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The German Doctor

Original title: Wakolda
  • 2013
  • PG-13
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
8K
YOUR RATING
Alex Brendemühl in The German Doctor (2013)
Watch Tráiler [OV]
Play trailer2:07
3 Videos
24 Photos
DramaThriller

The story of an Argentine family who lived with Josef Mengele without knowing his true identity, and of a girl who fell in love with one of the biggest criminals of all time.The story of an Argentine family who lived with Josef Mengele without knowing his true identity, and of a girl who fell in love with one of the biggest criminals of all time.The story of an Argentine family who lived with Josef Mengele without knowing his true identity, and of a girl who fell in love with one of the biggest criminals of all time.

  • Director
    • Lucía Puenzo
  • Writer
    • Lucía Puenzo
  • Stars
    • Alex Brendemühl
    • Diego Peretti
    • Guillermo Pfening
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lucía Puenzo
    • Writer
      • Lucía Puenzo
    • Stars
      • Alex Brendemühl
      • Diego Peretti
      • Guillermo Pfening
    • 35User reviews
    • 91Critic reviews
    • 62Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 19 wins & 22 nominations total

    Videos3

    Tráiler [OV]
    Trailer 2:07
    Tráiler [OV]
    The German Doctor
    Trailer 2:07
    The German Doctor
    The German Doctor
    Trailer 2:07
    The German Doctor
    Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 2:07
    Theatrical Trailer

    Photos24

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    Top cast28

    Edit
    Alex Brendemühl
    Alex Brendemühl
    • Mengele
    Diego Peretti
    Diego Peretti
    • Enzo
    Guillermo Pfening
    Guillermo Pfening
    • Klaus
    Alan Daicz
    • Tomás
    Natalia Oreiro
    Natalia Oreiro
    • Eva
    Elena Roger
    Elena Roger
    • Nora Eldoc
    Florencia Bado
    Florencia Bado
    • Lilith
    Nicolas Marsella
    • Polo
    Ana Pauls
    • Enfermera
    Juan I. Martínez
    • Otto
    Carlos Kaspar
    • Dueño de la fábrica
    Abril Braunstein
    • Ailín
    Maria V. Barret
    • Iva
    Benito E. Crespo
    • Cursis
    Sebástian Cáneva
    • Hijo de Cursis
    Hartmut Becher
    • Director de colegio
    Valeria Radivo
    • Professora
    Ricardo Truppel
    • Veterinario
    • Director
      • Lucía Puenzo
    • Writer
      • Lucía Puenzo
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews35

    6.78K
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    Featured reviews

    8mattkocian

    Fascinating, emotionally moving movie with solid performances!

    Seen at 2013 Cannes Film Festival, section "Un Certain Regard"

    Movie "Wakolda" challenges possible escape of Nazi physician Josef Mengele (Alex Brendemühl) to Bariloche, Argentina, in 1960, after being successfully in hiding for over a decade in Buenos Aires. On the road he meets an Argentinian family and becomes fascinated with their daughter Lilith (Florencia Bado) who was born premature and thus has smaller body for her age. Upon their arrival to Bariloche, Mengele, going by name Helmut Gregor, becomes a guest of family's lodging house. With permission of mother Eva (Natalia Oreiro) and behind father's Enzo (Diego Peretti) back, Mengele starts to treat Lilith with growth hormones, which reopens his fascination with pure Aryan race...

    The movie has exceptional score, cinematography and direction, almost fully shot in Bariloche's exteriors. The story develops into psychological thriller and suspense especially in moments where the family has no idea who the stranger in their house truly is, but spectators are fully aware of his true nature. Director Puenzo managed to incorporate into her movie elements of Nazi fascination by local community, mystery of genetic research and innocence of young Lilith who feels privileged to get stranger's attention.

    Alex Brendemühl is chilling as the "Angel of Death", while Florencia Bado gives solid performance, especially being it her first movie role. Natalia Oreiro, Diego Peretti and Elena Roger manage to capture essence of their diverse characters and have on-screen moments with stunning performances. Oreiro convincingly portrays a mother who submits her child to hormone experimentation believing it to be the only option to help Lilith as she blames herself for having her prematurely.

    The movie is multilayer and touches topics of Argentinian history that is not known to many. "Wakolda" is certainly an extraordinary movie experience.
    6awardknott-874-860243

    Not quite a thrilling thriller

    Puenzo has managed to create an interesting story that revolves around Mengele's arrogant manipulation of an Argentinian family.

    Its focus is initially on his relationship with the 12 year-old girl, Lileth, and his wish to help her with growth hormone treatment, however, it is never really made clear in the film as to whether this is merely Mengele seeing an opportunity to carry on his experiments or there is something darker about this relationship. Mengele manages throughout the film to manipulate the parents through promises of helping Lileth and easing the discomfort of the pregnant mother, and even offering to financially back the father in a potentially lucrative doll-making business.

    Puenzo uses the doll-making as a metaphor for Mengele's obsession with perfection which is a little heavy-handed, and Mengele's relationship with Lileth is rather confused. Both of these point to the fact that Puenzo could really have opened up the story a bit more as there are hints at something far more sinister going on around the Claustrophobic confines of the family.

