Posted on 03/22/2006 11:43:08 AM PST by Caleb1411
As is often the case, most of the Academy Award nominees for Best Foreign Language Film were largely unknown to American audiences at the time of the ceremony. What's especially sad about this is that the most inspiring, gripping, and surprising film nominated that eveningamong both the winners and loserswas one of these little-seen gems.
Germany's entry, Sophie Scholl: The Final Days, deserves a place next to A Man for All Seasons, Chariots of Fire, and others of the most profound portrayals of faith on film. Although currently only playing in select cities (with a wider release expected), this import is the definition of a film worth seeking out, even though it lost the Oscar to the South African film Tsotsi.
Well-known in Germany, Sophie Scholl is a figure of remarkable courage, intellect, and faith. The film deals with just six days of this young woman's lifethe final six days. Key members of a passive resistance anti-Nazi group known as The White Rose, Sophie (Julia Jentsch) and her brother Hans (Fabian Hinrichs) risk their lives by writing, printing, and distributing pamphlets that condemn National Socialism and a bloody war that Germany could not win.
On the morning of Feb. 18, 1943, Sophie and Hans walk into a lecture hall at the University of Munich to secretly distribute the group's sixth pamphlet before the building was flooded with students. This dangerous mission does not end well.
The film concerns itself with the short but intense period between Sophie's capture and execution. After she is jailed, Sophie faces off against Gestapo interrogator Robert Mohr (the steely Gerald Alexander Held), a Nazi true believer and atheist committed to breaking Sophie's spirit in order both to convict her and to search out her collaborators. While one might initially be frustrated at the lack of context for Sophie and her strongly held beliefs, the force of these interrogation scenes erases all misgivings.
Director Marc Rothemund and screenwriter Fred Breinersdorfer base their story extensively on transcripts of Sophie's interrogation and trial previously unpublished and unavailable (they were sealed away in East Germany before 1990). Never coming across as a Nazi-villain caricature, Mohr demonstrates supreme intellect and commitment to his causebut is shocked to find himself matched by Sophie, who has intellect and willpower to spare.
Mr. Rothemund, at the helm of a technically excellent production, shows immense skill at weaving in details that inform Sophie's character but never overwhelm the production with heavy-handed exposition. We learn of her faith in quiet moments of prayer, and of the influence of her parents (remarkably, it's positive) in informing her political views. Sophie possesses a deep-seated strength of character, and her humble confidence is so unnerving to Mohr that one wonders whether the first to break will be her or him.
Sophie Scholl falls shortly on the heels of another German film that deals directlyand powerfullywith Nazism, although each approaches this appalling period of that country's history from radically different directions. Downfall (rated R) centers on the final days of a much different lifeAdolf Hitler's (remarkably acted by Bruno Ganz). The bunker-bound finale to Hitler's sad existence is seen largely through the eyes of his naïve young secretary, Traudi Junge. As a secretary, Traudi was far from front lines and concentration camps during the war and served her Fuhrer with a blind, idealistic devotion.
Though Traudi, who survived the war, is fictionalized for the film, the story is bookended by interview clips from the real woman. Downfall ends with this devastating, but remarkably honest, admission by the aged Traudi: "I realized that she [Sophie Scholl] was the same age as me, and I realized that she was executed the same year I started working for Hitler. At that moment, I really sensed it was no excuse to be young and that it might have been possible to find out what was going on."
Sophie Scholl: The Final Days makes Sophie's moving story accessible to the rest of the world. Though the film is unrated, it contains nothing objectionable; only the intensity of the subject matter ought to give parents pause in allowing children to see it. It's a story that serves as a powerful example of faith and courage in the face of great evil. Go see it.
Memorial to The White Rose in Ulm, home of the Scholls. It reads, "From the leaflets of The White Rose: 'WE WILL NOT BE SILENT. WE ARE YOUR BAD CONSCIENCE. THE WHITE ROSE WILL GIVE YOU NO PEACE.'"
We need more movies like this.
"We will not be silent. We are your bad conscience. The White Rose will give you no rest."
8mm
Judge Greer Roland Freisler - The People's Court - October 30, 1893 - February 3, 1945
To bad he didn't live long enough to swing off the end of a rope.
I had not heard of it until now. It sounds like a powerful movie ... a story that needs to be known.
He hasn't escaped God's judgment.
The schedule posted above says June 9th at Cedar Lee.
Thank you . I had not gone to the hotlinks. So it is on its way! good. that is the theater I mentioned has the independents & foreign films. I will plan to see it.
You'll be glad you did. It's an excellent film!
(Photo one), Sophie Magdalena Scholl at about 10 years old. To look at it, would you suppose this little girl would go on to shake up the Nazi high command? Look again at that gleam in her eye, she is capable of anything! (Photo two), Sophie as student, age unknown. (Photo three), from left, Hans Scholl, Sophie Scholl and Cristoph Probst, together at the University of Munich, July, 1942. The following February 22, 1943, they were executed together for the "high treason" of denouncing the mistreatment of Jews and urging passive resistance to Hitler.
Thanks for the ping. Sounds like a wonderfully inspirational film.
Unfortunately, after checking the Play List I find that it isn't going to be shown in this state. Guess I'll have to wait until it comes out on DVD.
Oh, my, I hope so. I urge Freepers to see it if they can, and to talk it up everywhere we can in the meanwhile. It is cinema at the finest -- a true story focused on a timeless, riveting moral drama. In its tragedy is a spark of triumph. Sophie, 21 years old, faces a courtroom packed with Nazi functionaries. She looks her judges in the eye, head unbowed, answers their charges and foretells to them that they will be on trial next. And she was right.
Great cast, no weaknesses anywhere. Julia Jentsch, as Sophie, was beyond praise.
Don't miss this one 4cj.
Showing at Fresno Filmworks Fresno CA May 7-one day only .
"But when they arrest you, do not worry about what to say or how to say it.
At that time you will be given what to say, for it will not be you speaking, but the Spirit of your Father speaking through you."....Matthew 10:19,20
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