All Is Well (2018) Poster

(2018)

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5/10
Feeling of incompleteness
FrenchEddieFelson7 April 2019
What a strange movie. I was moderately connected to this story that portrays a woman acting as if nothing had happened, on any occasion: during a rape after a drunken evening, during a game between colleagues at a seminar, ... She is bland and lacks conviction. The actress Aenne Schwarz is extremely beautiful and plays sensitively, but the film lacks coherence, following an imperfect realization. Disappointing because of a feeling of incompleteness.
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6/10
Powerful and confronting
Ruskington23 August 2020
All Is Well has all the hallmarks of a modern art house movie. The abbreviated scenes, the prolonged silences and the confrontational subject matter. It was very interesting to see a rape story played out in this way, with the perpetrator not portrayed as a calculated psychopath living on the outskirts of society but as a functioning and respected citizen who is capable of both intense cruelty and actual remorse.

The lead performance from Aenne Schwarz is exceptional and helps keep the film afloat through it's more hesitant moments. A poignant and challenging piece of cinema.
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7/10
An interesting and unique perspective on the psychological effects of sexual assault, albeit not entirely consistent throughout
themadmovieman6 November 2018
With a very down-to-earth and ever-topical story, you may think that you've seen something similar to All Good before. However, while it touches on a topic portrayed in numerous films beforehand, it comes at it from a more interesting and rather refreshing angle, as such providing a little more emotional power and grit throughout. In that, it's an engrossing film, however it often fails to really keep its main theme at the centre of proceedings, occasionally taking away from that emotional core and making for a somewhat less enthralling watch.

Before I get into that, however, let's talk about what really works about All Good, specifically the central performance from Aenne Schwarz. As I said, you may think you understand the story of a woman suffering in silence after an assualt, but what this film does, and what Schwarz in particular does, is show that the emotional effects and way of dealing with that trauma are not all that simple.

Initially wonderfully smiley and likable, I was immediately taken by Schwarz's character here, and yet as the film goes on, her performance gradually begins to show the increasingly weary and even desperate extent that this woman has fallen to, slowly but effectively transitioning from someone who attempts to brush off something they at first see as harmless, and yet still suffer deeply from the lasting impact of such an event.

The scene in which we see the assault happen is very well-handled - it's not a sensationalist or overly dramatic set-piece, but one that reflects a more real-world circumstance in seeming a little less menacing and harrowing than many films portray, and that's why you're able to relate to our leading lady's desire to see it as a nothing more than a nuisance, rather than becoming immediately grief-stricken.

In that, the film takes a while for the real gravity of the situation to hit home, but in doing so, it expertly portrays a more realistic side to trauma and guilt, and allows the real intensity of what actually happened to play out over a longer and more agonising time period.

It's an interesting and different perspective to what many films portray, and the film's very honest and down-to-earth nature is something that makes it a likable and undoubtedly engrossing watch, refusing to give into theatrics and show something that can more accurately reflect the confusion and eventual suffering that a person may go through after a sexual assault.

Now, while that aspect of the film helps to keep it a generally intriguing watch, I still can't quite say that it managed to keep me completely enthralled from beginning to end, something that's largely due to that rather subdued opening act.

As I said earlier, it's great to see that director Eva Trobisch doesn't sensationalise or overplay the nature of sexual assault, and the following twenty minutes or so see our main character effectively forget all about what happened as she aims to move on with her life.

It's an interesting part of the plot, but for those twenty minutes, before the gravity of the situation really starts to hit home, there really isn't all that much to focus on, as you're left wondering what the fallout of that earlier event was.

Given hindsight, it's something that's a little difficult to criticise heavily, but it proves that without the film's well-detailed and strong central theme, the screenplay falters a little, and it really struggles to keep your attention well.

And finally, the film's ending is a poignant, albeit rather frustrating and abrupt one. Once again, it's a balance between orthodox cinema and the central theme here, and the trade-off doesn't quite work at the very end, as you're left hanging with an abrupt conclusion that doesn't quite satisfy the overall arc of the story. It's an undoubtedly unique way to finish things off, but it's not something that really hit me as hard as I felt was the intention, leaving me a little disappointed that there wasn't more to learn about what this woman is really going through.