    The German school Lileth is sent to has an underlying stench of Nazism still at play, yet this is something that Puenzo fails to explore. Also, the character of Nora, an archivist, photographer and Israeli agent, is underdeveloped. Puenzo merely hints at the work of Mossad and the how this is an important factor in the behaviour of both Mengele and Nora, also the group of Nazis working in a nearby country house isn't explained until Eva, the mother, gives birth and this necessitates Mengele requiring the help of the Nazi clinic.

    So, for me, Puenzo should have explored many of the underlying themes evident in the story. This felt like a 90 minute movie that could have added another half an hours worth of expositional drama that would have created more of a sense of suspense. As such, Wakolda is an interestingly dark drama, yet one that lacks the depth of a bigger movie.
    8l_rawjalaurence

    Harrowing Account of the Experiments of a Truly Malign Person

    Filmed in the rolling landscapes of Patagonia, Argentina, WAKOLDA is a truly harrowing story of the Nazi doctor who continued to practice his experiments well after the Second World War had ended.

    In exile and among a group of Nazi sympathizers, Josef Mengele (Àlex Brendemühl) lives under an assumed name, and ingratiates himself with a family running a hotel. Befriending the young daughter Lilith (Florencia Bado) he claims to be able to increase her growth and thereby prevent her from being teased at school for being the smallest in the class. She readily agrees; as do her parents. This provides the pretext for Mengele to continue his macabre researches that actually do more harm than good.

    Lucía Puenzo's film contrasts the domestic world of Lilith with the world of the Nazi sympathizers congregating in a local German school. They still practice the salute, and forge a regimented atmosphere guaranteed to impose order on the unwilling learners. Lilith is sent to the school, in the hope of receiving a good education - although remaining largely unaffected by Nazi ideology, she is made painfully aware of her lack of height, which only encourages her to seek Mengele's help even more.

    Set in 1960, WAKOLDA draws a direct parallel between Mengele's work and the doll-manufacturing practiced by Lilith's father Enzo (Diego Peretti). At first Enzo makes all the toys himself; but with Mengele's investment the venture is transformed into a small cottage industry, where all the dolls' faces are identical and they are given tiny mechanized beating hearts. We are made painfully aware that Mengele treats humanity with just the same indifference as the factory workers treat their dolls - as material for experimentation rather than living breathing personae.

    The film maintains a cool, detached tone throughout; although Israeli agents pursue Mengele with the same enthusiasm as with other ex- Nazis (notably Adolf Eichmann), they fail to capture him. But this is not really the film's concern: director Puenzo is far more concerned with Mengele's terrible plausibility as a practicing doctor taking unwitting victims into his confidence and subsequently abusing them.
    Vincentiu

    impressive

    more than a movie , it is an experience. a special puzzle from many historical details and a thriller who seduce at whole. because all is at perfect place - the acting, the script, the music. and the cold feeling about the evil essence. a remarkable film for the smart use of past shadows. and for the manner to explore each. Alex Brendemuhl does one of his great roles as one of post war legends. Natalia Oreira is far by soap opera classic circle. and the landscapes are ideal tool to suggest, to define the atmosphere. a movie for reflection. because its message remains universal. and it seems be more and more important. against forgetting. and as brilliant example of precise movie about past stains.
    10jeffk-1962

    Compelling

    Just saw one of the most compelling movies I have seen in quite a long time. "The German Doctor". It has the beautiful scenery of Bariloche Argentina shot throughout and some of the best acting I have seen in years along with a compelling musical score. It's basic plot deals with Mengele, perhaps one of the greatest villains to have survived the fall of the Nazi empire. He travels into Argentina and ingratiates himself with an Argentine family of Germany ethnicity. The role played by the doctor is both chilling and fascinating. Mengele comes across at first as a benevolent force, but soon we develop the insight not only as to who this person is, but how casually he dehumanizes everyone to meet his own terms of science and beauty. Pay special attention to the symbolism of dolls and their "sameness". The acting is exquisite, with Florencia Bado who conveys the innocence of a young girl who trusts "the German Doctor" as well as Natalia Oriero and Diego Peretti. There is no gruesome violence in this movie, no "action sequence", no CGI, no bad language, no nudity. Only the chilling suspense and dialogue of an evil passing itself as benevolence. The stark winter landscape and beautiful forests of that region are known to me and they were captured in a magnificent way. I cannot recommend this movie enough.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      For her role of Eva, actress Natalia Oreiro studied German language for two months prior to shooting. More than half of her dialogs are in fact in German.
    • Goofs
      The film is set in the year 1960, but the four-door Chevrolet Impala he drives throughout the film appears to be a 1965 or later model.
    • Quotes

      Lilith: That is why I chose Wakolda. It was the strangest of them all. Just like me.

    • Soundtracks
      Swing
      Written by Daniel Tarrab and Andrés Goldstein

      Performed by Laura Zisman

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 25, 2014 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Argentina
      • Spain
      • Norway
      • France
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • Spanish
      • German
      • Hebrew
    • Also known as
      • Wakolda
    • Filming locations
      • Bariloche, Río Negro, Argentina
    • Production companies
      • Historias Cinematograficas
      • Cine.Ar
      • P&P Endemol Argentina
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $2,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $418,392
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $34,259
      • Apr 27, 2014
    • Gross worldwide
      • $3,635,718
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 33m(93 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital

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