IMDb RATING
7.0/10
3.1K
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Through his work at a morgue, an incarcerated young man trying to build a new life starts to come to terms with the crime he committed.Through his work at a morgue, an incarcerated young man trying to build a new life starts to come to terms with the crime he committed.Through his work at a morgue, an incarcerated young man trying to build a new life starts to come to terms with the crime he committed.
- Awards
- 19 wins & 8 nominations total
Luna Lozic
- Mona
- (as Luna Mijovic)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Atmen is set in Austria and features a young man who has spent four years in juvenile detention and is breaking into the real world of work. The story is sad but also offers hope. The ending is a big surprise. Why did the young man end up where he was? You won't know unless you watch the whole film, which is beautifully shot and well acted.
Austria has been hitting aces with films like THE COUNTERFEITERS and REVANCHE and again with BREATHING, the country proves it has got what it takes to be considered amongst quality film making countries.
The film is small and poignant driven by a brave, bold and haunting performance by Thomas Schubert. The boy delves deep into the character and comes up with a nuance and sincerely enriched performance stating that he clearly lived every second of the film and literally felt the character making him able to wear the character over himself like a costume.
The supporting cast was adequate and served their purpose decently.
Karl Markovics is a known actor who inspired me with his acting skills in THE COUNTERFEITERS but here he comes up with an even better film and inspires with his directing and writing skills. The scenes were meticulously crafted, the feelings of the reclusive lead character were so rich that one watching the film can easily feel the mental pain and torture that he goes through.
The scenes i like best were when the Schubert releases the trapped bird, it carefully tells how his character has evolved into someone less brutal and caring person.
The score by Herbert Tucmandl and cinematography by Martin Gschlacht was cool and provided with the accurate mood of the film; dense, low but yet beautiful.
This movie might not be appealing to everyone but the lovers of art-drama films will surely cherish this small gem from Austria.
The film is small and poignant driven by a brave, bold and haunting performance by Thomas Schubert. The boy delves deep into the character and comes up with a nuance and sincerely enriched performance stating that he clearly lived every second of the film and literally felt the character making him able to wear the character over himself like a costume.
The supporting cast was adequate and served their purpose decently.
Karl Markovics is a known actor who inspired me with his acting skills in THE COUNTERFEITERS but here he comes up with an even better film and inspires with his directing and writing skills. The scenes were meticulously crafted, the feelings of the reclusive lead character were so rich that one watching the film can easily feel the mental pain and torture that he goes through.
The scenes i like best were when the Schubert releases the trapped bird, it carefully tells how his character has evolved into someone less brutal and caring person.
The score by Herbert Tucmandl and cinematography by Martin Gschlacht was cool and provided with the accurate mood of the film; dense, low but yet beautiful.
This movie might not be appealing to everyone but the lovers of art-drama films will surely cherish this small gem from Austria.
Thomas Schubert is Roman Kogler, a kid who's serving time in a juvenile detention center. He has a day job as a morgue attendant. He is socially awkward and can't connect with anybody. Can he find the connection that he so desperately need?
This movie moves rather slowly. It meanders along as we follow Roman around. There isn't anything dramatic going on until the final third of the movie. So we're relying on this being a character study. A character study has major problems here. The actor is not charismatic and the character is supposed to be withdrawn. Again that doesn't make for compelling watching. A final reveal is very enlightening about his incarceration. However, I think a violent action scene at the beginning would inject much needed tension into this character. It would serve the movie much better to see the incident at the beginning rather than hear about it at the end.
This movie moves rather slowly. It meanders along as we follow Roman around. There isn't anything dramatic going on until the final third of the movie. So we're relying on this being a character study. A character study has major problems here. The actor is not charismatic and the character is supposed to be withdrawn. Again that doesn't make for compelling watching. A final reveal is very enlightening about his incarceration. However, I think a violent action scene at the beginning would inject much needed tension into this character. It would serve the movie much better to see the incident at the beginning rather than hear about it at the end.
10EdgarST
Minds that have become sick from watching so much violent and mindless cinema ask for violence in their film diet. For them «Breathing» is a 'movie' in which there is no drama, nothing happens, and it is slow. But this drama is so dramatic (deliberately redundant) that to make it explicit would be cacophonic.
Roman Kogler (Thomas Schubert) was abandoned by his mother, he is 19 years old and has always lived in a reformatory, where he murdered another boy. He does not understand himself, he is lapidary, others do not like him, and I think he himself does not either; he spends long sessions in the prison pool, forcing apnea time at the bottom of the pool, putting his life in danger, but something, a hunch or perhaps the insistence of his probation counselor impels him to grow, to reach 20 and get out of the prison and his shell.
