Bastard
Bastard
| 22 January 2012 (USA)
Bastard Trailers

The nine-year-old Nikolas has been missing for days. The criminal psychologist Claudia Meinert notices contradictions in her conversation with the parents of the missing child. In particular Nikolas' mother appears to be hiding something. When a video of the missing Nikolas surfaces, showing him tied up in a cellar, the trail leads to his school. The 13-year-old Leon and Mathilda strike the psychologist as conspicuous and provocative. Shortly afterwards, Meinert encounters the children with Nikolas' parents at the local swimming pool and her suspicions are confirmed: the parents are entangled in an insidious father-mother-child game with the possible suspects Leon and Mathilda. Now it is up to the psychologist to resolve the dark mystery of Nikolas' disappearance and save the child.

Reviews
Ray Rocker

I just saw this movie (in OV= German)in German TV. This strongly psychotic plot needs a lot of conversation between the actors. And this is hard to understand! The young boy (Leon) is really not to understand in many important parts of the movie. I repeated some scenes twice and more - and could still not understand what this boy was talking. My wife had the same problems. Even many other actors are not to understand in some - possibly important - moments. This is the reason why this film is still quite unknown. Strong story - bad produced.

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Horst in Translation ([email protected])

I am actually a bit surprised that this 4-year-old movie is not more popular. The topic seems to be one for the broad masses and it has one of Germany's biggest movie stars in a lead role. Yet, it very much went under the radar. Martina Gedeck reunites here with Thomas Thieme from "Das Leben der Anderen". Hanns Zischler is also in this film, the rest of the cast is not too known. However, none of them are really bad. The two child actors do a good job, especially Lingemann, who won a truly prestigious award for her performance here. The film runs for roughly two hours and is the first full feature movie directed and written by Lars Unger, a good effort for being relatively new in the industry. Sadly, he has not made another movie in the last four years and there are no news on IMDb about upcoming projects.Actually, the girl was possibly the most interesting aspect about the movie. The boy was okay too, but when they included that whole storyline that the mother of the abducted boy is also the mother of the kidnapper, it got a bit weaker. I'd have preferred him to be a stone-cold psychopath, even if he was just a little boy. Occasionally this film reminded me of the far more popular "Funny Games" by Michael Haneke, only with younger criminals. Back to the girl, her final shot in this movie was pretty special. But there were some struggles as well. Looking at how she is in that spectacular roller-coaster, yet feels nothing makes me think that she is looking for thrills and the same idea comes when she is together with Leon as she is attracted by the danger that the kidnapping brings. But at the same time, she is looking for harmony, for a family that she does not have as her father is dead and her mother doesn't care about her. So, what is it she really wants? Speaking about Martina Gedeck's character, I was not too fond of her this time. The lighter scene was supposed to give us a deeper insight into her character, but it just isn't working. Same goes for the final shot of her giving Leon a hug in the face of the dead girl's body. This was really only because she was the star and so she had to be in an impactful last scene, I guess.I enjoyed watching these 120 minutes. They were by no means perfect (wow did the police mess up in this one so many times), but there were hardly no moments when it dragged and that is always an achievement for a film that runs for so long. It's good that this movie got released, even if it was delayed. Recommended.

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