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The Lives of Others

The Lives of Others (German: Das Leben der Anderen, pronounced [das ˈleːbm̩ deːɐ̯ ˈʔandəʁən] ) is a 2006 German drama film written and directed by Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck marking his feature film directorial debut. The plot is about the monitoring of East Berlin residents by agents of the Stasi, East Germany's secret police. It stars Ulrich Mühe as Stasi Captain Gerd Wiesler, Ulrich Tukur as his superior Anton Grubitz, Sebastian Koch as the playwright Georg Dreyman, and Martina Gedeck as Dreyman's lover, a prominent actress named Christa-Maria Sieland.

The Lives of Others
Original German-language poster
Directed byFlorian Henckel von Donnersmarck
Written byFlorian Henckel von Donnersmarck
Produced by
  • Max Wiedemann
  • Quirin Berg
Starring
CinematographyHagen Bogdanski
Edited byPatricia Rommel
Music by
Production
companies
Distributed byBuena Vista International
Release date
  • 23 March 2006 (2006-03-23)
Running time
137 minutes[1]
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman
Budget$2 million[2]
Box office$77.3 million[2]

The film was released by Buena Vista International in Germany on 23 March 2006. At the same time, the screenplay was published by Suhrkamp Verlag. The Lives of Others won the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film. The film had earlier won seven Deutscher Filmpreis awards—including those for best film, best director, best screenplay, best actor, and best supporting actor—after setting a new record with 11 nominations. It also won the BAFTA Award for Best Film Not in the English Language and European Film Award for Best Film, while it was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film. The Lives of Others cost US$2 million[3] and grossed more than US$77 million worldwide.[2]

Released 17 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, marking the end of the German Democratic Republic, it was the first notable drama film about the subject after a series of comedies such as Good Bye, Lenin! and Sonnenallee. This approach was widely applauded in Germany, and the film was complimented for its accurate tone despite some criticism that Wiesler's character was depicted unrealistically and with undue sympathy. The film's authenticity was considered praiseworthy given that the director grew up outside of East Germany and was 16 when the Berlin Wall fell.[4]

Plot edit

In 1984 East Germany, Stasi Hauptmann Gerd Wiesler, code name HGW XX/7, is ordered by his friend and superior, Lt. Col. Anton Grubitz, to spy on playwright Georg Dreyman, whose pro-communist politics and international recognition have so far kept the state from directly monitoring him. Dreyman's very appearance as a model East German mystifies Wiesler; the playwright has no known vices or record of disloyalty or dissent at all. At the request of Minister of Culture Bruno Hempf, Wiesler and his team bug Dreyman's apartment, set up surveillance equipment, and report Dreyman's activities. Wiesler is disappointed to discover that Hempf is having Dreyman observed not for suspicions of disloyalty or dissent, but for his own romantic interest in Dreyman's girlfriend, actress Christa-Maria Sieland. After an intervention by Wiesler leads to Dreyman's discovering Sieland's relationship with Hempf, he implores her not to meet him again and to be true to herself. She reconciles with Dreyman.

Dreyman's friend Albert Jerska, a blacklisted theatrical director, gives him sheet music for Sonate vom Guten Menschen (Sonata for a Good Man). Shortly afterwards, Jerska hangs himself. Dreyman realises that the GDR has not published its own suicide rates since 1977, and decides to publish an article in Western media. To determine whether or not his flat is bugged, Dreyman and his friends feign a defection attempt. A sympathetic Wiesler does not report it and the conspirators believe they are safe. Since all East German typewriters are registered and identifiable, an editor of prominent West German newsweekly Der Spiegel smuggles Dreyman a Groma Büromaschinen Kolibri, an ultra-flat typewriter, which he hides under a floorboard. It has only a red ribbon, which stains his fingers.

Dreyman publishes an anonymous article in Der Spiegel accusing the state of concealing the country's elevated suicide rates. The article angers the East German authorities but the Stasi cannot link it to a registered typewriter. Rejected by Sieland, Hempf orders Grubitz to arrest her. She is blackmailed into revealing Dreyman's authorship of the article, although the Stasi do not find the typewriter. Grubitz, suspicious of Wiesler, has him do the follow-up interrogation of Sieland. Wiesler makes Sieland reveal the typewriter's location.

When the Stasi return to Dreyman's apartment, Sieland realises that Dreyman will know she betrayed him and flees into the street and is hit by a truck. Dreyman runs after her and Sieland dies in his arms. Grubitz finds nothing beneath the floorboard; he ends the investigation with a perfunctory apology to Dreyman. Grubitz then informs Wiesler that while the investigation is over, so is Wiesler's career; his remaining years with the Stasi will be steam-opening letters for inspection in Department M, a dead-end assignment for disgraced agents. The same day, Mikhail Gorbachev is elected leader of the Soviet Union.

Two years after the fall of the wall, Hempf and Dreyman meet at a performance of Dreyman's play, each reflecting on life before and after German reunification. Dreyman asks why he was never monitored by the Stasi, to which Hempf replies that he had been: "We knew everything." Dreyman finds the abandoned listening devices in his apartment and rips them from the walls.

Dreyman reviews his Stasi files at the Stasi Records Agency, reading that Sieland was released just before the second search and could not have removed the typewriter. He is confused by other contradictions until, seeing a fingerprint in red ink in the final report, he realises that the officer in charge of his surveillance – Stasi officer HGW XX/7 – had removed the typewriter from his apartment and concealed his activities, including his authorship of the suicide article. He tracks down Wiesler, who now works delivering mail, but ultimately decides not to approach him.

Two years later, Wiesler passes a bookstore window display promoting Dreyman's new novel, Sonate vom Guten Menschen ("Sonata for a Good Man"). He opens a copy of the book, discovering that it is dedicated "To HGW XX/7, in gratitude". As he buys a copy, Wiesler is asked if he would like it giftwrapped. He replies: "No, it's for me."