Overall, I was generally impressed by All Good, what with its unique and grounded central theme, down-to-earth style, and excellent central performance, although it's not a film that managed to grab me entirely, occasionally trading off some of its emotional power for the sake of that central thematic narrative in rather unsatisfying fashion.
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7/10
Unconventional story about sexual abuse
manugw8 June 2019
Shows how a young woman copes with suffering in the aftermath of a sexual abuse by someone from her office. If the viewer expects to experience a fast paced emotional drama this is not the thing as it is implied in the title, in my opinion what they have in mind is how it feels to subdue everything that is bubbling inside which slowly lead to affect the mind and social relations in daily life. Unexpected cut off ending
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6/10
Nothing's good. Except this movie.
Horst_In_Translation14 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
"Alles ist gut" or "All Is Good" or "All Good" is a new German 2018 movie written and directed by Eva Trobisch and this is actually her first full feature release in both departments and I would say for that it is a pretty convincing and respectable achievement. It also helps with the subject perhaps that this was brought to life by a female filmmaker, although I would not call it a necessity. And this film also proves that you don't need any super famous actors to make a good script work because honestly, even I as a German film buff must say that I don't remember any of the performers here. That should not take away anything from their quality, however. Lead actress Aenne Schwarz is just as convincing with a really difficult role as pretty much all supporting players from start to finish. In these 1.5 hours we have the story of a young woman who gets raped by a man after a night of drinking and how she deals with everything afterward, i.e. her life and we ind out about the consequences of said night. It is not an in-your-face film. The rapist is not a wild beast, but a married man who regrets what he did. The victim is not one that screams out loudly and cries all the time. The words "For real now?" she uttered while being raped describe her very well. She is a tough self-confident woman who is not used to relying on help from anybody else. This is also why she cannot go to the clinic, why she cannot go to the police and why she wants a taxi driver to be the person of confidence to take her home after the abortion. Well, maybe the fact that she actually did get pregnant, was one of the rare moments I did not like that much in here, even if I liked how she says it's not even clear it is the rapist's child. Another interesting component of the film was how what happened had such a massive impact on the protagonist's boyfriend without him even knowing what happened. But he seems to feel that something really did go wrong and maybe that has to do with the scene when he completely escalated in the face of the other guy owning the apartment when the police officer enters the picture. And despite the main character's refusal to go to the police, the latter is a recurring force in here. The best example is really the very last scene before the credits roll in with the woman's refusal to leave the train despite not having a ticket. She relies on the ticket controlling people to call the police to remove her from the train. And maybe she intends to finally talk about what happened then or to hope that one of the officers will see through her in how she behaves. We will never know. It is an open ending and it is very obvious too that it will never be told by her to anyone as well. But I guess it would have been too much of a bad message sent out to audiences if Trobisch had really let him get away with it, even if at times it seems this is what the main character wants to happen, namely to ignore and forget what happened instead of seeking not only justice but also really dealing herself with what happened. Then there are of course the scenes later on between victim and offender who are really uncomfortable to watch I cannot deny. It's a heavy movie, heavy subject and painfully good performances and writing. Dead cats are still among the more harmless things you will get to see here. So if you are easily offended by violence or psychologically focused story lines about broken characters, then you should skip this one. Otherwise, really watch it if you get a hand on it. Not sure how much and how frequently it will be shown outside Germany. Thumbs-up and a positive recommendation from me.
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7/10
Density
joaomanuelvicente12 December 2018
No previously written or determined way one will deal with a severe ordeal. The girl was raped and, the minute after, she wishes to dominate it by contention and absorption of the event within herself. I believe that would be a way for her of not getting dominated by the event or by the perpetrator. At a certain point, however, she looses it and drops the cool. And then she is the one who dominates and confronts her raper. At this moment, when she finally lost her cool, she has at the same time won. Why not? Annae's smile and eyes are though out the movie so multidimensional! She smiles but her eyes don't. She looks cool all along but her smile implies something else. As in Mona Lisa. Great time watching this movie, it really adds to anything else I have seen before.
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6/10
Incomplete Ending
Caroletibet129 June 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I did like this film it was slow but it showed deep emotions. However I did not understand the ending I was waiting for it to go on and it had finished. I probably missed something why was she on the train and why did she not buy a ticket it was a strange ending. The acting was good.
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10/10
Nothing abrupt about it
Doctor-of-Nothing12 June 2019
Reviews suggesting that the end is abrupt are misguided. Every single scene in the film, bar one (the assault), are cut off. The form is the character, the character is the narrative.

Very, very disturbing film. Brilliant first (or any feature). Stellar lead performance. There are sounds of traffic and the city over the credits. All is good.
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4/10
Most boring movie I have ever seen
elin2219 December 2019
.... I haven't ever seen anything as dull as this before. That's quite an accomplishment.
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8/10
Unobtrusively good
neilahunter15 July 2019
Warning: Spoilers
It's interesting to contrast this film with Elle, a much bolder, or louder, treatment of a similar idea. I think both are good.

