classic on women and love in World War II. A representative work of German director Max Färberböck. Adapted from the diary work of the same name by a German female journalist. In Berlin before and after the surrender of Germany in 1945, the relationship changes and emotional entanglements between the beautiful German journalists as victims and the Soviet soldiers as occupiers: from being afraid of being raped to not afraid of being raped, from choosing to possess one's object to lovingly protecting oneself The Soviet Major... Love is gained and lost, men come back and leave... Views of the catastrophe of German women and reflections on the brutality of Soviet soldiers. The country breaks down, the people are low, heartache is speechless, objective and restrained, meticulous and outstanding. Nina Hoss, Yevgeni Sidikhin, Ulrike Krumbiegel, Rolf Kanies, Judith Cui Starring Jördis Triebel, Roman Gribkov, Juliane Köhler and others.
[Laughing alone: This film is the first film you see below with the theme of the rape of German women by Soviet soldiers during World War II. What do you think of the Soviet soldiers using Berlin as a brothel? ——Nazi soldiers who did not show up said, “Compared with what we have done to them in the past four years, Russians do nothing but fur.” The Soviet major said, “What are these few minutes?” German women are undoubtedly scapegoats for Nazis. It is also part of the smoke and dust of the war... The ending heroine said to herself after learning that the Soviet Major had been "transferred", "The birds and the bells are quiet, that's it." The beloved heroine is played by Hoth, the actress of the 2007 Berlin Film Festival, with a naked mirror, and the monologue that fits the image of the heroine is also very pleasant to the ears. In the movie, the heroine sees the D9 DVD with two Chinese subtitles, no English subtitles, and the length of the movie is 126 minutes. IMDb's record of the film is 131 minutes (Toronto Film Festival screening version), and the score is 7.3 points. 】
View more about Anonyma - Eine Frau in Berlin reviews