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GClooney.com
The Good German Movie Review ..
The Good German movie is set in Berlin, 1945. The George Clooney
character is an American war correspondent sent to cover the
Potsdam Peace Conference to discuss the fate of Germany after
the liberation of Europe. Clooney's character once managed a
news bureau and fell in love in Berlin, so it was not his first
visit to the country.
Clooney sees his murdered driver's body being pulled from a
river close to the Potsdam conference grounds.
The plot thickens when Russian and American forces search for
the missing German "Emil Brandt". Clooney meets up
with his former lover played by Cate Blanchett. She is the wife
of the missing Emil Brandt. Blanchett's character Lena Brandt
had to do things during the war that she is not proud of.

The Good German is part thriller, part period film, and part
love story. Steven Soderbergh has probably focused more on the
look of The Good German rather than the development of the characters,
but Clooney fans will still find something in this quirky little
film.
Browse through pictures
from The Good German movie online.
User Submitted Movie Reviews ..
- "PaddyC's
Movie Reviews"
Excerpt from "Paddy"
Directed by Steven Soderbergh, this movie was billed as 'an
experiment' for the director, one in which he only used equipment
that was available in the 1940's. So, no zoom lenses, only
one camera per shot, and hand-held boom microphones. We might
be forgiven for asking, as John Stewart put to George Clooney
in his Daily Show interview: "why!?".
Well,
The Good German is a noir tale of suspense and intrigue, set
against the backdrop of conflict-ravaged Berlin and Potsdam
in 1945, just as WWII is drawing to a close. So the easy answer
to John Stewart's question is really that the style of production
just happens to suit the subject matter, and contributes to
immersing the audience in the story.
Clooney
plays a war-time correspondent for the U.S. forces, stationed
in Berlin, with the nefarious Tully (Tobey Maguire) assigned
as his driver. Tully is sleeping with Lena, the German referred
to in the title, and she turns out to also be an old flame
of Clooney's from the his previous Berlin assignment. Lena
is played by Cate Blanchett, and her performance is noir
femme fatale to a tee, effortlessly mixing the German accent
of Marlene Dietrich with the smoking femininity of Lauren
Bacall from the days of 'Dark Passage' and 'To Have and
Have Not'. Her stand-out performance really out-shines her
two super-hero co-stars, and PCMR must stop banging on about
this, but she really is one of the best actresses working
today. Even large amounts of German dialogue can't repress
her ability to deliver each scene as capably as the last.
War-time
Berlin was a place where, to put it mildly, many bad things
happened. The characters in this movie espouse the belief
that, after living in Berlin for a while, nothing surprises
you any more. This is the backdrop for this intriguing story,
and is also a classic element of many noir tales, detailing
a micro-struggle set against the backdrop of a larger conflict.
Every noir movie also needs a bar, a smoke-filled sleazy
den, housing shady characters, military men, and dangerous
women, all with an angle to work and a story to tell. The
Good German is no different, and in these scenes, the barman,
played by the Scot Tony Curran, has some great lines. His
genuine Scottish accent seems a little out of place in war-time
Berlin, but this adds to his character, and he has some
memorable moments.
It was
a strange experience for PCMR, watching this one at 10.30
a.m. on a Saturday morning, but in a strange way, the timing
seemed appropriate to the lazy pace of the movie. I don't
want to give away too much of the plot, mainly because there
is too much detail to cover, but also because every little
detail gradually builds the plot, and contributes to the
outcome of the story. Like every noir movie should, The
Good German twists and turns, with your opinions of characters
never allowed to settle as they gradually reveal their cards,
and what they have at stake.
The
noir tradition was established by Hollywood classics of
the 40's and 50's, and is populated by such legends as Peter
Lorre, John Huston, Lauren Bacall, Marlene Dietrich and
the man himself, Humphrey Bogart. Roman Polanski also added
a benchmark to the genre in 1974, when he teamed up with
screenwriter Robert Towne, Faye Dunaway and a certain Jack
Nicholson to produce one of PCMR's all-time top movies 'Chinatown'.
(Wasn't John Huston in that too? - Ed). The Coen brothers
have even done a noir flick, receiving a more mixed reaction
with their slickly shot 'The Man Who Wasn't There'.
The
point of this little noir history lesson is that Steven
Soderbergh is attempting to move into an illustrious neighbourhood
with this movie, and is harking back to an established style
that has been well-defined by some of the cinematic greats.
Indeed, for much of the movie, Clooney sports stitches in
his cheek and a bandage on his ear, in a thinly disguised
nod and wink to Jack Nicholson's 'Chinatown' nose plaster.
Also, the closing scenes of The Good German, set as they
are in a military airfield, are a very obvious reference
to the iconic ending of 'Casablanca', with driving rain
substituted for the misty setting of - arguably - Bogie's
most iconic cinematic moments. Soderbergh and writer Paul
Attanasio avoid the temptation to refer directly to Casablanca
in the dialogue, but the similarity of these scenes must
have been intentional.
The verdict: Immersive, atmospheric and well-acted, but
just a tad drawn out in the end.
The rating: 7/10
Read
full Review @ Paddy C's Movie Reviews
- "Stylish"
Submitted by "Mike"
The good acting probably saved this film from being an over-stylized
picture with no substance. Cate Blanchett is an amazing actress.
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