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Reviews
Band of Brothers (2001)
Greatest war depiction ever!
This war series is by far the greatest war story ever shown on film. There are no stars in this epic, only ordinary soldiers who go about doing there job in an extraordinary fashion. The focus is not on super heroes who are larger than life but on teamwork and self-sacrifice. What enthralled me the most was the objective look into the life of these men and the battles they waged. The Germans soldiers are also depicted as human beings caught up in the tragic events that engulfed their nation and the world. This is contrary to other popular films where the latter are shown as lobotomized idiots intent only on evil. The surviving veterans of the 101st Airborne who courageously fought in the conflict will most certainly relive all the emotions they went through from D-Day to V-Day. >
Mephisto (1981)
Mephisto or Faust?
This film faithfully recreates the novel written in 1936 by Klaus Mann. It is a reflection of the age old temptation of Man, the story of Goethe's Faust. Karl Maria Brandauer is magnificent as Hendrik Höfgen, the obsessed "actor" who will do anything to gain wealth and fame. He first betrays the world around him, and then his inner values are swept away as he finally enters the inner sanctum of Nazi Germany. Is true theatre on stage or in the handshake that Höfgen makes in the prime minister's box behind the audience? Everything in this movie revolves around Höfgen's downward spiral into the abyss; the initial ascent to stardom was but an illusion. Mann instinctively knew that tragedy would befall his country when a pact was made between Hitler and the financial, industrial and military élites of Germany - remember the book was written nine years before that country's downfall. View the movie and read the book. Two truly artistic achievements! Thumbs up to István Szabó and K.M. Brandauer who managed to reveal everything in Höfgen's character.