En 1990, para proteger a su frágil madre de un shock fatal después de un largo coma, un joven debe evitar que ella se entere de que su amada nación de Alemania Oriental, había desaparecido.En 1990, para proteger a su frágil madre de un shock fatal después de un largo coma, un joven debe evitar que ella se entere de que su amada nación de Alemania Oriental, había desaparecido.En 1990, para proteger a su frágil madre de un shock fatal después de un largo coma, un joven debe evitar que ella se entere de que su amada nación de Alemania Oriental, había desaparecido.
- Nominada a1 premio BAFTA
- 36 premios ganados y 22 nominaciones en total
- Mutter Christiane Kerner
- (as Katrin Saß)
- Alex - 11 Jahre
- (as Nico Ledermüller)
Opiniones destacadas
Walls Come Tumbling Up...
Still a wonderful piece of filmmaking with great performances and some genuinely laugh out loud moments and goes well with The Lives of Others as a companion piece, although not too much to bring a smile to your face in that piece.
Excellent film
I had the good fortune to see East Berlin first in July 1989 (there was *ZERO* hint that the wall would be down in 4 months) and then in February 1990. It was an amazing before and after, and I thought this film captured this very well. As a visitor to the East for several months that year, this film really brought back to me the East European Quiet Revolution when everything really did change.
The characters going through that change are of course an allegory for the changes all around them- '40 years gone! They sold us up river!' says an old man who represents those who 'lost' in the reunification contrasted to those who won-the youth. Similarly, the contrast of personal re-unification (the children and their father) vs that of the east and west is a wonderfully treated theme through the film . And of course lies. Lies to comfort us, lies to deal with other lies. A very, very touching film.
Funny, Sad, Intelligent ....
-Celluloid Rehab
Socially conscious black comedy
The story is of Alex, whose mother, a devoted member of the Communist Party, suffers a heart attack which sends her into a coma - through which she sleeps throughout the months of revolution and the fall of the communist regime. When she awakes, the doctors warn Alex not to cause his mother any anxiety or excitement; therefore, he goes to ludicrously immense lengths to keep her convinced that communism in East Berlin is still alive. Not much of it, once again, stands the test of reason, but it's incredibly witty and entertaining, and manages, throughout, to get across some powerful statements.
'Good Bye, Lenin!' is both fun and important, a film which I recommend to everyone. Don't be afraid of European cinema; even though the film might be difficult to come by, it's very rewarding and well worth your time.
Small but perfectly formed
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaCGI was used extensively to "de-Westernize" Berlin. Even though it's mostly shot in the former East Berlin and much of the film takes place after the fall of the wall, it's been Westernized since at a furious rate. Many ads for Western products had to be removed, and many colors had to be lightened or grayed significantly.
- ErroresDenis wears a "digital rain"-style T-shirt in 1989 because he has developed the idea himself and has come up with an idea for a film exactly like Matrix (1999), which he describes in a deleted scene (the letters are not identical to the Matrix scheme.) The joke is that the idea originated in East Germany; compare the claim in one of Denis's fake news shows that the Coca-Cola formula was invented there. It also ties in to the film's main theme of keeping people in a simulated reality.
- Citas
[last lines]
[spoiler]
Alexander Kerner: [voiceover] My mother outlived the GDR by three days. I believe it was a good thing she never learned the truth. She died happy. She wanted us to scatter her ashes to the winds. That's prohibited in Germany, both East and West. But we didn't care.
[launches rocket]
Alexander Kerner: She's up there somewhere now. Maybe looking down at us. Maybe she sees us as tiny specks on the Earth's surface, just like Sigmund Jähn did back then. The country my mother left behind was a country she believed in; a country we kept alive till her last breath; a country that never existed in that form; a country that, in my memory, I will always associate with my mother.
- Créditos curiososRenowned German actor Jürgen Vogel plays the chicken in the supermarket and is credited as "Das Küken" ("young chicken").
- ConexionesFeatured in The 61st Annual Golden Globe Awards (2004)
- Bandas sonorasMocca-Milch-Eisbar
Written by Thomas Natschinski and Hartmut König
Selecciones populares
- How long is Good Bye Lenin!?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitios oficiales
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- Good Bye Lenin!
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- EUR 4,800,000 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 4,064,200
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 57,968
- 29 feb 2004
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 79,316,957
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 2h 1min(121 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1






