Das Experiment eines Gymnasiallehrers, mit dem er seinen Schülern demonstrieren möchte, wie es ist, unter einer Diktatur zu leben, gerät entsetzlich außer Kontrolle, als er dadurch eine sozi... Alles lesenDas Experiment eines Gymnasiallehrers, mit dem er seinen Schülern demonstrieren möchte, wie es ist, unter einer Diktatur zu leben, gerät entsetzlich außer Kontrolle, als er dadurch eine soziale Einheit erschafft, die ein Eigenleben entwickelt.Das Experiment eines Gymnasiallehrers, mit dem er seinen Schülern demonstrieren möchte, wie es ist, unter einer Diktatur zu leben, gerät entsetzlich außer Kontrolle, als er dadurch eine soziale Einheit erschafft, die ein Eigenleben entwickelt.
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The most disturbing thing is that the teacher slowly loses control over himself, until there is a disaster.
OK, does it take a week to form young people to fascists? That's not the point. How ever long it takes, the interesting answer here is that it is possible at all. Do we run that risk too? Well, if you look into yourself, you maybe won't find a fascist, but you'll probably find someone who wants to be a part of something. Whatever it is.
What I liked about the film was that it did not treat the pupils as "just kids"; they had brains, opinions, and their own ethics too. It is not a very black and white in it's opinion, you could draw some distinct opinion from the film but I suggest that there are several different opinions that are equally as valid. It keeps you guessing what is going to happen & even deliberately misleads you.
The movie takes a lesson in human psychology and shows how it is possible for a person with oratory skills and confidence to start a movement that turns into a revolution with frightening possibilities. It explains a lot about world history and current affairs.
Theme apart, I don't usually like to discuss any movie's story but I suppose if you're here you would've read the other reviews and summaries and would know a fair bit already. Putting it mildly, the movie deals with a classroom experiment about autocracy which has interesting positive and negative consequences.
The direction is sharp and spot on. The director is able to delve deeply into the minds of the various characters and explain their behaviour and position in the society that is created. It is all done realistically. The acting by and large is very good; however a few of the actors displayed a scope for further improvement. However this does not take away much from the movie experience. There are certain similarities with another great German film, Das Experiment, but not many.
I am certainly going to suggest this film to people I know including people who live on a staple of Hollywood blockbusters and like to keep away from festival films. So if you get the opportunity to watch it, please do.
His class starts out simple and nonthreatening. The students choose Wenger as their leader and are instructed to wear a uniform and create a name for themselves (the students choose Die Welle "The Wave"). But, this club slowly turns into a sort of fascist regime. The unsuspecting students think they are participating in some sort of fun club, but they are really being shown how easily impressionable people can be attracted by autocracy.
The biting irony of this film is that at the beginning of the autocracy class, Wenger touched on the subject of Hitler's reign, and the students almost instinctively spit out answers about how Germany would never fall into that trap again knowing what they know now. But, the children soon eat their words when they become members of a much less disturbing, yet frighteningly similar clique.
There is a glimmer of this fact when two students who aren't members of "The Wave" pick on a student who is. Two other members come to the rescue of the victim. Though many may view this as a positive aspect of this sort of togetherness, the point is that fascism has developed and can easily become corrupt.
I highly recommend this to any potential viewer who either holds the same views as the students at the beginning of the film or simply wants to be entertained by the ironic theme of the film (so long as you don't mind the subtitles).
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesBased on the novel "The Wave" by Todd Strasser (under the pen name Morton Rhue), a fictionalized account of the "Third Wave" teaching experiment by Ron Jones that took place in a Cubberley High School history class in Palo Alto, California in April 1967.
- PatzerAlthough set somewhere in western Germany, all policemen wear insignia of the state of Berlin.
- Zitate
Rainer Wenger: So you don't think there could be another dictatorship in Germany?
Jens: No, we are too enlightened now.
- Crazy CreditsOpening and closing credits appear as graffiti.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Johannes B. Kerner: Folge vom 12. März 2008 (2008)
- SoundtracksRock 'n' Roll High School
Written by Joey Ramone, Johnny Ramone and Dee Dee Ramone
Performed by EL*KE
Produced by Mirko Schaffer
©1980 WB Music Corp. and Taco Tunes
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- 5.000.000 € (geschätzt)
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 32.350.637 $
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 47 Min.(107 min)
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- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1