Cast edit

Production edit

Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck's parents were both from East Germany (originally they were from further east; the von Donnersmarcks belonged to Silesian nobility but the region was transferred to Poland from Germany after World War II). He has said that, on visits there as a child before the Berlin Wall fell, he could sense the fear they had as subjects of the state.[5]

He said the idea for the film came to him when he was trying to come up with a scenario for a film class. He was listening to music and recalled Maxim Gorky's saying that Lenin's favorite piece of music was Beethoven's Appassionata. Gorky recounted a discussion with Lenin:

And screwing up his eyes and chuckling, [Lenin] added without mirth: But I can't listen to music often, it affects my nerves, it makes me want to say sweet nothings and pat the heads of people who, living in a filthy hell, can create such beauty. But today we mustn't pat anyone on the head or we'll get our hand bitten off; we've got to hit them on the heads, hit them without mercy, though in the ideal we are against doing any violence to people. Hm-hm—it's a hellishly difficult office!

Donnersmarck told a New York Times reporter: "I suddenly had this image in my mind of a person sitting in a depressing room with earphones on his head and listening in to what he supposes is the enemy of the state and the enemy of his ideas, and what he is really hearing is beautiful music that touches him. I sat down and in a couple of hours had written the treatment."[3] The screenplay was written during an extended visit to his uncle's monastery, Heiligenkreuz Abbey.[6]

Although the opening scene is set in Hohenschönhausen prison (which is now the site of a memorial dedicated to the victims of Stasi oppression), the film could not be shot there because Hubertus Knabe, the director of the memorial, refused to give Donnersmarck permission. Knabe objected to "making the Stasi man into a hero" and tried to persuade Donnersmarck to change the film. Donnersmarck cited Schindler's List as an example of such a plot development being possible. Knabe's answer: "But that is exactly the difference. There was a Schindler. There was no Wiesler."[7]

Donnersmarck teamed up with cinematographer Hagen Bogdanski to bring the story to life. Describing his inspiration for the film's Brechtian grey color palette, cinematographer Bogdanski recalls the streets of East Berlin from the period: "They were very dark. Everything was happening inside, in private".[8]

Reception edit

The film was received with widespread acclaim. Film aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes reports a 92% rating, based on 149 positive reviews out of 163, and an average rating of 8.31/10. The website's critical consensus states: "Unlike more traditional spy films, The Lives of Others doesn't sacrifice character for cloak and dagger chases, and the performances (notably that by the late Ulrich Muhe) stay with you."[9] It also has a score of 89 out of 100 on Metacritic, based on 39 critics.[10]

A review in Daily Variety by Derek Elley described the film as "a superbly cast drama", which "balances the many dramatic and emotional strands between the players with poise and clarity".[11] Time magazine's Richard Corliss named the film one of the Top 10 Movies of 2007, ranking it at # and praising a "poignant, unsettling thriller".[12][13]

Film critic Roger Ebert gave the film four out of four, describing it as "a powerful but quiet film, constructed of hidden thoughts and secret desires".[14] A. O. Scott, reviewing the film in The New York Times, wrote that Lives is well-plotted, and added, "The suspense comes not only from the structure and pacing of the scenes, but also, more deeply, from the sense that even in an oppressive society, individuals are burdened with free will. You never know, from one moment to the next, what course any of the characters will choose."[15] Los Angeles Times critic Kenneth Turan agreed that the dramatic tension comes from being "meticulously plotted", and that "it places its key characters in high-stakes predicaments where what they are forced to wager is their talent, their very lives, even their souls". The film "convincingly demonstrates that when done right, moral and political quandaries can be the most intensely dramatic dilemmas of all".[16]

American commentator John Podhoretz called the film "one of the greatest movies ever made, and certainly the best film of this decade".[17] William F. Buckley, Jr. wrote in his syndicated column that after the film was over, "I turned to my companion and said, 'I think that is the best movie I ever saw.'"[18] John J. Miller of National Review Online named it number one in his list of "The Best Conservative Movies" of the last 25 years.[19]

Several critics pointed to the film's subtle building up of details as one of its prime strengths. The film is built "on layers of emotional texture", wrote Stephanie Zacharek in Salon online magazine.[20] Josh Rosenblatt, writing in the Austin Chronicle called the film "a triumph of muted grandeur".[21] Lisa Schwarzbaum, writing in Entertainment Weekly, pointed out that some of the subtlety is due to the fact that its "tensest moments take place with the most minimal of action" but that the director still "conveys everything he wants us to know about choice, fear, doubt, cowardice, and heroism".[22] An article in First Things makes a philosophical argument in defense of Wiesler's transformation.[23] The East German dissident songwriter Wolf Biermann was guardedly enthusiastic about the film, writing in a March 2006 article in Die Welt: "The political tone is authentic, I was moved by the plot. But why? Perhaps I was just won over sentimentally, because of the seductive mass of details which look like they were lifted from my own past between the total ban of my work in 1965 and denaturalisation in 1976".[24]

Anna Funder, the author of the book Stasiland, in a review for The Guardian called The Lives of Others a "superb film" despite not being true to reality. She claims that it was not possible for a Stasi operative to have hidden information from superiors because Stasi employees themselves were watched and almost always operated in teams.[7]

In a 2016 BBC poll, critics voted the film the 32nd greatest since 2000.[25]

According to German author Christoph Hein, the film is loosely based on his life story. In a 2019 article, he recalls that Donnersmarck interviewed him in 2002, and that his name was mentioned in the opening credits at the premiere. In Hein's opinion, the overly dramatic events of the film bear little resemblance to his life experience, which is why he asked Donnersmarck to delete his name from the credits. In Hein's words, "the movie does not depict the 1980s in the GDR" but is a "scary tale taking place in a fantasy land, comparable to Tolkien's Middle-earth".[26]

