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Good Bye Lenin!
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Directed by Wolfgang Becker.
A dedicated young German boy pulls off an elaborate scheme to keep his mother in good health in this comedy drama from director Wolfgang Becker. Suffering a heart attack and falling into a coma after seeing her son arrested during a protest, Alex's (Daniel Brühl) socialist mother, Christiane (Katrin Sass), remains comatose through the fall of the Berlin wall and the German Democratic Republic. Knowing that the slightest shock could prove fatal upon his mother's awakening, Alex strives to keep the fall of the GDR a secret for as long as possible. Keeping their apartment firmly rooted in the past, Alex's scheme works for a while, but it's not long before his mother is feeling better and ready to get up and around again. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Coca-Cola Cinema
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
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"This morning I was watching Billy Wilder’s One, Two, Three (see, readers, I do know movies before 1990), and it made me wonder if Coca-Cola is the most cinematic commercial product in the history of film. Not the most prominent in film, necessarily (in terms of either direct product placement or more casual indirect appearance,) but at least the most significant to film. After all, Coca-Cola did own a movie studio (Columbia Pictures) for the greater part of a decade (the 1980s). In addition to One, Two, Three, which is about a Coca-Cola executive in West Berlin, the soft drink figures specifically in and fundamentally to the plots of The Gods Must Be Crazy, Good Bye Lenin! and, obviously, The Coca-Cola Kid. But primarily, such direct incorporations of the brand are more about their connection to the U.S. and capitalism than they are to the actual product of soda. Even when Superman throws a bad guy at a giant Coca-Cola billboard in Superman II, the brand comes with a connotation of ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
On the face of it, Good Bye Lenin!'s premise -- a young adult son just about managing to keep the collapse of the East German regime (and the Berlin Wall) secret from his ailing mother -- is preposterous. In lesser hands, it would be prone to cheap, unfunny laughs and, worse, insensitivity to the subtleties of massive political and cultural change. Remarkably, the film totally avoids those pitfalls to create a moving work that deftly balances not just comedy and drama, but also the political and the personal. Although the scenario strains credibility, it's done with enough finesse to make it easy for viewers to suspend disbelief, much as the dying mother does despite mounting evidence that not all is what it seems. Much of the amusement comes from Daniel Brühl's increasingly desperate attempts to maintain a pre-Wall facade, which finds him stooping to rooting through the garbage for old pickle jars and filming fake news broadcasts in order to keep up appearances. Along the way are pretty witty jabs at both socialism and capitalism, which finds the family, and even some national heroes and school children, scampering for new jobs and side scams in the onrush of free enterprise. Yet some ways into this satire, Good Bye Lenin! becomes something more than a mere farce. It's also an examination of how the Cold War tore apart this family in particular, with long-buried secrets finally coming to light in a manner that mirrors how long-repressed desires for social freedom were finally getting expressed in 1990 East Germany, with similar attendant pains and ambiguity. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Movie Guide
 



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