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Great Freedom

Original title: Große Freiheit
  • 2021
  • Unrated
  • 1h 56m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
8.4K
YOUR RATING
Great Freedom (2021)
In postwar Germany, Hans is imprisoned again and again for being homosexual. The one steady relationship in his life becomes his long time cell mate, Viktor, a convicted murderer. What starts in revulsion grows to something called love.
Play trailer1:11
1 Video
66 Photos
Drama

In post-war Germany, liberation by the Allies does not mean freedom for everyone. Hans is repeatedly imprisoned under Paragraph 175, which criminalizes homosexuality. Over the decades, he de... Read allIn post-war Germany, liberation by the Allies does not mean freedom for everyone. Hans is repeatedly imprisoned under Paragraph 175, which criminalizes homosexuality. Over the decades, he develops an unlikely bond with his cellmate Viktor.In post-war Germany, liberation by the Allies does not mean freedom for everyone. Hans is repeatedly imprisoned under Paragraph 175, which criminalizes homosexuality. Over the decades, he develops an unlikely bond with his cellmate Viktor.

  • Director
    • Sebastian Meise
  • Writers
    • Thomas Reider
    • Sebastian Meise
  • Stars
    • Franz Rogowski
    • Georg Friedrich
    • Anton von Lucke
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    8.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Sebastian Meise
    • Writers
      • Thomas Reider
      • Sebastian Meise
    • Stars
      • Franz Rogowski
      • Georg Friedrich
      • Anton von Lucke
    • 27User reviews
    • 96Critic reviews
    • 89Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 41 wins & 42 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:11
    Official Trailer

    Photos65

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    Top cast40

    Edit
    Franz Rogowski
    Franz Rogowski
    • Hans Hoffmann
    Georg Friedrich
    Georg Friedrich
    • Viktor
    Anton von Lucke
    Anton von Lucke
    • Leo Giese
    Thomas Prenn
    Thomas Prenn
    • Oskar
    Thomas Stecher
    • Wärter 1968
    Alfred Hartung
    • Wärter 1945
    Thomas Wehling
    • Wärter 1957
    Mex Schlüpfer
    • Kumpel Viktor
    David Burnell IV
    David Burnell IV
    • Allierter
    • (as David Burnell the Fourth)
    Fabian Stumm
    Fabian Stumm
    • Polizist
    Joachim Schönfeld
    • Arrestwärter
    Dirk Nocker
    • Richter
    Andreas Patton
    Andreas Patton
    • Staatsanwalt
    Daniel Wagner
    • Strafverteidiger
    Lutz Bolle
    • Wärter
    Ulrich Faßnacht
    • Wärter
    • (as Ulrich Fassnacht)
    Peer Maurer
    • Wärter
    Martin Walanker
    • Klappen Besucher…
    • Director
      • Sebastian Meise
    • Writers
      • Thomas Reider
      • Sebastian Meise
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    7.58.3K
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    Featured reviews

    9Mengedegna

    Be True to Yourself. No compromises.

    In 1980 Frank Ripploh gave us "Taxi zum klo", a raunchy, rather self-satisfied (albeit slightly mocking) look at the gay scene in Berlin of that time, with a singular focus on the bulimic sexual doings of Ripploh, playing himself as one of its committed denizens. With his terrific Austro-German "Great Freedom", Sebatian Meiser takes us back to that period and to all that had gone before and gives a corrective, eschewing all the clichés about gay life, prison life, German life, or just-plain life and love that you can think of. Freedom, he seems to be telling us, comes from within and must be conquered individually, against the massive odds that society puts up against it. Toward the end of this new film, we are given a glimpse of the pseudo-freedom in which Ripploh gloried. Meiser tells us that this Great Freedom is not the real thing at all, and that affirming your sexuality alone, without an understanding of your whole self and the constraints of the world you live in, is meaningless.

    At a Q&A at NYC's Film Forum last night, Meiser stated that he had had Franz Rogoski in mind as the protagonist as he was developing the project, and that if Rogoski had turned him down he didn't know what he would have done. Since Hans, Rogoski's character, is present in almost every frame of this picture (including ones shot in total darkness), we are never left in doubt as to why Meiser felt this: Rogoski gives us what has to be one of the most intelligent, committed, uncompromising performances of that past decade, at least. Hans, we learn (or are led to infer), had been convicted of lewd homosexual acts by the Nazis and thrown into a concentration camp (details of all that, and of how he survived, are left to our imaginations) only to be imprisoned again in 1945 under the post-war Allied occupation, to serve out the balance of his sentence. From then onward, his life largely unfolds behind bars, as the German penal code's Paragraph 175, outlawing gay sexual activity, ensures that whenever he gets out of jail and asserts his right to be himself, an unapologetic gay man hungry for connection, he ends up back in prison. Which is where most of the film takes place, within a perfectly realized, relentlessly grim carceral world which differs from the grim outside world only in its details and rituals.

