed Curtis
Director: Istvan Szabo
Director: Istvan Szabo
Screenwriter: Ronald Harwood
Studio: New Yorker Films
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Reviews for Taking Sides
Istvan Szabo uses his compositions-of-depth as a sort of excavation of the epistemological quandaries haunting the post-Second World War world.
Harwood, who won the best-adapted-screenplay Oscar for The Pianist, has a knack for crafting looming tension
Brilliantly acted and written, Taking Sides overcomes any shortcoming of its transition from stage to screen.
The acting honours here -- and the main reason to see the film -- belong to Skarsgård's impressive performance as the bewildered yet still defiant scapegoat, who can't believe his own downfall.
This is compelling material, but Szabo's -- and screenwriter Ronald Harwood's -- execution of it is ham-handed.
That rare drama that’s both emotionally moving and intellectually thought-provoking.
[A] magnificent piece of theater-as-cinema, with performances so intense, backgrounds so evocative, the camera so ingeniously placed and the tempo so crisp, it's impossible to be bored.
Ronald Harwood's screenplay, based on his stage play, brings an impressive range of moral and political issues into play.
A variation on the theme of Nazism and the holocaust, making sparkling verbal drama out of the clash of opposing sides.
...a moderately effective small-scale courtroom drama set in the immediate years after Germany's surrender and shortly after the trials at Nuremberg.
Has a few good ideas, but Szabo covers them up in a blitz of soapbox scenery chewing.
Szabo effectively dramatizes what might look on paper like a dry, philosophic query.
Skarsgard is an actor with the power to make us feel emotionally scoured at the end of the film.
The talk in this moral debate smokes with provocative drama and actors of weight.
Ronald Harwood's morality tale plays out on film with its fireworks intact.
We're asked to jump into the combatants' arguments with no background about either one, no reason to care if Skarsgard sweats or Keitel rages.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 14% 14% | The Ugly Truth |
| 98% 98% | Up |
| 36% 36% | G.I. Joe: The Rise of … |
| 52% 52% | The Taking of Pelham 1… |
| 45% 45% | Ice Age: Dawn of the D… |
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 36% 36% | Angels & Demons |
| 68% 68% | Funny People |
| 25% 25% | Four Christmases |
| 45% 45% | Shorts |
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