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6.9/10
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In Berlin 1942, Hilde is a member of an anti-Nazi group. She falls in love with another member, Hans. The two spend a summer together until they get caught by the Gestapo and Hilde is impris... Read allIn Berlin 1942, Hilde is a member of an anti-Nazi group. She falls in love with another member, Hans. The two spend a summer together until they get caught by the Gestapo and Hilde is imprisoned, eight months pregnant.In Berlin 1942, Hilde is a member of an anti-Nazi group. She falls in love with another member, Hans. The two spend a summer together until they get caught by the Gestapo and Hilde is imprisoned, eight months pregnant.
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A movie about the love and suffering of one of the members of the "Rote Kapelle" resistance group...
Movie based on true events of how Hilde Coppi got involved in the german resistance group named "Rote Kapelle" ("Red Orchestra"). This resistance group was thereby focussed mainly on contacts with Russia. The movie thereby has a main focus on the arrest and imprisonment that took place around 1942-43, whilst Hilde Coppis involvement in the Rote Kapelle is shown through many flashbacks.
At first sight, this movie makes you think about the 2005 movie which is about "Sophie Scholl", whom was a member of the Munich resistance group "Weisse Rose". I personally think though that the two movies could not be more different. The movie about Hilde Coppi is way more slowgoing - and at times even a depressing watch - than the movie about Sophie Scholl. A lot of it has of course to do with what the director of the movie wanted to show: (1) a fast paced life with high risk resistance work in the movie about Sophie Scholl, versus (2) love and suffering in the movie about Hilde Coppi.
The acting and scenes are all very attractive to watch. Apart from some minor mistakes - including the often made mistake of using glasses with modern lenses having a green/purple anti glare coating - this movie looks pretty period-authentic. I personally think though that this movie could benefit significantly if it would be shortened to 90 minutes (instead of its current 125 minutes). It also could benefit from adding good music since it is pretty "silent" on that point.
Overall, I score this movie 5.6/10, resulting in a 6-star IMDb rating. Due to the relevance of the Rote Kapelle resistance group, this movie is an interesting watch for anyone who wants to learn more about how german people themselves tried to pose some resistance against the Nazi regime.
At first sight, this movie makes you think about the 2005 movie which is about "Sophie Scholl", whom was a member of the Munich resistance group "Weisse Rose". I personally think though that the two movies could not be more different. The movie about Hilde Coppi is way more slowgoing - and at times even a depressing watch - than the movie about Sophie Scholl. A lot of it has of course to do with what the director of the movie wanted to show: (1) a fast paced life with high risk resistance work in the movie about Sophie Scholl, versus (2) love and suffering in the movie about Hilde Coppi.
The acting and scenes are all very attractive to watch. Apart from some minor mistakes - including the often made mistake of using glasses with modern lenses having a green/purple anti glare coating - this movie looks pretty period-authentic. I personally think though that this movie could benefit significantly if it would be shortened to 90 minutes (instead of its current 125 minutes). It also could benefit from adding good music since it is pretty "silent" on that point.
Overall, I score this movie 5.6/10, resulting in a 6-star IMDb rating. Due to the relevance of the Rote Kapelle resistance group, this movie is an interesting watch for anyone who wants to learn more about how german people themselves tried to pose some resistance against the Nazi regime.
It feels heartless to be critical of such a well-meaning film. This is, after all, a tale of the heroism and sacrifice of real people. Oppressed by the tyrannical Nazi regime, the small group at the centre of 'From Hilde, with Love' fought back as best they could, accepted the risk and faced the consequences.
The problem with the film is, simply, that there is no sense of menace. The apparatus of the Nazi regime is largely absent until Hilde and her group are arrested. It does not breathe down their necks. It hardly appears to be interested in them.
As a result their plotting, organising and minor acts of civil disobedience have an inconsequential, undergraduate air. The atmosphere feels more like early-1960s Sweden than wartime Nazi Germany. You half expect them to break off their activities on behalf of the Soviet Union to compose a message of solidarity with their brothers and sisters in Nicaragua.
Under arrest, Hilde is shouted at. The food isn't good. The conditions are Dickensian. She has a baby and manages to keep him alive, assisted by increasingly humane prison staff. Little sense of menace intrudes. The likely sentence for Hilde's offence is not a threat but a fact, arrived at by a form of due process.
The film closes on a poignant note provided by Hilde's son. It is as effective a reminder of the bravery of these young people as anything else in the film.
The problem with the film is, simply, that there is no sense of menace. The apparatus of the Nazi regime is largely absent until Hilde and her group are arrested. It does not breathe down their necks. It hardly appears to be interested in them.
As a result their plotting, organising and minor acts of civil disobedience have an inconsequential, undergraduate air. The atmosphere feels more like early-1960s Sweden than wartime Nazi Germany. You half expect them to break off their activities on behalf of the Soviet Union to compose a message of solidarity with their brothers and sisters in Nicaragua.
Under arrest, Hilde is shouted at. The food isn't good. The conditions are Dickensian. She has a baby and manages to keep him alive, assisted by increasingly humane prison staff. Little sense of menace intrudes. The likely sentence for Hilde's offence is not a threat but a fact, arrived at by a form of due process.
