The Baader-Meinhof Complex

DVDfever.co.uk – The Baader-Meinhof Complex DVD reviewHelen M Jerome reviews

The Baader-Meinhof Complex
Distributed by
Momentum Pictures DVD:
DVD + Ltd Novel:

  • Cert:
  • Cat.no: MP827D
  • Running time: 143 minutes
  • Year: 2009
  • Pressing: April 2009
  • Region(s): 2, PAL
  • Sound: Dolby Digital 2.0
  • Languages: German
  • Subtitles: English
  • Widescreen: 1.85:1
  • 16:9-Enhanced: Yes
  • Macrovision: Yes
  • Disc Format: DVD 9
  • Price: £17.99
  • Extras: Making-of documentaries
  • Vote and comment on this DVD: View Comments

    Director:

      Uli Edel

Producers:

    Bernd Eichinger and Manuel Cuotemoc Malle

Writer:

    Bernd Eichinger

Music:

    Peter Hinderthur and Florian Tesslof

Cast:

    Andreas Baader: Moritz Bleibtreu
    Ulrike Meinhof: Martina Gedeck
    Gudrun Ensslin: Johanna Wokalek
    Horst Herold: Bruno Ganz


Never has there been such a rich, vital, utterly exciting time in German film-making, when the rules are constantly being rewritten and revised.,

First we had Downfall, Goodbye Lenin and The Lives of Others. Now, exploding onto DVD comes Uli Edel’s The Baader-Meinhof Complex. Shot with the narrative drive and tension of a thriller, but with documentary qualities that seem ripped from the headlines and footage of the day, this is the first real drama about the RAF – the Red Army Faction – an idealistic terrorist group known outside Germany as the Baader Meinhof Group.

Starting with two quick scenes, on a naturist beach, then a sixties party, it cuts to the big set-piece action as the Shah of Iran arrives at Berlin Opera House in 1967. And when Iranian students start beating up the German protestors, who get further pursued and assaulted by mounted police, batons, and water cannons, a handful of young, outraged protestors are radicalised. An extraordinarily brutal and brilliantly choreographed scene, meticulously recreating what really happened. The rest of the film follows the gang’s exploits as they grow in numbers, become more overtly violent, then murderous, before being hunted down by the likes of Horst Herold, beautifully played by Bruno Ganz.


Martina Gedeck (from The Lives Of Others) is the journalist mother who turns into an activist on the run. Moritz Bleibtreu invests all his easy charisma into the part of loose cannon Andreas Baader, who is always at boiling point. And Johanna Wokalek is the glamorous, unforgiving Gudrun Ensslin, the third cornerstone of the group. They are almost certainly the grooviest, coolest, flipping sexiest bunch of radicals you’ll ever watch – especially Bleibtreu’s Baader. And even though you know their crimes were heinous and their exploits bloody, it’s hard not to root for them – as you might with Bonnie and Clyde, or Butch and Sundance.

Director Uli Edel lived through the period, and wanted to convey all the intensity of that time – which is neglected in school history lessons, says Bleibtreu, but is one of the most important periods in post-war Germany. And this is where the wonderful set of extras on the DVD really add to the viewer’s experience. Through documentaries on the making of the movie, the director himself, and the film’s music, we follow the development of the film from the original 1985 book by Stefan Aust right up to the adding of layers of percussion on the soundtrack to give the necessary tribal feeling. And we learn that the violence, stress and terror of the plot were profoundly affecting and draining for the director and actors, but helped inform the composers’ compelling score. Intense is the word that keeps cropping up – and you can see it in all their faces.

There is only one tiny quibble about the whole DVD, and that is that the subtitles are too small for the small screen. Other than that, it’s a resounding cry of ‘wunderbar’. Recommended.


FILM
PICTURE
SOUND
EXTRAS


OVERALL
Review copyright © Helen M Jerome, 2009. View the discussion thread.blog comments powered by Disqus = 0) {query += ‘url’ + i + ‘=’ + encodeURIComponent(links[i].href) + ‘&’;}}document.write(”);})();//]]]]>]]>

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