115 reviews
- bored_bingewatcher
- Jul 28, 2023
- Permalink
This is a German Sci-Fi film based around the premise that scientists have determined a way to not just extend your life, but buy back your youth. The catch is that your time is coming directly from someone who is DNA compatible with you (I.e. Relatives make a good match and certain ethnic backgrounds are underrepresented). The company who has developed this technology is run like a massive biotech that has Apple like meetings where awards like salesperson of the year are awarded...but the real reason people attend is to hear the CEO speak, a Olivia Theissen. The recipient of the best salesperson award is Max, who we follow throughout the film.
In essence the film is almost a de-evolution of Max's beliefs. In the beginning he is very pro-company and really believes in what they are doing in the most altruistic sense, which is part of what makes him a great salesperson...visiting refugees in a refugee camp and convincing young refugees to donate just 5-10 years for the money to help their entire families immigrate. When his doctor wife is forced to give up 40 years after their home is burnt down...he starts to see things from a different perspective. Meanwhile there is an activist group who believes so strongly against this company and it's practices that they are willing to commit violent crimes like murder.
Interesting from a psychological perspective, I enjoyed this German Sci-fi film...not as much as I enjoyed the Dark series, but I did enjoy it. I think sci-fi fans will think it is a worthy watch, so it gets my recommendation.
My review is based on watching it in it's original German language with English subtitles.
In essence the film is almost a de-evolution of Max's beliefs. In the beginning he is very pro-company and really believes in what they are doing in the most altruistic sense, which is part of what makes him a great salesperson...visiting refugees in a refugee camp and convincing young refugees to donate just 5-10 years for the money to help their entire families immigrate. When his doctor wife is forced to give up 40 years after their home is burnt down...he starts to see things from a different perspective. Meanwhile there is an activist group who believes so strongly against this company and it's practices that they are willing to commit violent crimes like murder.
Interesting from a psychological perspective, I enjoyed this German Sci-fi film...not as much as I enjoyed the Dark series, but I did enjoy it. I think sci-fi fans will think it is a worthy watch, so it gets my recommendation.
My review is based on watching it in it's original German language with English subtitles.
I loved the issues brought up and how it used a Sci-fi concept to highlight them, and it had some lovely details; but I think it had a bit of a slow build up. Like I feel the pacing of the film would have made an excellent TV series.
I do feel like the concept and the things brought up were very interesting. I also felt there were a lot of side characters who seemed like they had a very interesting stories to tell that were barely touched on.
It was overall interesting, and enjoyable it just had more to give. And I think the film suffered a tiny bit because of that. It was clearly a very well thought out concept.
I do feel like the concept and the things brought up were very interesting. I also felt there were a lot of side characters who seemed like they had a very interesting stories to tell that were barely touched on.
It was overall interesting, and enjoyable it just had more to give. And I think the film suffered a tiny bit because of that. It was clearly a very well thought out concept.
I see there are a lot of mixed reviews for this German sci-fi, from people that didn't get it to people that found it clever. Count me in the people that enjoyed this movie, and so did my wife. I thought the plot was interesting, certainly food for thought. The only thing that could have been a bit better was the acting from certain actors but overall it was all pretty decent. I didn't think the plot was complicated at all so I don't get what others didn't understand about the story. The lesson of the movie is don't do to others what you don't want others do to you. If everybody would think about that a bit more, life on earth would be so much better.
- deloudelouvain
- Aug 6, 2023
- Permalink
I think that Germany is a step ahead here in Europe, lots of European production such as the French one or the Italian one are still attached at the old way of doing cinema, such as Nouvelle vague or Neorealism, Germany during these last few years has demonstrated that has a lot to offer, Dark, Kleo, 1989 and now Paradise. It was not a perfect movie, but it was not predictable and it perfectly show how fragile human nature is and how humans way of thinking can change.
The main protagonist really did an amazing job, his character is very well written like the rest of the script. I wouldn't mind if they do a sequel to this movie. If you liked In time, you'll definitely like this one!