Awards and honors edit

The film and its principals have won numerous awards. Among the most prestigious are:

Acclaim edit

The Europe List, the largest survey on European culture established that the top three films in European culture are:

  1. Roberto Benigni's Life is Beautiful[29]
  2. Donnersmarck's The Lives of Others[29]
  3. Jean-Pierre Jeunet's Amélie[29]

Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Netherlands and Sweden had the film at number one.[30]

Proposed remake edit

In February 2007, Sydney Pollack and Anthony Minghella announced a deal with The Weinstein Company to produce and direct an English-language remake of The Lives of Others.[31][32] Minghella died in March 2008[33] and Pollack died less than three months later.[34]

Influence edit

Israeli intelligence controversy edit

In September 2014, 43 members of the Israeli elite clandestine Unit 8200 wrote a letter to Israel's prime minister and army chief, refusing further service and claiming Israel made "no distinction between Palestinians who are and are not involved in violence" and that information collected "harms innocent people". One of these people named a viewing of The Lives of Others as "the transformational moment".[35][36]

2013 mass surveillance disclosures edit

The Lives of Others has been referred to in political protests following the 2013 mass surveillance disclosures.[37] Daniel Ellsberg in an interview with Brad Friedman on KPFK/Pacifica Radio republished on salon.com stressed the importance of The Lives of Others in light of Edward Snowden's revelations:[38]

ELLSBERG: My knowledge of the Stasi is not very extensive, but it's largely from a movie called The Lives of Others, which won the Oscar for "Best Foreign Film" some years ago. Everybody should get that now. It should be reissued now. Preferably. It has subtitles. In German. But I'd like to see it dubbed so it had a wider audience. What that shows is what life can be with a government that knew as much as the Stasi did then. But if they know – and one thing they can do with that information right now – is to turn people into informants, so that the government has not only the information that people say on electronic devices, they have what they say in the bedroom, because their wife or their whoever – spouse – is an informant. As happened in the movie. That is what did happen in East Germany. And if we were to get that here, and there's the infrastructure for it right now, we will become a democratic republic in the same sense as the East German Democratic Republic.

Film critic and historian Carrie Rickey believes that The Lives of Others was one of two movies that influenced Snowden's actions, the other being the 1974 Francis Ford Coppola film The Conversation, both being about wiretappers troubled by guilt.[39]

Both movies are about the morality of surveillance and the questionable reliability of information harvested – and how listeners can be duped and/or can misinterpret raw data. I would recommend these films to anyone interested in great movies that touch on the issues raised by L'Affaire Snowden.

On 25 June 2013, after revelations of collaboration between the NSA and GCHQ, British journalist and documentary maker Sarfraz Manzoor tweeted that "Now would be a good time to pitch a British remake of The Lives of Others."[40] On 16 July 2013, American novelist and frequent cable news commentator Brad Thor stated: "At what point did the Obama administration acquire the rights to reenact The Lives of Others?"[41]

French President Nicolas Sarkozy gave an interview in Le Figaro expressing his outrage over his being the target of surveillance. He drew a direct comparison to the film: "This is not a scene from that marvellous film The Lives of Others, about East Germany and the activities of the Stasi. It is not the case of some dictator acting against his political opponents. This is France."[42] Because of this interview, sales of Le Figaro more than doubled.[42]

Libel suit edit

Henckel von Donnersmarck and Ulrich Mühe were successfully sued for libel for an interview in which Mühe asserted that his second wife, Jenny Gröllmann, informed the Stasi about his activities while they were East German citizens[3] through the six years of their marriage.[43] Mühe's former wife denied the claims, although 254 pages of government records detailed her activities.[20] However, Gröllmann's real-life controller later claimed he had made up many of the details in the file and that the actress had been unaware that she was speaking to a Stasi agent.[44]

Literature and music edit

  • Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck: Das Leben der anderen. Suhrkamp, Frankfurt am Main 2006, ISBN 3-518-45786-1
  • Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck: Das Leben der anderen. Geschwärzte Ausgabe. Suhrkamp, Frankfurt am Main 2007, ISBN 3-518-45908-2
  • The piano sonata "Sonata for a Good Man", used as the main transformation point of the Stasi Agent Gerd Wiesler, does not carry the name of the composer, as it is original music written for the film by Gabriel Yared.
  • Regarding Beethoven's Appassionata, Lenin is quoted as having said that: "If I keep listening to it, I won't finish the revolution".
  • An excerpt from a 1920 poem by Bertold Brecht, "Reminiscence of Marie A.", is recited in the film in a scene in which Wiesler reads it on his couch, having taken it from Dreyman's desk.
  • The poem "Versuch es" by Wolfgang Borchert is set to music in the film and played as Dreyman writes the article about suicide. Borchert was a playwright whose life was destroyed by his experience of being drafted into the Wehrmacht in World War II and fighting on the Eastern Front.

