Monday, March 19, 2007



Yesterday Cinema!

Finally, after a long time, we went to a cinema. A huge Warner Bros village near by our house. Left the kid and ... here we go.

This movie was not bad. Specially I loved the old style features, the black & white, the original footages and the atmosphere... a real noir.

...

The Good German is an Academy Award-nominated 2006 feature film adaptation of a novel by Joseph Kanon. Directed by Steven Soderbergh and starring George Clooney, Cate Blanchett, and Tobey Maguire, the film uses archival Russian footage and archived film from Corbis -- edited to blend with scenes shot on soundstages and on Universal Studios' backlot -- to tell a tale which on the surface is a murder mystery, but which weaves elements hinting at NASA's origins -- and the American postwar employment of Nazi rocket scientists. Shot in color, (which allowed the use of faster film than available black-and-white film stocks, and afforded the ability to use green screen techniques) the film was reduced in post-production -- through the use of a D.I. -- to grainier black and white, to blend with the (carefully restored) archival material.

The film's title alludes to the concept of "a good German", ostensibly one who was not to blame for allowing Hitler to do the evil that he did, and who did not see the Holocaust as it occurred before their eyes. Thematically, the film centers on guilt, and the unanswered question: "Is it possible to both survive the atrocities and yet to be unaware of and uncomplicit in them?"

Jacob ('Jake') Geismer, an American war correspondent — played by George Clooney — returns to Berlin during the Potsdam negotiations between the Allied powers after World War II was over in Europe but before hostilities ended in Asia. Jacob witnesses his murdered driver, a black-marketeering American soldier (played by Tobey Maguire), being fished from a river eddy, suspiciously adjacent to the Potsdam conference grounds. The corpse is discovered to be in possession of 100,000 German reichsmarks — which are later revealed to have been printed by the U.S occupying forces.

Geismer becomes entwined both in the mystery of his murdered driver, and with the clandestine search by both Russian and American forces for the missing German Emil Brandt (the title character, played by Christian Oliver). Jake becomes more involved in both mysteries as his investigation intersects his search for Lena Brandt (played by Cate Blanchett), a German Jew — and Emil's wife — with whom Jacob had been in a relationship prior to the war. Lena has survived the Holocaust by doing "what she had to" to stay alive — early in the film this is assumed to be just prostitution, but Lena holds a darker secret of complicity and guilt.

In the film, character Emil Brandt is a former SS officer who was the secretary of Franz Bettmann, Chief Production Engineer of the V2 at concentration camp Mittelbau-Dora/Mittelwerk . (Bettman is only a minor character in the film; he appears to be based on the real Arthur Rudolph.) Russians, Americans, and the English all try to get hold of Emil Brandt, for different reasons. In the film, the American already detain Bettmann in a safe house and intend to ferry him back as part of their Operation Overcast to the U.S. to have him work on their own rocket program (c.f. also Wernher von Braun). They are—in the film—fully aware of Bettmann's role at Camp Dora and know about the slave labour used in the V2 program, but want to cover up his involvement (because they could not possible employ a known war criminal), which includes eliminating Emil Brandt, whose testimony or written notes would prevent whitewashing Bettmann. Geismer, in his attempts to get his former love Lena out of Berlin, gets more and more involved in the search for Emil Brandt. At one point, Lena gives Emil's notes on Camp Dora to Geismer. When Lena and Geismer try to turn in Emil Brandt to the English authorities, they are intercepted by the Americans, and Brandt gets killed. But Geismer still has Brandt's notebooks, which he now trades in to the war crimes investigators of the U.S. Army (i.e. to the ones who want to keep that evidence confidential to whitewash Bettmann) in exchange for a Persilschein (a de-nazification document) and a visa for Lena, such that she can leave to England or the U.S. (that's not clear in the film).

Through a minor character of a Jewish owner of a pawn shop who survived the Holocaust with his legs amputated, the film refers to the Nazi human experimentation, in particular to bone transplantation experiments as they were done at the Ravensbrück concentration camp. (Although Ravensbrück was a women's camp.)

While some critics, such as Peter Travers, greatly appreciated the film, the film received generally poor reviews, with many critics complaining the film was too reliant on style and did not concentrate on the building of characters

Thomas Newman received an Academy Award nomination for Original Score for his music to the film.

Have fun!

BR/zespri

Tuesday, March 06, 2007












Hej!

Back home in a full spring-like weather. Yesterday in Milano 22° C!

I think we'll have to leave in the wardrobe most of the stuff I bought during my half day of savage shopping in Lund. We'll save them for next year, hoping the shoes will still fit Andy's feet... he's growing so fast!

Meg complained about the green colour of the jacket, but I'm used too. Last time she gave to her mother a beautiful Dale of Norway knitwear, saying it made her looking like an elderly lady! Never buy clothes to a woman...

For I imagine you will ask what about the six maxi cans of mariestads, well, I'll guess they'll be gone by Saturday... ;-)

See you.

BR/zespri

Monday, March 05, 2007









Back from SE, finally. Stable bad weather conditions. Some delays at CPH, as usual. Don't complain too much about MXP!! It's the same everywhere...
Some pics of the snow.
Have fun.
BR/zespri