The main protagonist really did an amazing job, his character is very well written like the rest of the script. I wouldn't mind if they do a sequel to this movie. If you liked In time, you'll definitely like this one!
- chiaramariecapritta
- Aug 3, 2023
- Permalink
- Top_Dawg_Critic
- Jul 29, 2023
- Permalink
A rather dull approach to an interesting subject.
Unfortunately, neither of the characters emerge as multi-faceted human beings, they simply pop out of the script like two-dimensional caricatures, and while the cast does its best to bring these personae to life, their hard work can only go so far in carrying a piece that doesn't hold its ground.
With a few plot twists, the movie tries to gain our attention, but they appear predictable by the time we've finished watching the film.
Despite introducing us to a formidable antagonist, the CEO of the evil AEON corporation, who's capable of eliminating innocent lives for her own profits and interest, we don't get to know much about her either, and the whole characterisation falls flat. Neither does her character design present her as a grey shadowed presence, nor does it do much to make the viewer hate her.
Even the opposing fraction ADAM fighting against AEON is led by a woman with firm beliefs, but that side of the story doesn't contribute anything except bodies dropping left and right. It ultimately leaves us with a question - what really was the point of it all, if neither the negative forces leading the controversial ageist agenda had anything to speak for themselves, nor the resistance party trying to reinstate the status quo.
Although classism and ageism are the obvious themes being dealt by the movie, the social commentary in that arena also feels very thin, resulting in merely a crumbling down of the whole idea that could've created a larger than life image, but never does.
Personally, I was looking forward to this release owing to my own cravings of a good science fiction thriller, but again that ship has sailed without leaving me with much to remember in the end.
Unfortunately, Boris Kunz's feature has only resulted in a run-of-the-mill forgettable viewing experience. As much as I wanted to like this one, it didn't really hand out a significantly building up narrative, nor did it lay out worthy character developments. Its sole dark vision of a society falling apart with a classist billion-dollar company set up at the centre only brings out the obvious view of a dystopian setting, but nothing more than that.
Initially, the German film pushes a great deal to cement its foregrounding issues about the socio-economic divide between different classes of society, ageism, relationships, technological advancements overtaking emotional human ground and more.
But in the end, it reels out a dystopian concept merely on the surface, as a selling point. It lacks profundity and fails to ask the right questions.
Unfortunately, neither of the characters emerge as multi-faceted human beings, they simply pop out of the script like two-dimensional caricatures, and while the cast does its best to bring these personae to life, their hard work can only go so far in carrying a piece that doesn't hold its ground.
With a few plot twists, the movie tries to gain our attention, but they appear predictable by the time we've finished watching the film.
Despite introducing us to a formidable antagonist, the CEO of the evil AEON corporation, who's capable of eliminating innocent lives for her own profits and interest, we don't get to know much about her either, and the whole characterisation falls flat. Neither does her character design present her as a grey shadowed presence, nor does it do much to make the viewer hate her.
Even the opposing fraction ADAM fighting against AEON is led by a woman with firm beliefs, but that side of the story doesn't contribute anything except bodies dropping left and right. It ultimately leaves us with a question - what really was the point of it all, if neither the negative forces leading the controversial ageist agenda had anything to speak for themselves, nor the resistance party trying to reinstate the status quo.
Although classism and ageism are the obvious themes being dealt by the movie, the social commentary in that arena also feels very thin, resulting in merely a crumbling down of the whole idea that could've created a larger than life image, but never does.
Personally, I was looking forward to this release owing to my own cravings of a good science fiction thriller, but again that ship has sailed without leaving me with much to remember in the end.
Unfortunately, Boris Kunz's feature has only resulted in a run-of-the-mill forgettable viewing experience. As much as I wanted to like this one, it didn't really hand out a significantly building up narrative, nor did it lay out worthy character developments. Its sole dark vision of a society falling apart with a classist billion-dollar company set up at the centre only brings out the obvious view of a dystopian setting, but nothing more than that.
