Your Company
 

Before the Fall(Napola – Elite für den Führer)

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Germany · 2004
1h 57m
Director Dennis Gansel
Starring Max Riemelt, Tom Schilling, Devid Striesow, Joachim Bißmeier
Genre Drama

In 1942, Friedrich Weimer's boxing skills get him an appointment to a National Political Academy (NaPolA) – high schools that produce Nazi elite. Over his father's objections, Friedrich enrolls. During his year in seventh column,Friedrich encounters hazing, cruelty, death, and the Nazi code. His friendship with Albrecht, the ascetic son of the area's governor, is central to this education.

We hate to say it, but we can't find anywhere to view this film.

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

40

Village Voice by

The movie is too middlebrow to show us the superman-type sexual heroics they must've engaged in, or even allow the illicit subtext to float to the surface (as Sokurov does in Father and Son)--instead we get tepid moralizing on dehumanization in the military.

50

Variety by Eddie Cockrell

An intermittently gripping story about an idealistic young boxer who becomes disillusioned with the Third Reich during his elite training, Napola is finally KO'd by an overdose of Nazi fetishism.

63

New York Daily News by Jack Mathews

The homoerotic relationship between Friedrich and Albrecht is stopped short by tragedy, but the point is made - to Friedrich and the audience - that fascism has no room for humanity.

75

TV Guide Magazine by Ken Fox

All the paraphernalia so important to the image of the Reich, particularly the uniforms, are painstakingly rendered, bringing a heightened sense of realism to what might otherwise have been a romantic coming-of-age tale.

70

The A.V. Club by Nathan Rabin

It's an emotionally chilly movie with a blank, inexpressive protagonist, but it gains cumulative force en route to a viscerally moving climax.

75

New York Post by V.A. Musetto

Gansel based the film on the memories of one of his grandfathers. The acting is believable; the photography, atmospheric; and the moral, unmistakable.

Users who liked this film also liked