6/10
Good to watch and to listen to
13 May 2015
Warning: Spoilers
"Jenseits der Stille" is an almost 20-year-old German movie by Caroline Link. This film here scored an Academy Award nomination, but lost to the Dutch entry. However, 5 years later Link triumphed ("Nirgendwo in Afrika") and she was pretty young back then as in 2015 she is 50 years old. The story here is simply. A girl has deaf parents and helps them with coping in everyday life as good as she can, but her ability to hear makes her long for a more meaningful life. She becomes a musician and longs for the support of her family, especially her dad's, but he cannot really accept and appreciate what his daughter does as he cannot hear it. He says in one scene that he would actually have preferred her to be deaf as well.

During these roughly 105 minutes, we also meet some other family members and watch how the protagonist has to deal with the loss of a beloved person. The first 40 minutes or so are about the central character's life as a child and how she gets into playing the clarinet. The transformation from girl to woman (if you can say that) happens during a concert as there is a time jump of roughly 10 years. Sylvie Testud takes over at this point. She won a German Film Award for her performance here. If you have seen Marion Cotillard's Oscar winning turn in "La môme", you will have come across Testud there as well. That is possibly her most famous movie.

Anyway, I have to say I enjoyed this film and there is really not much wrong with it. I especially enjoyed the first 45 minutes because the child actress Tatjana Trieb is very good and the writing is excellent there as well when we get to watch how she constantly interprets between her parents and everybody else or helps her mother in watching old romance movies. I did like the ending from an emotional perspective, but the reunion between her and her dad could have been even more effective if they had taken a more subtle approach. Even I was thinking that she finally needs to play during the audition instead of constantly talking to her father and ignoring the professors. There is a very successful French movie named "La famille Bélier" out right now and there are really quite a few parallels between these two films. If you saw this new film, give the old one "Jenseits der Stille" a chance as well. You will most likely not be disappointed. Also it has excellent music. Recommended.
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