"Punching the World" is a film that ambitiously tackles big themes: origins, trauma, violence, and the search for stability. All of this is set in East Germany, and much of it feels painfully authentic. Its strongest asset is clearly the cast: whether it's the parents (Christian Näthe among others), the children (Camille Moltzen and Anton Franke), the youth performance (Tilman Döbler), or Meinhard Neumann as a hopeless alcoholic handyman - all of them deliver convincing work and showcase their talent under the direction of Constanze Klaue. Only Sammy Scheuritzel feels oddly out of place, since he resembles Christian Näthe but not his younger self Anton Franke (a strange lapse).
The film mostly succeeds with its intense imagery, even though the camerawork itself leaves something to be desired and at times reveals an uncertain hand in its guidance. Still, it creates a dense, sometimes oppressive atmosphere that captures the painfully honest reality of life in the East German provinces between 2006 and 2015.
That said, the storytelling has its flaws. The narrative feels needlessly jumpy at times, piecing together images that serve more as atmospheric assertions than logical developments. The weight of the subject matter is occasionally made overly heavy-handed instead of letting its raw force speak for itself. In those moments, the film oddly slips into the territory of a typical German social drama. As a result, the character arcs weaken midway through, though the direction conjures up striking moments again toward the end.
Yet the quiet rage, yearning, and desperate struggle for orientation are vividly felt - and that makes "Punching the World" a rarely seen but worthwhile take on the subject.