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In Berlin 1942, Hilde is a member of an anti-Nazi group. She falls in love with another member, Hans. The two spend a summer together until they get caught by the Gestapo and Hilde is impris... Read allIn Berlin 1942, Hilde is a member of an anti-Nazi group. She falls in love with another member, Hans. The two spend a summer together until they get caught by the Gestapo and Hilde is imprisoned, eight months pregnant.In Berlin 1942, Hilde is a member of an anti-Nazi group. She falls in love with another member, Hans. The two spend a summer together until they get caught by the Gestapo and Hilde is imprisoned, eight months pregnant.
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BERLINALE 2024: Nomination for the Golden Bear
A calmly told film about Hilde Coppi (1909 - 1943), who was sentenced to death by the National Socialists as a member of the communist resistance group ROTE KAPELLE. Liv Lisa FRIES, the superstar from the German quality series BABYLON BERLIN, plays this extraordinary role with calm precision.
The German director Andreas DRESEN has been making very successful films that deal with Germany's past and present for 25 years. DRESEN has already been nominated twice for the EUROPEAN FILM AWARD (2002 for HALBE TREPPE / 2008 for WOLKE NEUN).
Partly in flashbacks (with wonderful images of the Müggelsee in summer), the story of the married couple Hans (Johannes HEGEMANN) and Hilde Coppi, who offered modest resistance to the Nazi regime through a communist-minded circle of friends, is impressively told. Both were sentenced to death in the merciless dictatorship. Their son Hans Coppi Junior was born while they were still in prison, and his voice can be heard at the end of the film as an 80-year-old man.
This film is a monument to the Coppis and their circle of friends that is worth seeing. Other roles include wonderful German actors such as Lisa WAGNER as a prison guard who is gradually becoming capable of compassion, Alexander SCHEER (EUROPEAN FILM AWARD 2019: nomination for GUNDERMANN) as a sensitive priest and Florian LUKAS (known from the German quality series WEISSENSEE) as a nasty prison doctor.
Well worth seeing!
A calmly told film about Hilde Coppi (1909 - 1943), who was sentenced to death by the National Socialists as a member of the communist resistance group ROTE KAPELLE. Liv Lisa FRIES, the superstar from the German quality series BABYLON BERLIN, plays this extraordinary role with calm precision.
The German director Andreas DRESEN has been making very successful films that deal with Germany's past and present for 25 years. DRESEN has already been nominated twice for the EUROPEAN FILM AWARD (2002 for HALBE TREPPE / 2008 for WOLKE NEUN).
Partly in flashbacks (with wonderful images of the Müggelsee in summer), the story of the married couple Hans (Johannes HEGEMANN) and Hilde Coppi, who offered modest resistance to the Nazi regime through a communist-minded circle of friends, is impressively told. Both were sentenced to death in the merciless dictatorship. Their son Hans Coppi Junior was born while they were still in prison, and his voice can be heard at the end of the film as an 80-year-old man.
This film is a monument to the Coppis and their circle of friends that is worth seeing. Other roles include wonderful German actors such as Lisa WAGNER as a prison guard who is gradually becoming capable of compassion, Alexander SCHEER (EUROPEAN FILM AWARD 2019: nomination for GUNDERMANN) as a sensitive priest and Florian LUKAS (known from the German quality series WEISSENSEE) as a nasty prison doctor.
Well worth seeing!
While at it's core another traditional basic biographical structure, director Andreas Dresen does a solid work on presenting the relationship and history of the two character of Hilde and Hans Coppi with two strong lead performances from the cast and including some solid direction choices.
Stories about anti-Nazi and the war period has been done many times and Dresen offers at times some good direction and atmosphere approaches. Regarding it's writing being predictable and nothing too special when it comes to context, history and development, especially character development, the strong performances, solid camerawork and certain dialogue moments remain ambitious.
Stories about anti-Nazi and the war period has been done many times and Dresen offers at times some good direction and atmosphere approaches. Regarding it's writing being predictable and nothing too special when it comes to context, history and development, especially character development, the strong performances, solid camerawork and certain dialogue moments remain ambitious.
The film serves its purpose in giving a brutally unflinching glimpse into the grotesque, uncompromising Nazi regime at the time - while also counterbalancing the story with hopeful, youthful optimism and deep love between the two main characters, Hilde and Jakob. Their relationship captures the essence of resilience amidst despair, making each scene compelling and emotionally resonant.