Initially, the German film pushes a great deal to cement its foregrounding issues about the socio-economic divide between different classes of society, ageism, relationships, technological advancements overtaking emotional human ground and more.
But in the end, it reels out a dystopian concept merely on the surface, as a selling point. It lacks profundity and fails to ask the right questions.
- filmbuff924
- Jul 26, 2023
- Permalink
This movie had everything to be great. The premise was good, to say the least, the beginning was exciting, the performances committed and the course chosen pointed in the direction of something really prosperous.
In addition, the ethical issues raised by a group called Adam, which violently opposes the shady methods of manipulating the life span of the poor in exchange for money , run by the AEON company, are extremely valid and provide material for a realistic reflection on a possible future that lies ahead of our time. In fact, this discussion would have been the best thing in the movie if the script had gone down this road.
But halfway through the movie the script becomes a seesaw with so many ups and downs. The story loses its breath and becomes a little lame. It improves a little with the reappearance of the terrorist core Adam, adding some action to the lukewarm script, but it falls off again with poor script choices as the film nears its climax.
When personal moral dilemmas that don't quite fit appear out of nowhere, things turn lukewarm again and the movie goes downhill again. And so it goes until the end. It's not bad and keeps the interest, but good wasted characters and an undefined script about where it wants to go, partially spoil what could have been great. In the end, it leaves a slight hook for a possible continuation.
In addition, the ethical issues raised by a group called Adam, which violently opposes the shady methods of manipulating the life span of the poor in exchange for money , run by the AEON company, are extremely valid and provide material for a realistic reflection on a possible future that lies ahead of our time. In fact, this discussion would have been the best thing in the movie if the script had gone down this road.
But halfway through the movie the script becomes a seesaw with so many ups and downs. The story loses its breath and becomes a little lame. It improves a little with the reappearance of the terrorist core Adam, adding some action to the lukewarm script, but it falls off again with poor script choices as the film nears its climax.
When personal moral dilemmas that don't quite fit appear out of nowhere, things turn lukewarm again and the movie goes downhill again. And so it goes until the end. It's not bad and keeps the interest, but good wasted characters and an undefined script about where it wants to go, partially spoil what could have been great. In the end, it leaves a slight hook for a possible continuation.
- jabandrade
- Aug 16, 2023
- Permalink
Fantastic beginning and middle, terrible and lazy ending. Three quarters of the way though this movie, it became extremely confusing and then nothing was making sense! The ending left so many loose ends and I was extremely unsatisfied. I feel like the movie never ended. I am left empty, like a kid who just dropped his ice cream and never gets another. I think the writers ran out of time, making up whatever to get the movie finished. Terrible, terrible ending. I feel like calling Netflix and asking for my money back. I feel like someone who bites into a sandwich and finds out it's just bread. Extremely disappointed! I would love for there to be an alternate ending.
- robwestgate-39789
- Aug 13, 2023
- Permalink
The movie is very captivating and has solid storytelling. The story might work a bit better in a series as there could be more to tell. The theme is very interesting and I wish there was more to see.
German movies mostly cannot compete with international movies but this one is an exception.
This one was definitely a surprise, given Netflix' history of trash content.
For the story:
It is about an employee who works for a german science corporation which can transfer life-time via a medical procedure.
People 'donate' some of their life-time and receive money as compensation.
Can definitely recommend!
German movies mostly cannot compete with international movies but this one is an exception.
This one was definitely a surprise, given Netflix' history of trash content.
For the story:
It is about an employee who works for a german science corporation which can transfer life-time via a medical procedure.
People 'donate' some of their life-time and receive money as compensation.
Can definitely recommend!
It's hard for me to understand how Netflix can allow complete amateurs write movie scripts.
They do it again and again. How can this be a sustainable business model? Put 15 million dollars in a movie based on a script that any 16 years old could have written better.
I mean look at this mess of a script. What is this? Apart from the premise, which is not completely new but interesting, it is just complete garbage. There are no character build ups, there is no interesting dramatic goal, there are not story steps, there isn't even a central conflict, it's just a huge chaos all over the place.
