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Amnesia

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Switzerland, France · 2015
1h 36m
Director Barbet Schroeder
Starring Max Riemelt, Marthe Keller, Bruno Ganz, Corinna Kirchhoff
Genre Drama

In this film exploring the reactions of three generations of Germans to the horrific crimes of Nazi Germany, a young composer moves from Berlin to the island of Ibiza. There, he becomes friends with an elderly woman whose painful past has caused her to reject everything to do with Germany, including her native language.

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What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

50

Village Voice by

Under Schroeder’s direction, Keller and Riemelt deliver wistful, earnest performances that almost make up for the script’s shortcomings.

88

RogerEbert.com by Glenn Kenny

It is reported that this movie’s scenario was inspired by the life of Schroeder’s own mother, and the film has a personal tone that is not always detectable in his other movies. It enhances a film that’s one of the most thoughtful in his body of work.

50

The New York Times by Manohla Dargis

Amnesia, Mr. Schroeder has said, is a story partly based on his mother, who refused to speak German, so perhaps it’s no surprise that it’s strongest when it focuses on Martha, a character Ms. Keller inhabits gracefully.

70

Los Angeles Times by Michael Rechtshaffen

While its insights into the consequences of selective memory loss continue to resonate the world over, at its heart, Amnesia is a beautifully acted depiction of confronting regret.

58

The A.V. Club by Mike D'Angelo

Schroeder was reportedly inspired to make Amnesia as a tribute to his mother, who left Germany not long after the Nazis came to power and never wanted to return; he even shot the film in the house where she lived for many years (which was also a major location in his 1969 debut, More). But neither he nor his co-writers managed to prevent their ostensible subtext from swamping the text.

50

Movie Nation by Roger Moore

Fresh insights are rare and dramatic moments rarer in Barbet Schroeder’s meditation on Germans forgiving themselves for the Holocaust, Amnesia.

60

Variety by Scott Foundas

There are a lot of compelling ideas afloat in “Amnesia” that never fully congeal, but the undeniable sincerity and personal commitment of Schroeder’s vision help to carry the film over its rough patches.

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