Stars:
Nina Hoss, Evgeniy Sidikhin, Irm HermannStoryline
A nameless woman keeps a diary as the Russians invade Berlin in the spring of 1945. She is in her early 30s, a patriotic journalist with international credentials; her husband, Gerd, a writer, is an officer at the Russian front. She speaks Russian and, for a day or two after the invasion, keeps herself safe, but then the rapes begin. She resolves to control her fate and invites the attentions of a Russian major, Andreij Rybkin. He becomes her protector of sorts subject to pressures from his own fellow soldiers and officers. Dramas play out in the block of flats where she lives. Is she an amoral traitor? She asks, "How do we go on living?" And what of Gerd and her diary?User Reviews
'The pity of war, the pity of war distilled' AudenANONYMA - EINE FRAU IN
BERLIN (A Woman In Berlin) is the painfully sensitive title of this
exquisite film from writer/director Max Färberböck based on a once
occult book by 'Anonyma' that has become a recent bestseller in Germany.
It has the courage to tell the story of what it was like in Berlin as
World War II was ending - the time of the Russian siege of the city just
before and just after Hitler committed suicide, ending the horror of
the Nazi regime. While many films have been made about the German
populace and how they coped with the fall of their 'great Third Reich'
country that was to rule the planet, few have been able to allow the
audience to understand the brutalities of war on the people of Germany
in so direct a fashion. It is a film that will haunt the viewer for a
long time, a film that will restore some dignity to the German people
who lived through it, not being part of Hitler's madness but being
trapped in the ugliness that followed his fall.
Anonyma (Nina
Hoss) is a journalist, a pretty woman living in the cellars and other
hiding places while the Russians took over Berlin. She helps her fellow
survivors of the bombing of Berlin, struggling for food and protection.
The Russian soldiers, still angry with the gnawing hatred for the
Germans from the Siege of Leningrad and the loathing of anything that
exists in Hitler's Berlin, drink heavily and seek out the women from
hiding to satisfy their insatiable lust. 'Berlin is a German whorehouse'
and all women, from children to youngsters to elderly fraus are
continually raped and beaten as part of the victors' rage. Anonyma
speaks several languages including Russian and decides her only hope for
survival is to align with the Commander of the troops, Major Andreij
Rybkin (Yevgeni Sidikhin), believing that if she becomes his concubine
she will be safe from the random raping by the rest of the soldiers.
Their liaisons become more than outlets for the Major and the two
gradually bond despite the horrors outside their rendezvous. They
survive. Hitler commits suicide and the war is over and the two face the
reality of returning to their previous pre-war lives...or can they?
Nina
Hoss is brilliant in this difficult role and though the script allows
her little to say, she conveys so much through her expressions that
words are nearly unnecessary. Likewise, Yevgeni Sidikhin captures the
dichotomy of emotional response his character must display, finding just
the right balance between the conquering Russian soldier and the
compassionate and vulnerable lover. The cinematography by Benedict
Neuenfels captures the devastation not only of the buildings but also of
the emotions of both sides of the participating groups and Zbigniew
Preisner is responsible for the musical score that adds immeasurably to
the drama. This is one of the great German films that took many years of
maturing to make. It should be seen.
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