Flight to Berlin (1984) Poster

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7/10
A BFI film very 1980s.
ib011f9545i24 June 2021
The director's Radio On is quite well known and recently reissued on blu ray but this film is forgotten.

It is not a great film but it is interesting.

I saw the film on the big screen and also on Channel 4 tv and never understood the plot.

Interesting if you were ever in Berlin in the 1980s.
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Almost endlessly slippery and playful
philosopherjack2 February 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Christopher Petit's Flight to Berlin sustains the brittle surface of a modern-day Euro-noir, starting with a visitor to the city, Susannah, taken from her hotel for police interrogation, the questions apparently based in suspicion of illicit smuggling and connections with murky local figures, then going back in classic style to review the events that lead her there. That's almost as much as one can say with any certainty about Petit's film, all that follows being almost endlessly slippery, ambiguous, mutable and playful, drawing (but not too strenuously) on Berlin's then-unique status as a divided, liminal space. To note just a few points: Susannah, we find out, is indeed fleeing a crime scene, but not the one she's questioned about; she frequently calls herself by a different name, Marianne (and although English, is played by the Swedish Tusse Silberg); she has a German sister, Julie, with whom she's seldom ever spent time, and she rapidly sleeps with a man who's also slept with Julie, and who works for a shady character who turns out to be Julie's husband (a Frenchman who claims he only married her for a German passport, seeming more interested in being with Susannah). The film at various times evokes almost every major European director of its time in one way or another (the casting alone provides connections with Rivette, Fassbinder, Wenders, Godard and onwards), as well as the looming shadow of classic Hollywood, with Eddie Constantine showing up as himself, oozing presence and charisma and opining along the way that by going into politics Ronald Reagan ruined a perfectly good career in B-Westerns. Ultimately, the film offers no resolution, perhaps ending where it might have begun, indeed defined largely by a sense of flight, of storytelling and reinvention, both of its protagonist and of the unstable city around her.
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