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Stefan Zweig: Farewell to Europe(Vor der Morgenröte)

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Austria, Germany, France · 2016
1h 46m
Director Maria Schrader
Starring Josef Hader, Barbara Sukowa, Aenne Schwarz, Matthias Brandt
Genre Drama, History

In 1936, the Jewish writer Stefan Zweig flees Nazi Germany for Brazil. The jetset of Rio de Janeiro expects him to denounce Germany, but he cannot blame all German people for Nazism. As he struggles to define his feelings for his home country, he falls in love with Brazil, and plans a book about his new home.

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What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

90

Village Voice by

Aenne Schwarz and Barbara Sukowa give strong performances as the author’s second and first wives, respectively, but this is Hader’s movie. His is one of the great performances of recent years.

63

Washington Post by Alan Zilberman

"Farewell to Europe” is a little like Zweig himself: smart, overly fastidious and remote to a fault. By avoiding Zweig’s inner life, his eventual collapse seems all the more perfunctory.

90

The Hollywood Reporter by Boyd van Hoeij

Much of the feature’s quietly accumulated emotional power derives from the fact that viewers have to connect some of the dots themselves. Indeed, just like in the subject’s own work, the imagination of the audience is as important an ingredient for the final result as what is actually written or suggested.

63

Slant Magazine by Clayton Dillard

The film hovers between being a straight-up biopic of Zweig and a diagnosis of neoliberalism's recent ceding to neofascist policy and nationalistic fervor.

70

The New York Times by Glenn Kenny

One need not admire Zweig’s writing to recognize the worth of this thoughtful treatment of one of the countless real-life tragedies of 20th-century history.

60

Variety by Guy Lodge

This articulate, formally immaculate portrait proves less compelling in practice than it does in principle: Over-burdened at the outset with extraneous ceremonial detail and starchy speechifying, the film takes a dry, acolytes-only approach before later, more domestically focused chapters raise the body temperature of proceedings.

90

Los Angeles Times by Kenneth Turan

"Stefan Zweig" is only Schrader's second film as a director, but, armed with clear ideas of what she wanted to convey and how she wanted to convey it, she's made a movie that allows its actors to fully inhabit their characters in a potent but low-key way.

75

IndieWire by Michael Nordine

Schrader’s direction is unobtrusive but agile, as though she considers it her duty to provide a cinematic soapbox for Zweig and politely exit the spotlight.

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