Roman is so closed to the exterior that, among all the job offers, he opts for a position in the city morgue. And day by day, he goes from one place to another with his work group, discovering what life means to others and the pain of loss, while a girl shows him that he is attractive enough and worthy of trust, a smile and a beer, sharing a pleasant trip from the morgue to the prison; a hard co-worker reveals himself as an alternate father and friend, and above all, one unexpected day something happens to him that will change his life forever, when he discovers that his biological mother has not died.
This multi-level emotional action-reaction plot of situations that reveal dark corners of the human essence was written and directed by Karl Markovics, the celebrated actor in the Oscar-winning film "The Counterfeiter." An outstanding theater, film, and TV actor, in this, his debut feature, Markovics reveals himself as a magnificent delineator of characters with notable psychological strength and richness. He had the valuable contribution of actor Thomas Schubert (who was only 17 years old when filming), in a measured, calculated and therefore surprising performance in the role of Roman; actress Karin Lischka in a composition cared for in detail, as Roman's mother, and Herbert Tucmandl's beautiful music used with measure and precision.
I recommend opening our visors to world cinemas and let the American industry with its Netflix, TV series and superheroes cool down for a while, to see if it generates good films again, as in the 1970-80s. The benefit of enjoying different cinemas is immediately felt as we start a good diet with these productions. Thus, we do not miss works like this and others that emerge in Austria, such as Michael Haneke's films, just to mention its most recognized filmmaker.
«Breathing» won the awards for best film, director, screenwriter, actor (Schubert), film editing and music from the Austrian Film and TV Industry, the prize for best European film at the Cannes film festival, the awards for best film and actor at the Sarajevo film festival, and the Best International Film award at the São Paulo festival, among many other recognitions.
Roman Kogler (Thomas Schubert) was abandoned by his mother, he is 19 years old and has always lived in a reformatory, where he murdered another boy. He does not understand himself, he is lapidary, others do not like him, and I think he himself does not either; he spends long sessions in the prison pool, forcing apnea time at the bottom of the pool, putting his life in danger, but something, a hunch or perhaps the insistence of his probation counselor impels him to grow, to reach 20 and get out of the prison and his shell.
Roman is so closed to the exterior that, among all the job offers, he opts for a position in the city morgue. And day by day, he goes from one place to another with his work group, discovering what life means to others and the pain of loss, while a girl shows him that he is attractive enough and worthy of trust, a smile and a beer, sharing a pleasant trip from the morgue to the prison; a hard co-worker reveals himself as an alternate father and friend, and above all, one unexpected day something happens to him that will change his life forever, when he discovers that his biological mother has not died.
This multi-level emotional action-reaction plot of situations that reveal dark corners of the human essence was written and directed by Karl Markovics, the celebrated actor in the Oscar-winning film "The Counterfeiter." An outstanding theater, film, and TV actor, in this, his debut feature, Markovics reveals himself as a magnificent delineator of characters with notable psychological strength and richness. He had the valuable contribution of actor Thomas Schubert (who was only 17 years old when filming), in a measured, calculated and therefore surprising performance in the role of Roman; actress Karin Lischka in a composition cared for in detail, as Roman's mother, and Herbert Tucmandl's beautiful music used with measure and precision.
I recommend opening our visors to world cinemas and let the American industry with its Netflix, TV series and superheroes cool down for a while, to see if it generates good films again, as in the 1970-80s. The benefit of enjoying different cinemas is immediately felt as we start a good diet with these productions. Thus, we do not miss works like this and others that emerge in Austria, such as Michael Haneke's films, just to mention its most recognized filmmaker.
«Breathing» won the awards for best film, director, screenwriter, actor (Schubert), film editing and music from the Austrian Film and TV Industry, the prize for best European film at the Cannes film festival, the awards for best film and actor at the Sarajevo film festival, and the Best International Film award at the São Paulo festival, among many other recognitions.
Karl Markovics's "Atmen" ("Breathing" in English) focuses on a youth's emotional awakening and the issue of morality in our lives. The movie both gives the viewer a glimpse into the youth's life as he gets a job as a mortuary attendant while still in a juvenile detention center, but also how he has to confront the crime that put him juvie. There are also several shots of the environs of Vienna. I thought that the most effective scenes were the train, showing him going to and from the juvenile detention center, and how the advertisement comes into view, or vanishes.
I'd say that this was the right movie for Austria to submit for its nomination for Best Foreign Language Film at the Academy Awards. Addressing matters of incarceration, ethics, and relationships, it hits the right notes.
I'd say that this was the right movie for Austria to submit for its nomination for Best Foreign Language Film at the Academy Awards. Addressing matters of incarceration, ethics, and relationships, it hits the right notes.
Did you know
- TriviaThe film was selected as Austria's submission to the 84th Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film, but it did not make the final shortlist.
- How long is Breathing?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- €1,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $4,630
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $949
- Sep 2, 2012
- Gross worldwide
- $807,436
- Runtime
- 1h 34m(94 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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