None of the characters come even close to touching us. The antagonist has one single encounter with the hero, where they both say one sentence, no conflict. We never learn what motivates her.
The hero saves a woman that doesn't wanna be saved. His wife. Well, it's said that she is his wife, but we never really come to believe it, as there is zero chemistry between them. They tell each other "I love" you three times in a car, but there is no feeling, it's worse than in a soap opera. Two sex scenes (hello Netflix) add nothing to the chemistry. The actress isn't very convincing, but it's not only her fault. Maybe the makers should have watched some love movies to learn how to establish a bond between a loving couple, especially as this is - or rather should have been - the central motivator of the hero, saving his wife's life.
That's his mission. Unfortunately, she doesn't rally wanna be saved and seems to have given in to her fate. Then she changes her mind and wants to be saved. Then she changes her mind again, because it would mean to harm an innocent person. Then she changes her mind again and almost kills the innocent girl, sleeps with her husband, and finally decides to betray her husband and take the lifetime of the girl, and also break up with the guy who sacrificed his life for her and get pregnant from another guy that appeared out of nowhere (is this the new "female empowerment"?). Frustrated, her now ex-husband joins the terrorist to kill some more people. Why? We never really learn.
It's so bizarre, that it's almost funny. The script actually reminded me of Tommy Wiseau's 2003 film The Room, widely considered the worst film ever made. In this film the actor changes his mind sometimes twice within a scene.
I wonder if the producers come to Netflix with a script so bad, or if the script is okay but Netflix ruins it with their developer team, because they want it to fit their algorithm or whatever.
It's depressing, because the premise would have offered so much potential. For example, only the rich can afford the costly life-time transfer process, and they take it from the poor. Was that too political for Netflix? Why was this huge potential theme never harvested in the movie? Isn't that what's happening right now on this planet, that only the rich can afford top medical care?
Well, but ignoring reality and promoting escapism seems to be the new thing on Netflix, so I guess the filmmakers ran into heavy resistance there. Sad.
Netflix used to be cool, now it's more and more turning into a drug to numb down the oppressed workforce.
They do it again and again. How can this be a sustainable business model? Put 15 million dollars in a movie based on a script that any 16 years old could have written better.
I mean look at this mess of a script. What is this? Apart from the premise, which is not completely new but interesting, it is just complete garbage. There are no character build ups, there is no interesting dramatic goal, there are not story steps, there isn't even a central conflict, it's just a huge chaos all over the place.
None of the characters come even close to touching us. The antagonist has one single encounter with the hero, where they both say one sentence, no conflict. We never learn what motivates her.
The hero saves a woman that doesn't wanna be saved. His wife. Well, it's said that she is his wife, but we never really come to believe it, as there is zero chemistry between them. They tell each other "I love" you three times in a car, but there is no feeling, it's worse than in a soap opera. Two sex scenes (hello Netflix) add nothing to the chemistry. The actress isn't very convincing, but it's not only her fault. Maybe the makers should have watched some love movies to learn how to establish a bond between a loving couple, especially as this is - or rather should have been - the central motivator of the hero, saving his wife's life.
That's his mission. Unfortunately, she doesn't rally wanna be saved and seems to have given in to her fate. Then she changes her mind and wants to be saved. Then she changes her mind again, because it would mean to harm an innocent person. Then she changes her mind again and almost kills the innocent girl, sleeps with her husband, and finally decides to betray her husband and take the lifetime of the girl, and also break up with the guy who sacrificed his life for her and get pregnant from another guy that appeared out of nowhere (is this the new "female empowerment"?). Frustrated, her now ex-husband joins the terrorist to kill some more people. Why? We never really learn.
It's so bizarre, that it's almost funny. The script actually reminded me of Tommy Wiseau's 2003 film The Room, widely considered the worst film ever made. In this film the actor changes his mind sometimes twice within a scene.