See also edit

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ "DAS LEBEN DER ANDEREN - THE LIVES OF OTHERS". British Board of Film Classification. 27 November 2006. Retrieved 24 November 2012.
  2. ^ a b c "The Lives of Others (2007)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 7 July 2011.
  3. ^ a b c Riding, Alan (7 January 2007). "Behind the Berlin Wall, Listening to Life". The New York Times. Retrieved 27 July 2007.
  4. ^ Ash, Timothy (31 May 2007). "The Stasi on Our Minds". The New York Review of Books. 54 (9). Retrieved 17 November 2014. It was therefore with particular interest that I recently sat down to watch The Lives of Others, this already celebrated film about the Stasi, made by a West German director who was just sixteen when the Berlin Wall came down.
  5. ^ "Director's Statement". Sony. Retrieved 17 August 2007.
  6. ^ . Heiligenkreuz (in German). Archived from the original on 13 February 2012. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
  7. ^ a b Fundler, Anna (5 May 2007). "Tyranny of Terror". The Guardian. London.
  8. ^ "Ways of Seeing: Surveillance, Observation, and the Lives of Others". Fashion x Film.
  9. ^ The Lives of Others The Lives of Others at Rotten Tomatoes
  10. ^ "The Lives of Others". Metacritic.
  11. ^ Elley, Derek (11 June 2006). "The Lives of Others". Daily Variety. Retrieved 17 August 2007.
  12. ^ Corliss, Richard; "The 10 Best Movies"; Time magazine; 24 December 2007; Page 40.
  13. ^ Corliss, Richard (9 December 2007). "The 10 Best Movies". time.com. Retrieved 7 June 2019.
  14. ^ Ebert, Roger (21 September 2007). "The Lives of Others". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 14 July 2010.
  15. ^ Scott, A.O. (9 February 2007). "A Fugue for Good German Men". The New York Times. Retrieved 17 August 2007.
  16. ^ Turan, Kenneth (1 December 2006). . Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 9 May 2007. Retrieved 17 August 2007.
  17. ^ Podhoretz, John (25 July 2007). "Ulrich Muhe RIP". National Review Online. Retrieved 17 August 2007.
  18. ^ Buckley, William F. Jr. (23 May 2007). "Great Lives". National Review Online. Retrieved 17 August 2007.
  19. ^ Miller, John (23 February 2009). "The Best Conservative Movies". National Review Online. Retrieved 19 August 2009.
  20. ^ a b Zacharek, Stephanie (9 February 2007). "The Lives of Others". Salon.com. Retrieved 17 August 2007.
  21. ^ Rosenblatt, Josh (2 March 2007). "The Lives of Others". Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 17 August 2007.
  22. ^ Schwarzbaum, Lisa (2 February 2007). "Movie Review: The Lives of Others (2007)". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 17 August 2007.
  23. ^ ""Why Dictators Fear Artists" (2007)". First Things. 23 July 2007. Retrieved 24 August 2007.
  24. ^ Biermann, Wolf (29 March 2006). "The ghosts are leaving the shadows". signandsight. Retrieved 7 June 2019.
  25. ^ "The 21st century's 100 greatest films". BBC. 23 August 2016. Retrieved 8 November 2016.
  26. ^ "Warum ich meinen Namen aus "Das Leben der Anderen" löschen ließ" [Why I had my name deleted from 'The Lives of Others']. Süddeutsche Zeitung (in German). 24 January 2019.
  27. ^ . Metacritic. Archived from the original on 2 January 2008. Retrieved 5 January 2008.
  28. ^ Germain, David; Christy Lemire (27 December 2007). . Columbia Daily Tribune. Associated Press. Archived from the original on 3 January 2008. Retrieved 31 December 2007.
  29. ^ a b c . Goethe Institute. Goethe Institute. Archived from the original on 5 July 2013. Retrieved 7 June 2019.
  30. ^ . Goethe Institute. Archived from the original on 5 July 2013. Retrieved 7 June 2019.
  31. ^ "Weinsteins keep sight of Mirage". Variety. 28 February 2007. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
  32. ^ "Lives of Others set for Hollywood remake". The Guardian. 1 March 2007. Retrieved 17 August 2007.
  33. ^ Carr, David (18 March 2008). "Anthony Minghella, Director, Dies at 54". The New York Times. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
  34. ^ Cieply, Michael (27 May 2008). "Sydney Pollack, Film Director, Is Dead at 73". The New York Times. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
  35. ^ Rudoren, Jodi (12 September 2014). "Veterans of Elite Israeli Unit Refuse Reserve Duty, Citing Treatment of Palestinians". The New York Times.
  36. ^ "'Any Palestinian is exposed to monitoring by the Israeli Big Brother'". TheGuardian.com. 12 September 2014.
  37. ^ "European officials lash out at new NSA spying report". CBS News. AP. 30 June 2013. Retrieved 7 June 2019.
  38. ^ Friedman, Brad (14 June 2013). "Daniel Ellsberg: Edward Snowden is a patriot". Retrieved 7 June 2019.
  39. ^ Hoffmann, Sheila Weller (15 July 2013). "What should Edward 'I'm a brave martyr but I wanna go home' Snowden do now?". The Washington Post.
  40. ^ "quote-sarfaraz". Sarfraz Manzoor. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
  41. ^ "Brad Thor- Lives of Others". Brad Thor. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
  42. ^ a b "How Snowden's Revelations Saved Sarkozy". The New Yorker. 17 April 2014.
  43. ^ Nickerson, Colin (29 May 2006). "German film prompts open debate on Stasi: A forbidden topic captivates nation". The Boston Globe.
  44. ^ "Ulrich Mühe Obituary". The Telegraph. 27 July 2007. Retrieved 30 November 2012.

