Time Out London by Cath Clarke
It works and then some, making for a noirish and complex emotional thriller. And Hoss is incredible, playing Nelly with the shuffling gait and haunted expression of a dead woman walking.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Germany, Poland · 2014
Rated PG-13 · 1h 38m
Director Christian Petzold
Starring Nina Hoss, Ronald Zehrfeld, Nina Kunzendorf, Trystan Pütter
Genre Drama
Please login to add films to your watchlist.
Nellie is a concentration-camp survivor who is unrecognizable after facial reconstruction surgery. She returns to Berlin in order to find her estranged husband, Johnny. Her goal becomes clear: she must figure out whether he betrayed her to the Nazis or not.
Time Out London by Cath Clarke
It works and then some, making for a noirish and complex emotional thriller. And Hoss is incredible, playing Nelly with the shuffling gait and haunted expression of a dead woman walking.
A gripping study of treachery, identity and survival.
Hoss' portrayal of a woman at odds with her surroundings is in a class by itself.
Slant Magazine by James Lattimer
Christian Petzold never luxuriates in all this film history, but rather channels the artifice and affect it embodies into new insights.
Petzold's Phoenix is a high-concept premise executed as a heart-wrenching character piece.
The Hollywood Reporter by Jordan Mintzer
Both a powerful allegory for post-war regeneration and a rich Hitchcockian tale of mistaken identity, Phoenix once again proves that German filmmaker Christian Petzold and his favorite star, Nina Hoss, are clearly one of the best director-actor duos working in movies today.
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Nathalie Atkinson
With a riveting performance-within-a-performance of subtle physicality by Nina Hoss, the charade in which a woman plays her own doppelganger certainly borrows tension, look and conventions from postwar film noir.
The Playlist by Nikola Grozdanovic
Petzold distills a familiar atmosphere to create a work veiled in vibrant, cohesive, sensitively stimulating power.
Because Petzold is such a gifted storyteller, with the lean, driving narrative sense of the film noir masters, he also keeps those twists and turns chugging smoothly along, building to a climax so expertly orchestrated that one imagines he started with it in mind and worked the rest of the movie backward from there.
Village Voice by Stephanie Zacharek
The director's last film was the superb 2012 Barbara, also starring Hoss and Zehrfeld, another romance with a mystery built in; Phoenix is an even finer piece of work, so beautifully made that it comes close to perfect.
During World War II, a German woman named Maria struggles to live and to love.
Childhood friends Eun-Suh and Jung-Soo reunite by chance and rekindle their relationship as adults.
Who lit the fuse that tore Harold's world apart?
In The African Heat, One Woman Stands Alone.
A Story of Love and Subterfuge with Simmering Intelligence.
Every family has a story.
Ryota Nonomiya learns that his biological son was switched with another child after birth, and he must make a life-changing decision,
Everything is in his power.
The gods are amongst us
The Russian Avant-Garde, a century on
Georg, after assuming the identity of a dead writer, meets Marie — the wife of the man whose identity he stole.
Probably the greatest performance of the 2010s is in this film by Nina Hoss