I wonder if the producers come to Netflix with a script so bad, or if the script is okay but Netflix ruins it with their developer team, because they want it to fit their algorithm or whatever.
It's depressing, because the premise would have offered so much potential. For example, only the rich can afford the costly life-time transfer process, and they take it from the poor. Was that too political for Netflix? Why was this huge potential theme never harvested in the movie? Isn't that what's happening right now on this planet, that only the rich can afford top medical care?
Well, but ignoring reality and promoting escapism seems to be the new thing on Netflix, so I guess the filmmakers ran into heavy resistance there. Sad.
Netflix used to be cool, now it's more and more turning into a drug to numb down the oppressed workforce.
- openyourmind-28366kfiejwkln
- Jul 29, 2023
- Permalink
No pun intended - actually one might say puns. But let's not get ahead of ourselves! What is life or a movie if we skip stuff - if we are made to fast forward? Or go back? Time and age wise! There are a lot of questions the movie is asking - very obvious ones (should we sacrifice so called regular folk to enrich our culture with geniuess? Make them live longer?) ... but I would argue that it doesn't really answer them ... it does go off into different directions.
That all being said, this is an intriguing concept ... try not to get hung up on ... well technicalities (again sorry for the pun). This is meant to be ... well meant to be entertainment first, while also giving you food for thought. What would you do? And does every technology benefit the rich? Who can be deemed ... well unnecessary? Isn't every life worth something? Still if someone would want to give away ... there is a whole bag of issues there. One being that person may change their mind ... no backsies I assume.
I like that the filmmakers took a chance and went for it. With Kostja they have a very charismatic lead ... he walks a very line about what he wants, about being a fighter for justice ... and trying to handle what his significant other may want ... all the while playing god of sorts ... there are many twists and turns ... some make more some make less sense ... just suspend your disbelief ...
That all being said, this is an intriguing concept ... try not to get hung up on ... well technicalities (again sorry for the pun). This is meant to be ... well meant to be entertainment first, while also giving you food for thought. What would you do? And does every technology benefit the rich? Who can be deemed ... well unnecessary? Isn't every life worth something? Still if someone would want to give away ... there is a whole bag of issues there. One being that person may change their mind ... no backsies I assume.
I like that the filmmakers took a chance and went for it. With Kostja they have a very charismatic lead ... he walks a very line about what he wants, about being a fighter for justice ... and trying to handle what his significant other may want ... all the while playing god of sorts ... there are many twists and turns ... some make more some make less sense ... just suspend your disbelief ...
As "Paradise" (2023 release from Germany; 118 min) opens, we are introduced to Max, a "donation manager" for Aeon, which literally buys time from people for money, lots of money. (In the opening scene, am 18 yo is offered EUR 700K for 5 years of his life). Then the irony: when the condo that Max and his wife Elena own burns down, they owe the rest of the mortgage. Elena is forced to donate 38 years of her life...
Couple of comments: this is the latest from German director Boris Kunz. Here he looks at the moral dilemma: how to value the amount of time in your life. In and of itself this could make for an interesting concept, but for whatever reason it doesn't feel well implemented in this movie. The movie's first hour just crawls by, and although things get a little better in the second hour, it feels like this is a wasted opportunity. And I'm not even mentioning the very end of the movie, which had me baffled.
"Paradise" started streaming on Netflix last weekend, and Netflix suggested it to me based on my viewing habits. If you are in the mood for a weird-ish sci-fi that has some interesting concepts but lacks a deep implementation, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.
Couple of comments: this is the latest from German director Boris Kunz. Here he looks at the moral dilemma: how to value the amount of time in your life. In and of itself this could make for an interesting concept, but for whatever reason it doesn't feel well implemented in this movie. The movie's first hour just crawls by, and although things get a little better in the second hour, it feels like this is a wasted opportunity. And I'm not even mentioning the very end of the movie, which had me baffled.
"Paradise" started streaming on Netflix last weekend, and Netflix suggested it to me based on my viewing habits. If you are in the mood for a weird-ish sci-fi that has some interesting concepts but lacks a deep implementation, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.