Bibliography

External links edit

lives, others, other, uses, disambiguation, german, leben, anderen, pronounced, ˈleːbm, deːɐ, ˈʔandəʁən, 2006, german, drama, film, written, directed, florian, henckel, donnersmarck, marking, feature, film, directorial, debut, plot, about, monitoring, east, be. For other uses see The Lives of Others disambiguation The Lives of Others German Das Leben der Anderen pronounced das ˈleːbm deːɐ ˈʔandeʁen is a 2006 German drama film written and directed by Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck marking his feature film directorial debut The plot is about the monitoring of East Berlin residents by agents of the Stasi East Germany s secret police It stars Ulrich Muhe as Stasi Captain Gerd Wiesler Ulrich Tukur as his superior Anton Grubitz Sebastian Koch as the playwright Georg Dreyman and Martina Gedeck as Dreyman s lover a prominent actress named Christa Maria Sieland The Lives of OthersOriginal German language posterDirected byFlorian Henckel von DonnersmarckWritten byFlorian Henckel von DonnersmarckProduced byMax Wiedemann Quirin BergStarringUlrich Muhe Martina Gedeck Sebastian Koch Ulrich TukurCinematographyHagen BogdanskiEdited byPatricia RommelMusic byGabriel Yared Stephane MouchaProductioncompaniesWiedemann amp Berg Bayerischer Rundfunk Arte Creado FilmDistributed byBuena Vista InternationalRelease date23 March 2006 2006 03 23 Running time137 minutes 1 CountryGermanyLanguageGermanBudget 2 million 2 Box office 77 3 million 2 The film was released by Buena Vista International in Germany on 23 March 2006 At the same time the screenplay was published by Suhrkamp Verlag The Lives of Others won the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film The film had earlier won seven Deutscher Filmpreis awards including those for best film best director best screenplay best actor and best supporting actor after setting a new record with 11 nominations It also won the BAFTA Award for Best Film Not in the English Language and European Film Award for Best Film while it was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film The Lives of Others cost US 2 million 3 and grossed more than US 77 million worldwide 2 Released 17 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall marking the end of the German Democratic Republic it was the first notable drama film about the subject after a series of comedies such as Good Bye Lenin and Sonnenallee This approach was widely applauded in Germany and the film was complimented for its accurate tone despite some criticism that Wiesler s character was depicted unrealistically and with undue sympathy The film s authenticity was considered praiseworthy given that the director grew up outside of East Germany and was 16 when the Berlin Wall fell 4 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Reception 4 1 Awards and honors 4 2 Acclaim 5 Proposed remake 6 Influence 6 1 Israeli intelligence controversy 6 2 2013 mass surveillance disclosures 7 Libel suit 8 Literature and music 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksPlot editIn 1984 East Germany Stasi Hauptmann Gerd Wiesler code name HGW XX 7 is ordered by his friend and superior Lt Col Anton Grubitz to spy on playwright Georg Dreyman whose pro communist politics and international recognition have so far kept the state from directly monitoring him Dreyman s very appearance as a model East German mystifies Wiesler the playwright has no known vices or record of disloyalty or dissent at all At the request of Minister of Culture Bruno Hempf Wiesler and his team bug Dreyman s apartment set up surveillance equipment and report Dreyman s activities Wiesler is disappointed to discover that Hempf is having Dreyman observed not for suspicions of disloyalty or dissent but for his own romantic interest in Dreyman s girlfriend actress Christa Maria Sieland After an intervention by Wiesler leads to Dreyman s discovering Sieland s relationship with Hempf he implores her not to meet him again and to be true to herself She reconciles with Dreyman Dreyman s friend Albert Jerska a blacklisted theatrical director gives him sheet music for Sonate vom Guten Menschen Sonata for a Good Man Shortly afterwards Jerska hangs himself Dreyman realises that the GDR has not published its own suicide rates since 1977 and decides to publish an article in Western media To determine whether or not his flat is bugged Dreyman and his friends feign a defection attempt A sympathetic Wiesler does not report it and the conspirators believe they are safe Since all East German typewriters are registered and identifiable an editor of prominent West German newsweekly Der Spiegel smuggles Dreyman a Groma Buromaschinen Kolibri an ultra flat typewriter which he hides under a floorboard It has only a red ribbon which stains his fingers Dreyman publishes an anonymous article in Der Spiegel accusing the state of concealing the country s elevated suicide rates The article angers the East German authorities but the Stasi cannot link it to a registered typewriter Rejected by Sieland Hempf orders Grubitz to arrest her She is blackmailed into revealing Dreyman s authorship of the article although the Stasi do not find the typewriter Grubitz suspicious of Wiesler has him do the follow up interrogation of Sieland Wiesler makes Sieland reveal the typewriter s location When the Stasi return to Dreyman s apartment Sieland realises that Dreyman will know she betrayed him and flees into the street and is hit by a truck Dreyman runs after her and Sieland dies in his arms Grubitz finds nothing beneath the floorboard he ends the investigation with a perfunctory apology to Dreyman Grubitz then informs Wiesler that while the investigation is over so is Wiesler s career his remaining years with the Stasi will be steam opening letters for inspection in Department M a dead end assignment for disgraced agents The same day Mikhail Gorbachev is elected leader of the Soviet Union Two years after the fall of the wall Hempf and Dreyman meet at a performance of Dreyman s play each reflecting on life before and after German reunification Dreyman asks why he was never monitored by the Stasi to which Hempf replies that he had been We knew everything Dreyman finds the abandoned listening devices in his apartment and rips them from the walls Dreyman reviews his Stasi files at the Stasi Records Agency reading that Sieland was released just before the second search and could not have removed the typewriter He is confused by other contradictions until seeing a fingerprint in red ink in the final report he realises that the officer in charge of his surveillance Stasi officer HGW XX 7 had removed the typewriter from his apartment and concealed his activities including his authorship of the suicide article He tracks down Wiesler who