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Our next film of the season takes place on: |
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| Review | |||
After decades of war movies, in which Germans are depicted as wolves in wolves' clothing, along comes two films that change the perception of a nation brainwashed by evil. The first is Downfall, which tells of Hitler's last days in the bunker, and now Sophie Scholl, the true story of anti war protesters in Munich in 1943. Although both were made in Germany, with exceptional actors, Sophie Scholl is not as big a film, which is not to say it is of less consequence. Shot with simplicity and clarity, often in empty spaces - a prison cell, the great staircase of an old university, the echoing hall of the ministry of justice - it becomes a battle of wills between a 21-year-old girl and a middle-aged interrogator (superb performance from Gerald Alexander Held). Sophie (Julia Jentsch), her brother Hans (Fabian Hinrichs) and a handful of friends operate a clandestine printing press. They write pamphlets, criticising the Third Reich for continuing the war in the face of certain defeat. For the sake of the motherland, they plead, stop the killing. They know the dangers. They could be arrested and charged with treason, the ultimate penalty being death. They post the pamphlets to addresses in the suburbs, rather than risk handing them out in the streets. Hans is frustrated by this method and insists that in the history of national unrest, it is the student body that fuels revolution. He wants to take the pamphlets to the university and distribute them. The others consider this an act of madness, but Hans is determined, accepting full responsibility. Sophie says she will go with him and carry the papers in a suitcase, because "they tend not to search the girls." The tension of this apparently simple operation is acute and it doesn't let up for the rest of the movie. Director Marc Rothemund believes in the power of implication, rather than the shock of violence. These Nazis, or rather the men who work for them, are sticklers for protocol. Everything requires a form and a signature. Without these, the interrogator says, chaos would reign. Sophie's courage is remarkable. Even to write such a sentence undermines the integrity of the film. This is not about courage so much as conviction and the conscience of a single person in an intellectual battle for the higher moral ground, not that it counts in a system corrupted by the blood of the innocent. Eye for Film | |||
| Trivia | |||
The film was shot in chronological order. |
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| News | |||
![]() SOCIAL EVENING - tickets selling now - don't miss out! Our social evening will take place at the Little Theatre on Saturday 6th Feb, starting at 7.30pm. We have planned a packed evening of entertainment - Prize quizzes including our famous wall quiz and caption competition, a selection of short films from slapstick to modern animation, food including a vegetarian option, and your first drink included. Here is a good opportunity to relax and meet some new friends - just ask anyone who came along last year. The night is excellent value at just £7.50 per person - make sure you don't miss out. Tickets are available now. |
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VICKY CRISTINA BARCELONA With the adverse weather we did not show this film on 5th January. So we will move to form part of the film festival between 2nd and 9th March at the Steam Mill. Vicky Cristina Barcelona will be shown on Thursday 4th March, and film society members will be admitted free. |
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Please visit http://www.chesterfilmfans.co.uk/mailing_list/news_100124.htm for an online version of this issue. |
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| This newsletter is produced by Mike Graham for Chester Film Society. Please visit www.chesterfilmfans.co.uk regularly for programme information. | |||