    Forget any notions you've gained from redundant genre films about gay people (tormented and/or triumphant), or of any prison film you have ever seen, or of any love story you can think of, or indeed any expectations at all. Rogoski's realization of Meiser's uncompromising vision is note perfect, and therefore harrowing. He has been compared to Joachim Phoenix, and I see the point, but, much as I admire Phoenix when he's in the right hands, Rogoski goes farther and deeper into his character than I have seen Phoenix do. (Though perhaps Phoenix has never gotten to work with a director of Meiser's talent.)

    There's plenty of violence here, physical and psychological, but it is treated as being the in the natural order of things: we are not invited to be shocked, or scandalized, but rather to reflect on how banal it is, and on how little prison differs from life outside. In this way, "Great Freedom" (has any movie title ever been as ironic?) takes us back to the existentialists: to Sartre's "Hell is other people", to Camus' Dr. Rieux in Oran under quarantine.

    This is a film about being true to yourself, in life and in love, set against a world that has other ideas about who you are and who you are expected to be and that will grind you down every chance it gets. It' a masterpiece.
    9kmoska

    Low-profile story on tragedy and hope of the human condition

    This superbly made prison movie is one of the few that put homosexuality in the epicentre. Great Freedom centers around the postwar life path of a German homosexual which more often than not leads him to incarceration whenever he exercises his Freedom of choice. The irony of the German modernity miracle is plain to see.

    The protagonist's -played by Rogowski- pathway intertwines more and more with another inmate's, a drug addict played by Friedrich. Both actors performances are exemplary and the latter shines particularly towards the end.

    The film has a low profile, recreating a realistic and moody representation of 1950s- 1970s. There are few colours, just a dark grey and washed away blue are used that help acclimatise the viewer. The incorporation of the 'Great step for mankind' into the prison's microcosm is another brilliant moment.

    Understandably, many people will consider this a movie about true love. Whatever that means. More generally, it is a story about human condition and the effort to retain one's defining qualities, our humanity in the most arid wastelands. Ultimately, as Rilke would have put it, this can only be a tale about loneliness.

    An emblematic scene arises at the court when the judges clinically y summarise Rogowski's moral crimes and deprivation. The bureaucratic onslaught carried out with impeccable bureaucratic professionalism and disregard for human life leaves the audience numb and speechless.

    To capitalism critics the movie offers a striking parable to former-communist countries collapse. The Great Freedom they were promised, never realised. This can explain the last scene, which I nevertheless find more convincing than Moonlight's far-fetched virginity supposition.
    9riccardomorarm

    Be Gay, Do Crime

    "Große Freiheit" must become a cult. Because of the great performances of all the actors, and the extraordinary performance of Franz Rogowski. Because of the deeply moving and tender stories of love and friendship it is about. Because of the historical accuracy with which the system of oppression against homosexual people in Germany is described, a system that survived unaltered from the Nazi regime to post-war Germany until the abolition of infamous law 175 in 1973. Because of the force with which the existential condition of prisoners is portrayed, as well as that of outcasts of society, a force that finds its equal and source in Genet and in Fassbinder, among many others. Because it is a cry for help, and a cry for justice at the same time, because it shows pain and endurance, violence and strength, dispair and its antidote - the wondrous human ability to feel compassion.
    10thebeachlife

    Human Heart

    For two hours I chose to sit through incessant violence, injustice, humiliation, most horrible expressions of human weakness in order to see the gem of a human soul. I would refer to this one as genocide-themed or even the Holocaust but there's so much more to it. Despite the obvious background, it is all about endurance, fearlessness and as simple as it is: a Human Heart.
    9dakjets

    Let this film be a constant reminder

    We're tired of Pride!", "Why Pride?" "We don't want any more Pride". Yes, I have read and heard this a lot this year, 2023. In my home country of Norway, in 2022 there was even a terrorist attack against a gay pub. Two innocent people were killed.

    This film perhaps clearly shows why Pride, why Pride and gay rights are about human rights. We are not free until everyone is free. This film is strong and very current. It shows what happened to homosexuals who practiced their sexuality in the 50s and 60s. Prison where they received degrading treatment from both other inmates, staff and society's moral pointer.

    As I write this, there is an increase in the number of countries where homosexuality is banned and queers are persecuted. So we need movies like this, as a constant reminder of how NOT to treat difference and gays.

    The film is also an experience in itself. Character actor Franz Rogowski carries this film, mostly with what he doesn't say, but shows.

    Strong stuff here.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Soundtracks
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      Written and Performed by Nils Petter Molvær

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 6, 2022 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Austria
      • Germany
    • Languages
      • German
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Grosse Freiheit
    • Production companies
      • FreibeuterFilm
      • Rohfilm
      • ORF Film/Fernseh-Abkommen
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $71,946
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $9,581
      • Mar 6, 2022
    • Gross worldwide
      • $218,511
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 56 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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