now works delivering mail but ultimately decides not to approach him Two years later Wiesler passes a bookstore window display promoting Dreyman s new novel Sonate vom Guten Menschen Sonata for a Good Man He opens a copy of the book discovering that it is dedicated To HGW XX 7 in gratitude As he buys a copy Wiesler is asked if he would like it giftwrapped He replies No it s for me Cast editUlrich Muhe as Hauptmann Gerd Wiesler Sebastian Koch as Georg Dreyman Martina Gedeck as Christa Maria Sieland Ulrich Tukur as Oberstleutnant Anton Grubitz Thomas Thieme as Minister Bruno Hempf Hans Uwe Bauer as Paul Hauser Volkmar Kleinert as Albert Jerska Matthias Brenner as Karl Wallner Herbert Knaup as Gregor Hessenstein Der Spiegel journalist Charly Hubner as Udo Leveh Wiesler s night shift Bastian Trost as Haftling 227 prisoner Marie Gruber as Frau Meineke neighbour Volker Michalowski de as typewriter expert Werner Daehn as Stasi officer in charge at house search Hinnerk Schonemann as Axel Stiegler joketeller at Stasi Gabi Fleming as the prostitute Ute Ludwig Blochberger as Benedikt Lehmann Wiesler s studentProduction editFlorian Henckel von Donnersmarck s parents were both from East Germany originally they were from further east the von Donnersmarcks belonged to Silesian nobility but the region was transferred to Poland from Germany after World War II He has said that on visits there as a child before the Berlin Wall fell he could sense the fear they had as subjects of the state 5 He said the idea for the film came to him when he was trying to come up with a scenario for a film class He was listening to music and recalled Maxim Gorky s saying that Lenin s favorite piece of music was Beethoven s Appassionata Gorky recounted a discussion with Lenin And screwing up his eyes and chuckling Lenin added without mirth But I can t listen to music often it affects my nerves it makes me want to say sweet nothings and pat the heads of people who living in a filthy hell can create such beauty But today we mustn t pat anyone on the head or we ll get our hand bitten off we ve got to hit them on the heads hit them without mercy though in the ideal we are against doing any violence to people Hm hm it s a hellishly difficult office Donnersmarck told a New York Times reporter I suddenly had this image in my mind of a person sitting in a depressing room with earphones on his head and listening in to what he supposes is the enemy of the state and the enemy of his ideas and what he is really hearing is beautiful music that touches him I sat down and in a couple of hours had written the treatment 3 The screenplay was written during an extended visit to his uncle s monastery Heiligenkreuz Abbey 6 Although the opening scene is set in Hohenschonhausen prison which is now the site of a memorial dedicated to the victims of Stasi oppression the film could not be shot there because Hubertus Knabe the director of the memorial refused to give Donnersmarck permission Knabe objected to making the Stasi man into a hero and tried to persuade Donnersmarck to change the film Donnersmarck cited Schindler s List as an example of such a plot development being possible Knabe s answer But that is exactly the difference There was a Schindler There was no Wiesler 7 Donnersmarck teamed up with cinematographer Hagen Bogdanski to bring the story to life Describing his inspiration for the film s Brechtian grey color palette cinematographer Bogdanski recalls the streets of East Berlin from the period They were very dark Everything was happening inside in private 8 Reception editThe film was received with widespread acclaim Film aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes reports a 92 rating based on 149 positive reviews out of 163 and an average rating of 8 31 10 The website s critical consensus states Unlike more traditional spy films The Lives of Others doesn t sacrifice character for cloak and dagger chases and the performances notably that by the late Ulrich Muhe stay with you 9 It also has a score of 89 out of 100 on Metacritic based on 39 critics 10 A review in Daily Variety by Derek Elley described the film as a superbly cast drama which balances the many dramatic and emotional strands between the players with poise and clarity 11 Time magazine s Richard Corliss named the film one of the Top 10 Movies of 2007 ranking it at and praising a poignant unsettling thriller 12 13 Film critic Roger Ebert gave the film four out of four describing it as a powerful but quiet film constructed of hidden thoughts and secret desires 14 A O Scott reviewing the film in The New York Times wrote that Lives is well plotted and added The suspense comes not only from the structure and pacing of the scenes but also more deeply from the sense that even in an oppressive society individuals are burdened with free will You never know from one moment to the next what course any of the characters will choose 15 Los Angeles Times critic Kenneth Turan agreed that the dramatic tension comes from being meticulously plotted and that it places its key characters in high stakes predicaments where what they are forced to wager is their talent their very lives even their souls The film convincingly demonstrates that when done right moral and political quandaries can be the most intensely dramatic dilemmas of all 16 American commentator John Podhoretz called the film one of the greatest movies ever made and certainly the best film of this decade 17 William F Buckley Jr wrote in his syndicated column that after the film was over I turned to my companion and said I think that is the best movie I ever saw 18 John J Miller of National Review Online named it number one in his list of The Best Conservative Movies of the last 25 years 19 Several critics pointed to the film s subtle building up of details as one of its prime strengths The film is built on layers of emotional texture wrote Stephanie Zacharek in Salon online magazine 20 Josh Rosenblatt writing in the Austin Chronicle called the film a triumph of muted grandeur 21 Lisa Schwarzbaum writing in Entertainment Weekly pointed out that some of the subtlety is due to the fact that its tensest moments take place with the most minimal of action but that the director still conveys everything he wants us to know about choice fear doubt cowardice and heroism 22 An article in First Things makes a philosophical argument in defense of Wiesler s transformation 23 The East German dissident songwriter Wolf Biermann was guardedly enthusiastic about the film writing in a March 2006 article in Die Welt The political tone is authentic I was moved by the plot But why Perhaps I was just won over sentimentally because of the seductive mass of details which look like they were lifted from my own past between the total ban of my work in 1965 and