Beautifully acted, written, and directed, this is one of those films that will stick with you for a while whether you like it or not. The cinematography is breathtaking, capturing the raw and stark landscapes that mirror the emotional turmoil and the indomitable spirit of the characters. With its haunting musical score and meticulously crafted dialogue, this masterpiece delves deep into the human spirit's ability to endure and love even in the harshest conditions. Riveting and thought-provoking, it challenges viewers to reflect on the past and consider the complexities of history.
Feel free to tweak it further to match your voice and perspective!
Beautifully acted, written, and directed, this is one of those films that will stick with you for a while whether you like it or not. The cinematography is breathtaking, capturing the raw and stark landscapes that mirror the emotional turmoil and the indomitable spirit of the characters. With its haunting musical score and meticulously crafted dialogue, this masterpiece delves deep into the human spirit's ability to endure and love even in the harshest conditions. Riveting and thought-provoking, it challenges viewers to reflect on the past and consider the complexities of history.
Feel free to tweak it further to match your voice and perspective!
It feels heartless to be critical of such a well-meaning film. This is, after all, a tale of the heroism and sacrifice of real people. Oppressed by the tyrannical Nazi regime, the small group at the centre of 'From Hilde, with Love' fought back as best they could, accepted the risk and faced the consequences.
The problem with the film is, simply, that there is no sense of menace. The apparatus of the Nazi regime is largely absent until Hilde and her group are arrested. It does not breathe down their necks. It hardly appears to be interested in them.
As a result their plotting, organising and minor acts of civil disobedience have an inconsequential, undergraduate air. The atmosphere feels more like early-1960s Sweden than wartime Nazi Germany. You half expect them to break off their activities on behalf of the Soviet Union to compose a message of solidarity with their brothers and sisters in Nicaragua.
Under arrest, Hilde is shouted at. The food isn't good. The conditions are Dickensian. She has a baby and manages to keep him alive, assisted by increasingly humane prison staff. Little sense of menace intrudes. The likely sentence for Hilde's offence is not a threat but a fact, arrived at by a form of due process.
The film closes on a poignant note provided by Hilde's son. It is as effective a reminder of the bravery of these young people as anything else in the film.
The problem with the film is, simply, that there is no sense of menace. The apparatus of the Nazi regime is largely absent until Hilde and her group are arrested. It does not breathe down their necks. It hardly appears to be interested in them.
As a result their plotting, organising and minor acts of civil disobedience have an inconsequential, undergraduate air. The atmosphere feels more like early-1960s Sweden than wartime Nazi Germany. You half expect them to break off their activities on behalf of the Soviet Union to compose a message of solidarity with their brothers and sisters in Nicaragua.
Under arrest, Hilde is shouted at. The food isn't good. The conditions are Dickensian. She has a baby and manages to keep him alive, assisted by increasingly humane prison staff. Little sense of menace intrudes. The likely sentence for Hilde's offence is not a threat but a fact, arrived at by a form of due process.
The film closes on a poignant note provided by Hilde's son. It is as effective a reminder of the bravery of these young people as anything else in the film.
The film tells a story of a group of young, reasonably well off and naive people, who fought the NAZI by trying to help USSR. However, as said by Hilde's son Hans, a German historian, after the war, many Nazi officers who participated in the torture and killing of those fighters were never prosecuted but joined the West German military, while his parents and other continued to be treated as traitors till 2008. That makes you wonder whether they were heroes fighting for freedom, or victims in the geopolitical conflicts played by the people in power.
In the film, all of the people in Nazi machines, the secret police , the prison guards, the hospital staff, the judges, were humane, kind and sympathetic. I am not sure how well this reflects the historical truth. Prison systems across the world were cruel in those days. Was Hilde just lucky to be treated humanely, or was it the filmmaker's desire of not hurting this beautiful soul, on the big screen?
Looking at the conflicts today that are killing so many people in the name of glorious goals, I wonder whether humans are really capable of learning. This film tells such a story that makes some of us think and see the wars differently.
In the film, all of the people in Nazi machines, the secret police , the prison guards, the hospital staff, the judges, were humane, kind and sympathetic. I am not sure how well this reflects the historical truth. Prison systems across the world were cruel in those days. Was Hilde just lucky to be treated humanely, or was it the filmmaker's desire of not hurting this beautiful soul, on the big screen?
Looking at the conflicts today that are killing so many people in the name of glorious goals, I wonder whether humans are really capable of learning. This film tells such a story that makes some of us think and see the wars differently.
Did you know
- TriviaThe narration at the very end of the film is spoken by the real Hans Coppi Jr.
Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $701,097
- Runtime
- 2h 5m(125 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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