The screenplay is admirably reticent, unafraid of banality, and scrupulously realistic. All the supporting characters have stuff going on in their own lives, which we often only glimpse, and which reflect tangentially on the theme. But the real gold here are the performances, which I found endlessly fascinating and believable, subtle, and sometimes surprising - like life.

It's a film that grows in authority as it stays true to its characters, exploring the effect of trauma on a relationship which is not strong enough to survive it. I liked the way we are invited to interrogate the boyfriend's character as much as the man who committed the rape (a rape scene that is extremely well handled). Although some have taken issue with the abortion subplot, it works very well to force the issue when she discovers she needs a consort to drive her home.

It is an abrupt ending (in keeping with the aesthetic of sharp, propulsive editing that keeps the film flowing), but also a proper ending: finally, she is taking a stand.
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8/10
Well-made, Thought-provoking Film
albertval-6956028 January 2022
The decision of Janne to keep quiet about the incident seems to be unusual for a woman. But, it seems, on the face of it that it makes sense if the victim doesn't want to be embroiled in interminable litigation and if she shuns public scrutiny.

Her experience makes me think of the comfort women in Asia in World War II who were abused/raped by Japanese soldiers routinely. They, too, didn't complain because it was futile for them to do so given their circumstances. They didn't have a choice.

But Janne had a choice. She could have pressed charges against Martin. What she did was unnatural and it showed in the debilitating effect on her wellbeing. She tries to convince herself that this is the best way to go but she knows this is farthest from the truth.

Aenne Schwarz delivers a compelling performance as Janne. She understands all the emotions that confront Janne, and she portrays this on a subdued, almost measured, way. She animates her character totally and presents us with a gripping cautionary tale.

This is a disturbing, thought-provoking film. It's something you wouldn't want to miss.
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Unique Take on the Issue of Rape, Yet the Screenplay Falters Most of the Time
andrewestrella16 November 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Can I just point out how extraordinary beautiful Aenne Schwarz is? And she is 35 years old! *Phew* that is insane. The film was originally two stars, but when I found that out, I had to raise my levels of stardom for this film up!

Anyways, All Good is a German film about a woman who, in an attempt to forget about a rape that happened, eventually becomes traumatized from the whole experience, until she reaches an absolutely breaking point. I love the concept and the acting, but I actually found the script and some of the music to be genuinely bad. First, there was not really a score at all, but there was a lot of loud and annoying pop songs that would play in the background of some scenes, which totally took me out of the film. I do not know why, but its just that the music was almost objectively not good. And then the dancing that the cast would do when it was playing made me cringe. Now I know Germans have their own way of doing things, but I cannot be alone in thinking the music was horrendous here. They should have used ac lot less music and incorporated more of a score to go along with the sadness of Aenne's character.

Second, and most importantly, is the horrible screenplay. There way, WAY, too many plot conveniences surrounding the rape that happens.

1.) Why does our main character agree to sleep in the same house as the rapist following the high school or college reunion? 2.) How is it that our main character continuously run into the rapist? 3.) Even with me understanding that rapes occur for little to no reason, I cannot even wrap my mind why this dude would even want to rape her you in the first place. He is literally getting married in a few days, so what the heck? 4.) Why was our main character letting the dude be so friendly and romantic to her, even if she has a husband and they are doing well?

The rape scene really took me by surprise with how well it was done, but every plot annoyance and convenience surrounding it took me out of the film.

Here are some other glaring issues:

1.) Why do we get more time developing the relationship between the rapist and the main girl, than we even do with her and her own husband. Like oh yeah let us just show the audience how the main girl and the rapist are flirting with each other, walking at night, and feeding cats. But as for the husband, just show the main girl ride him cowgirl style, and that establishes their lovable relationship. Heck yeah! Go screenwriters! Glad I feel just a tad more development for the rapist than the main girl's husband. 2.) The subplot surrounding the main character and her husband's fight literally made no sense to you. I was confused (and maybe a little bored), but it is just felt so far out of left field, that it did not belong her. 3.) What is even going on in that final shot? Why are people getting so upset that she is not getting off the bus? There are all of these other seats!!

Honestly, there was some stuff I really liked in All Good. The acting Aenne Schwarz is exceptional. There were some interesting ideas thrown in there. The rape scene was pretty raw and brutal. The depiction of a woman trying to forget her own rape was even pretty unique. However, the story was annoying. The amount of subplots started to annoy me. And I got more bored as time went along.

Watch out for the standout performance from Aenne Schwarz everyone. However, just know that everything else in this film is not All Good.

Will give a rewatch when it ever releases digitally to see if my mind is changed.
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