denaturalisation in 1976 24 Anna Funder the author of the book Stasiland in a review for The Guardian called The Lives of Others a superb film despite not being true to reality She claims that it was not possible for a Stasi operative to have hidden information from superiors because Stasi employees themselves were watched and almost always operated in teams 7 In a 2016 BBC poll critics voted the film the 32nd greatest since 2000 25 According to German author Christoph Hein the film is loosely based on his life story In a 2019 article he recalls that Donnersmarck interviewed him in 2002 and that his name was mentioned in the opening credits at the premiere In Hein s opinion the overly dramatic events of the film bear little resemblance to his life experience which is why he asked Donnersmarck to delete his name from the credits In Hein s words the movie does not depict the 1980s in the GDR but is a scary tale taking place in a fantasy land comparable to Tolkien s Middle earth 26 Awards and honors edit Main article List of accolades received by The Lives of Others The film and its principals have won numerous awards Among the most prestigious are 79th Academy Awards Best International Feature Film 61st British Academy Film Awards Best Film Not in the English Language Cesar Awards Best Foreign Film European Film Awards Best Film Best Actor Ulrich Muhe Best Screenwriter Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck German Film Awards Best Film Best Actor Best Supporting Actor Best Director Best Cinematography Best Production Design Best Screenplay Bavarian Film Awards 2006 Best Actor Ulrich Muhe Best Newcomer Director Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck Best Screenplay Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck Vilnius International Film Festival The Audience Award The Lives of Others also appeared on many critics lists of the ten best films of 2007 27 1st James Berardinelli ReelViews 1st Shawn Levy The Oregonian 2nd Empire 2nd Marjorie Baumgarten The Austin Chronicle 2nd Michael Sragow The Baltimore Sun 2nd Richard Corliss TIME magazine 3rd Rene Rodriguez The Miami Herald 4th David Ansen Newsweek 4th Stephen Holden The New York Times 5th Roger Ebert Chicago Sun Times 5th Richard Roeper Chicago Sun Times 5th Liam Lacey and Rick Groen The Globe and Mail 5th Owen Gleiberman Entertainment Weekly 7th Christy Lemire Associated Press 28 7th Tasha Robinson The A V Club 8th A O Scott The New York Times tied with Michael Clayton 8th Kyle Smith New York Post Acclaim edit The Europe List the largest survey on European culture established that the top three films in European culture are Roberto Benigni s Life is Beautiful 29 Donnersmarck s The Lives of Others 29 Jean Pierre Jeunet s Amelie 29 Belgium Denmark Germany Greece Ireland Netherlands and Sweden had the film at number one 30 Proposed remake editIn February 2007 Sydney Pollack and Anthony Minghella announced a deal with The Weinstein Company to produce and direct an English language remake of The Lives of Others 31 32 Minghella died in March 2008 33 and Pollack died less than three months later 34 Influence editIsraeli intelligence controversy edit In September 2014 43 members of the Israeli elite clandestine Unit 8200 wrote a letter to Israel s prime minister and army chief refusing further service and claiming Israel made no distinction between Palestinians who are and are not involved in violence and that information collected harms innocent people One of these people named a viewing of The Lives of Others as the transformational moment 35 36 2013 mass surveillance disclosures edit The Lives of Others has been referred to in political protests following the 2013 mass surveillance disclosures 37 Daniel Ellsberg in an interview with Brad Friedman on KPFK Pacifica Radio republished on salon com stressed the importance of The Lives of Others in light of Edward Snowden s revelations 38 ELLSBERG My knowledge of the Stasi is not very extensive but it s largely from a movie called The Lives of Others which won the Oscar for Best Foreign Film some years ago Everybody should get that now It should be reissued now Preferably It has subtitles In German But I d like to see it dubbed so it had a wider audience What that shows is what life can be with a government that knew as much as the Stasi did then But if they know and one thing they can do with that information right now is to turn people into informants so that the government has not only the information that people say on electronic devices they have what they say in the bedroom because their wife or their whoever spouse is an informant As happened in the movie That is what did happen in East Germany And if we were to get that here and there s the infrastructure for it right now we will become a democratic republic in the same sense as the East German Democratic Republic Film critic and historian Carrie Rickey believes that The Lives of Others was one of two movies that influenced Snowden s actions the other being the 1974 Francis Ford Coppola film The Conversation both being about wiretappers troubled by guilt 39 Both movies are about the morality of surveillance and the questionable reliability of information harvested and how listeners can be duped and or can misinterpret raw data I would recommend these films to anyone interested in great movies that touch on the issues raised by L Affaire Snowden On 25 June 2013 after revelations of collaboration between the NSA and GCHQ British journalist and documentary maker Sarfraz Manzoor tweeted that Now would be a good time to pitch a British remake of The Lives of Others 40 On 16 July 2013 American novelist and frequent cable news commentator Brad Thor stated At what point did the Obama administration acquire the rights to reenact The Lives of Others 41 French President Nicolas Sarkozy gave an interview in Le Figaro expressing his outrage over his being the target of surveillance He drew a direct comparison to the film This is not a scene from that marvellous film The Lives of Others about East Germany and the activities of the Stasi It is not the case of some dictator acting against his political opponents This is France 42 Because of this interview sales of Le Figaro more than doubled 42 Libel suit editHenckel von Donnersmarck and Ulrich Muhe were successfully sued for libel for an interview in which Muhe asserted that his second wife Jenny Grollmann informed the Stasi about his activities while they were East German citizens 3 through the six years of their marriage 43 Muhe s former wife denied the claims although 254 pages of government records detailed her activities 20 However Grollmann s real life controller later claimed he had made up many of the details in the file and that the actress had been unaware that she was