- paul-allaer
- Aug 31, 2023
- Permalink
Nothing new, nothing special.
Through this movie there's just a hint of trying too hard and being overly dramatic. The movie adds unnecessary tension which is prolonged through the entirety of the film. The concept behind the film is something new however the way it's filmed just devalues the idea. The acting wasn't bad, good enough to keep the movie afloat. The start was pretty engaging and hooked the audience however the hook slowly became more and more blunt until the movie became a boring and repetitive mess. It's sad to see such a good idea go to waste but hopefully this movie or idea gets interpreted in a clearer and more appealing way.
Through this movie there's just a hint of trying too hard and being overly dramatic. The movie adds unnecessary tension which is prolonged through the entirety of the film. The concept behind the film is something new however the way it's filmed just devalues the idea. The acting wasn't bad, good enough to keep the movie afloat. The start was pretty engaging and hooked the audience however the hook slowly became more and more blunt until the movie became a boring and repetitive mess. It's sad to see such a good idea go to waste but hopefully this movie or idea gets interpreted in a clearer and more appealing way.
I really wasn't expecting something quite as good based on the putrid 6.3/10 rating on IMDb. The production, acting, premise, are all really good. The sci-fi story is very interesting though pretty linear and mostly predictable. With that said I was fully captivated throughout the entire movie and I'm one that gets antsy easily. I haven't seen any of the actors before but they all played their parts very well and were fully convincing in their parts. I would definitely watch a part 2 of this movie if one is made. The only reason I think this movie didn't get a higher review is the subtitles and the fact that it doesn't have a single A-list actor from Hollywood.
- mrwildgoose
- Aug 9, 2023
- Permalink
- therapyaldosalas
- Oct 10, 2023
- Permalink
- ayesha_lea
- Aug 4, 2023
- Permalink
- francinejlee
- Aug 5, 2023
- Permalink
I am baffled by all the good reviews, so I feel compelled to write one myself.
The premise is way over the top, but it's kept in the background, and used more as a pretext for some social commentary, which I thought was smart, as going into scientific details would have probably broken my suspension of disbelief. The dialog wasn't terrible, I'd say it was much better and made more sense than a lot of the usual American movies on the platform. The special effects were decent enough to be believable, and the lead did a very good job. The fact the movie is German helped it feel more fresh.
But the script takes a 180 degrees turn towards the end, making every single actor behave completely out of character, to a baffling degree, and completely nonsensical just to tidy up the plot. I've never seen in my entire life, and I've seen a lot of bad movies, such a blatant way to make your characters fit the script. The movie would have been a decent 6.5/10 popcorn flick if it wasn't for this, but this completely ruined everything. I can't go into more detail without spoiling things, but there wasn't a single character that didn't do an irrational decision, in complete contrast to their entire character development up to that point. So there's that.
Either stop the movie 30 minutes before it ends, or be prepared for a sour taste. Better yet, completely avoid it.
The premise is way over the top, but it's kept in the background, and used more as a pretext for some social commentary, which I thought was smart, as going into scientific details would have probably broken my suspension of disbelief. The dialog wasn't terrible, I'd say it was much better and made more sense than a lot of the usual American movies on the platform. The special effects were decent enough to be believable, and the lead did a very good job. The fact the movie is German helped it feel more fresh.
But the script takes a 180 degrees turn towards the end, making every single actor behave completely out of character, to a baffling degree, and completely nonsensical just to tidy up the plot. I've never seen in my entire life, and I've seen a lot of bad movies, such a blatant way to make your characters fit the script. The movie would have been a decent 6.5/10 popcorn flick if it wasn't for this, but this completely ruined everything. I can't go into more detail without spoiling things, but there wasn't a single character that didn't do an irrational decision, in complete contrast to their entire character development up to that point. So there's that.
Either stop the movie 30 minutes before it ends, or be prepared for a sour taste. Better yet, completely avoid it.
- sohan_andrei
- Aug 12, 2023
- Permalink