It's a mystery to classify as a thriller

Bertha 2022-04-22 07:01:47

How did this film get classified as an Italian thriller? The three-hour plot is one after another, but if you know the biography of the audience, you should be able to guess the ending~ This is not an Italian thriller, this is clearly a German historical film.

The male protagonist is 82 years old, and he has no sense of disobedience in his youth. The female protagonist can only choose a young and beautiful post-95 sister. It may be that European and American women are really aging too fast.

I have to say that after watching it for three hours, I can only feel that it was done in one go. The director's shooting technique is very mature and stable. As a movie audience (a layman like me), I can quickly capture a series of echoes before and after, and I have also done it for that tragic history more objective description.

In addition, the clothes and clothes have been restored very realistically. The eye makeup of the female students is basically a replica of the old photos.

The commentator at the beginning of the film is the male lead of another film about the history of World War II. When he recognized it, he suddenly felt that he was not face-blind to Europeans and Americans.

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Extended Reading

Never Look Away quotes

  • Professor Antonius van Verten: Don't vote for anyone. Never vote for another party again. Vote for art. It's either-or. In art only, freedom is not an illusion.After the Nazi catastrophe, only the artist can give people back their sense of freedom. Every individual, whether he's a garbage man or a farmer, has the chance to be an artist. if he develops his own subjective abilities without external guidelines. If you aren't free... completely free, then nobody else will be. By making yourselves free, you are liberating the world. You are priests. You are revolutionaries. You are liberators. Make your burnt offerings!

  • Professor Antonius van Verten: So, Lehmbruck. He said that each work of art must retain something from the first days of Creation. As if almost as if it were still divine... As if it were only just emerging from the primeval mass, from the rib... No. No, a different approach. Has anyone had an insight this week? A realization... you'd perhaps like to share?

    Kurt Barnert: Lottery numbers. If I tell you six numbers at random... 5, 7, 23, 29, 44, 11... that's just stupid. But if I read you the winning numbers from the lottery... May I?- "2, 17, 19, 25, 45, 48." Suddenly they have a true quality, something imperative, almost beautiful.