speaking to a Stasi agent 44 Literature and music editFlorian Henckel von Donnersmarck Das Leben der anderen Suhrkamp Frankfurt am Main 2006 ISBN 3 518 45786 1 Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck Das Leben der anderen Geschwarzte Ausgabe Suhrkamp Frankfurt am Main 2007 ISBN 3 518 45908 2 The piano sonata Sonata for a Good Man used as the main transformation point of the Stasi Agent Gerd Wiesler does not carry the name of the composer as it is original music written for the film by Gabriel Yared Regarding Beethoven s Appassionata Lenin is quoted as having said that If I keep listening to it I won t finish the revolution An excerpt from a 1920 poem by Bertold Brecht Reminiscence of Marie A is recited in the film in a scene in which Wiesler reads it on his couch having taken it from Dreyman s desk The poem Versuch es by Wolfgang Borchert is set to music in the film and played as Dreyman writes the article about suicide Borchert was a playwright whose life was destroyed by his experience of being drafted into the Wehrmacht in World War II and fighting on the Eastern Front See also editList of films featuring surveillance Telephone tapping in the Eastern BlocReferences editNotes DAS LEBEN DER ANDEREN THE LIVES OF OTHERS British Board of Film Classification 27 November 2006 Retrieved 24 November 2012 a b c The Lives of Others 2007 Box Office Mojo Retrieved 7 July 2011 a b c Riding Alan 7 January 2007 Behind the Berlin Wall Listening to Life The New York Times Retrieved 27 July 2007 Ash Timothy 31 May 2007 The Stasi on Our Minds The New York Review of Books 54 9 Retrieved 17 November 2014 It was therefore with particular interest that I recently sat down to watch The Lives of Others this already celebrated film about the Stasi made by a West German director who was just sixteen when the Berlin Wall came down Director s Statement Sony Retrieved 17 August 2007 Ein Oscar aus Heiligenkreuz Heiligenkreuz in German Archived from the original on 13 February 2012 Retrieved 2 December 2019 a b Fundler Anna 5 May 2007 Tyranny of Terror The Guardian London Ways of Seeing Surveillance Observation and the Lives of Others Fashion x Film The Lives of Others The Lives of Others at Rotten Tomatoes The Lives of Others Metacritic Elley Derek 11 June 2006 The Lives of Others Daily Variety Retrieved 17 August 2007 Corliss Richard The 10 Best Movies Time magazine 24 December 2007 Page 40 Corliss Richard 9 December 2007 The 10 Best Movies time com Retrieved 7 June 2019 Ebert Roger 21 September 2007 The Lives of Others Chicago Sun Times Retrieved 14 July 2010 Scott A O 9 February 2007 A Fugue for Good German Men The New York Times Retrieved 17 August 2007 Turan Kenneth 1 December 2006 The Lives of Others Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 9 May 2007 Retrieved 17 August 2007 Podhoretz John 25 July 2007 Ulrich Muhe RIP National Review Online Retrieved 17 August 2007 Buckley William F Jr 23 May 2007 Great Lives National Review Online Retrieved 17 August 2007 Miller John 23 February 2009 The Best Conservative Movies National Review Online Retrieved 19 August 2009 a b Zacharek Stephanie 9 February 2007 The Lives of Others Salon com Retrieved 17 August 2007 Rosenblatt Josh 2 March 2007 The Lives of Others Austin Chronicle Retrieved 17 August 2007 Schwarzbaum Lisa 2 February 2007 Movie Review The Lives of Others 2007 Entertainment Weekly Retrieved 17 August 2007 Why Dictators Fear Artists 2007 First Things 23 July 2007 Retrieved 24 August 2007 Biermann Wolf 29 March 2006 The ghosts are leaving the shadows signandsight Retrieved 7 June 2019 The 21st century s 100 greatest films BBC 23 August 2016 Retrieved 8 November 2016 Warum ich meinen Namen aus Das Leben der Anderen loschen liess Why I had my name deleted from The Lives of Others Suddeutsche Zeitung in German 24 January 2019 2007 Film Critic Top Ten Lists Metacritic Archived from the original on 2 January 2008 Retrieved 5 January 2008 Germain David Christy Lemire 27 December 2007 No Country for Old Men earns nod from AP critics Columbia Daily Tribune Associated Press Archived from the original on 3 January 2008 Retrieved 31 December 2007 a b c The self perception of Europeans in comparison with the perception of other countries Goethe Institute Goethe Institute Archived from the original on 5 July 2013 Retrieved 7 June 2019 EUROPE LIST On the search for a European culture National results Goethe Institute Archived from the original on 5 July 2013 Retrieved 7 June 2019 Weinsteins keep sight of Mirage Variety 28 February 2007 Retrieved 8 August 2011 Lives of Others set for Hollywood remake The Guardian 1 March 2007 Retrieved 17 August 2007 Carr David 18 March 2008 Anthony Minghella Director Dies at 54 The New York Times Retrieved 8 August 2011 Cieply Michael 27 May 2008 Sydney Pollack Film Director Is Dead at 73 The New York Times Retrieved 8 August 2011 Rudoren Jodi 12 September 2014 Veterans of Elite Israeli Unit Refuse Reserve Duty Citing Treatment of Palestinians The New York Times Any Palestinian is exposed to monitoring by the Israeli Big Brother TheGuardian com 12 September 2014 European officials lash out at new NSA spying report CBS News AP 30 June 2013 Retrieved 7 June 2019 Friedman Brad 14 June 2013 Daniel Ellsberg Edward Snowden is a patriot Retrieved 7 June 2019 Hoffmann Sheila Weller 15 July 2013 What should Edward I m a brave martyr but I wanna go home Snowden do now The Washington Post quote sarfaraz Sarfraz Manzoor Retrieved 18 August 2013 Brad Thor Lives of Others Brad Thor Retrieved 18 August 2013 a b How Snowden s Revelations Saved Sarkozy The New Yorker 17 April 2014 Nickerson Colin 29 May 2006 German film prompts open debate on Stasi A forbidden topic captivates nation The Boston Globe Ulrich Muhe Obituary The Telegraph 27 July 2007 Retrieved 30 November 2012 Bibliography Paul Cooke ed The Lives of Others and Contemporary German Film A Companion De Gruyter Berlin Boston 2013 ISBN 978 3 11 026810 2 John Hamilton musician scholar Conspiracy Security and Human Care in Donnersmarck s Leben der Anderen Historical Social Research Vol 38 2013 No 1 pp 129 141 Article in the Boston Globe about the film s political impact in Germany Interview in indieWIRE with Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck about the film Directing The Lives of Others audio a February 2007 Fresh Air interview Teaching material from digischool nlExternal links editOfficial website The Lives of Others at IMDb nbsp The Lives of Others at AllMovie The Lives of Others at Box Office Mojo The Lives of Others at Rotten Tomatoes The Lives of Others at Metacritic nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Lives of Others amp oldid 1226046466, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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