The film closes on a poignant note provided by Hilde's son. It is as effective a reminder of the bravery of these young people as anything else in the film.
I found this a really riving watch. I have a history with radical movements, and I found a lot of similarities in terms of the way the group dynamics played out with the resistance members. What was really surprising is the tactful way that the 'ordinary life' of many of the average or upper-middle class Germans faced, with the exception of the war hanging over everybody's head.
The portrayal of some of the more sympathetic members of the German state apparatus was really well done as well. They respected a number of her wishes (despite initially bleating out that things were just 'the rules'), and responded well to the perfectly reasonable requests of the characters.
The ending was jarring in a good way, and left me sat in my seat in the cinema even after the credits had finished. Very moving and inspiring, despite being considered 'not a date night film' by the people sat behind me.
The portrayal of some of the more sympathetic members of the German state apparatus was really well done as well. They respected a number of her wishes (despite initially bleating out that things were just 'the rules'), and responded well to the perfectly reasonable requests of the characters.
The ending was jarring in a good way, and left me sat in my seat in the cinema even after the credits had finished. Very moving and inspiring, despite being considered 'not a date night film' by the people sat behind me.
BERLINALE 2024: Nomination for the Golden Bear
A calmly told film about Hilde Coppi (1909 - 1943), who was sentenced to death by the National Socialists as a member of the communist resistance group ROTE KAPELLE. Liv Lisa FRIES, the superstar from the German quality series BABYLON BERLIN, plays this extraordinary role with calm precision.
The German director Andreas DRESEN has been making very successful films that deal with Germany's past and present for 25 years. DRESEN has already been nominated twice for the EUROPEAN FILM AWARD (2002 for HALBE TREPPE / 2008 for WOLKE NEUN).
Partly in flashbacks (with wonderful images of the Müggelsee in summer), the story of the married couple Hans (Johannes HEGEMANN) and Hilde Coppi, who offered modest resistance to the Nazi regime through a communist-minded circle of friends, is impressively told. Both were sentenced to death in the merciless dictatorship. Their son Hans Coppi Junior was born while they were still in prison, and his voice can be heard at the end of the film as an 80-year-old man.
This film is a monument to the Coppis and their circle of friends that is worth seeing. Other roles include wonderful German actors such as Lisa WAGNER as a prison guard who is gradually becoming capable of compassion, Alexander SCHEER (EUROPEAN FILM AWARD 2019: nomination for GUNDERMANN) as a sensitive priest and Florian LUKAS (known from the German quality series WEISSENSEE) as a nasty prison doctor.
Well worth seeing!
A calmly told film about Hilde Coppi (1909 - 1943), who was sentenced to death by the National Socialists as a member of the communist resistance group ROTE KAPELLE. Liv Lisa FRIES, the superstar from the German quality series BABYLON BERLIN, plays this extraordinary role with calm precision.
The German director Andreas DRESEN has been making very successful films that deal with Germany's past and present for 25 years. DRESEN has already been nominated twice for the EUROPEAN FILM AWARD (2002 for HALBE TREPPE / 2008 for WOLKE NEUN).
Partly in flashbacks (with wonderful images of the Müggelsee in summer), the story of the married couple Hans (Johannes HEGEMANN) and Hilde Coppi, who offered modest resistance to the Nazi regime through a communist-minded circle of friends, is impressively told. Both were sentenced to death in the merciless dictatorship. Their son Hans Coppi Junior was born while they were still in prison, and his voice can be heard at the end of the film as an 80-year-old man.
This film is a monument to the Coppis and their circle of friends that is worth seeing. Other roles include wonderful German actors such as Lisa WAGNER as a prison guard who is gradually becoming capable of compassion, Alexander SCHEER (EUROPEAN FILM AWARD 2019: nomination for GUNDERMANN) as a sensitive priest and Florian LUKAS (known from the German quality series WEISSENSEE) as a nasty prison doctor.
Well worth seeing!
Not watching this! I actually recommend watching this, so no pun intended as always. We can only imagine how it must have been - although you do have countries where .... well there is one form of dictatorship or another ... if you feel I attacked the country you are living in - well that is on you. As in don't blame me for what you perceive to be your truth or what you feel to be true - my words are kept to a minimum. Just saying.
And I am not tip toeing around anything for any specific reason - as in I don't expect to get the treatment our main character is getting here. I'd hope that does not happen - to anybody ... but again we have seen things happening lately .. so there is a crazy world out there.
Which makes this an important watch I assume ... and powerful ... even if not easy to watch! What would you do? Not easy to answer.
And I am not tip toeing around anything for any specific reason - as in I don't expect to get the treatment our main character is getting here. I'd hope that does not happen - to anybody ... but again we have seen things happening lately .. so there is a crazy world out there.
Which makes this an important watch I assume ... and powerful ... even if not easy to watch! What would you do? Not easy to answer.
Did you know
- TriviaThe narration at the very end of the film is spoken by the real Hans Coppi Jr.
Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $696,618
- Runtime
- 2h 5m(125 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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