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Sunday, May 18, 2008

DOWNFALL (2005)

'Adolf Hitler’s Last Days' has an obvious dramatic pull, yet it always turns into the grimmest of black comedies, at best, and strangely pointless. This one takes a legit shot at the material, if only Bruno Ganz's Hitler didn’t look so much like Michael Palin. Outside the bunker, we’re asked to summon up a lot of sympathy for all those German non-combatants whom we might well have seen cheering wildly in newsreels just a few years back. Sure, we’re meant to feel uncomfortable, but in what way? Russian avant garde megger Alexander Sokurov got closer to the mark in MOLOCH, but DOWNFALL settles for a realistic look at a surrealistic moment in world history. And it largely succeeds on its own terms. Heino Ferch’s Albert Speer stands out in the fine large cast. Why Hollywood hasn’t scooped up this charismatic presence is beyond me.

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