Strähl (2004) Poster

(2004)

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7/10
Swiss coppa buster
erniemunger2 December 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Strähl is losing the plot. A bad-tempered but mush-hearted bully patrolling the hot district around Zurich's Langestrasse, our man gets tangled up in a drug-and-love story where right and wrong get sort of mixed up. So does Strähl whose mammoth intake of medication doesn't help. Here's a doomed man on a doomed mission, simultaneously trying to save his job and get square with the Albanian drug mafia, who finds himself bribing a dope-pushing witness with a pounder worth of heroin... Zurich as canvas for a gritty urban detective story? Well, not quite. Strähl is a thoroughly funny and not least endearing take on your archetypical bad cop plot. Roeland Wiesnekker as Strähl is a monument of a self-pitying, hopeless and sympathetic flatfooter. Johanna Bantzer has just the right edge for the sleazy, street-wise Carol. Manuel Löwensberg as shifty junkie René keeps up with his colleagues. Great side characters (cops). Nice pace throughout. Crafty image. A few flaws in the plot, but who minds, really? Hilariously crude dialogues, though I seriously doubt any translation will do justice to the mangy talk that accounts for a great deal of the fun. Even the German subtitling I got wasn't any where near the real thing. Sound proof that at least a few Swiss do have humour. Great value.
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9/10
Swiss "mean street" hopefully a start into a new era of films
Daniel Wiener28 March 2004
You know the contribution of Denmark, Sweden, Netherlands and other smaller countries to European Cinema. But you certainly haven't seen any recent Swiss made movie, that hit the ranks with critics as well as the public. This seems kind of strange, because Switzerland has an outstanding documentary film making tradition and certainly a strong economy, which could finance even expensive features. But in the last decade or two nothing remarkable from Switzerland came in sight on our movie theater screens. Strähl could be the first feature to signal a new, very different era of films from "Heidiland". On one hand, Strähl presents a rather traditional story of a breakdown in a Cop's career - moving from fighting drug dealers to falling in love with a narcotic. But on this basis it derives it's strengths and high suspense from a witty script, brilliant acting, a dense atmosphere and a very Swiss variety of madness on the streets. So if you don't want to miss the premiere of a - hopefully - new feature production country in Europe, have a look at this (9 out of 10).
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Kick-ass cop movie
FritzdaCat9 February 2005
Action-packed cop movies are fun in any language, and German is no exception. In fact, the language lends itself quite well to a Dirty Harry-style Swiss narc who likes to stomp ass first and ask questions later. Strahl is an obsessive, angry cop who actually gives a damn about his job. His violent temper and obsession with busting an Armenian drug trafficker get him mixed up in the Zurich underworld deeper than he intended. This familiar and beloved cop-movie plot works great in the able hands of first-time director Manuel Flurin Hendry. (This film was actually his senior project for film school.) The action is fast-paced and fun, and acting kudos go out to Roeland Wiesnekker, who plays Strahl. If this is what director Hendry did in film school, I'll be looking to see what he does after graduation. 4 out of 5.
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