Hinter Kaifeck
Hinter Kaifeck
| 06 February 2009 (USA)
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Reviews
Horst in Translation ([email protected])

"Hinter Kaifeck" is the so far last theatrical release directed by German Esther Gronenborn. It stars Benno Fürmann and Alexandra Maria Lara and is a mystery story set in a small German town. Father and son, with a passion for photography, come to this place and meet the crime scene where a whole family was murdered decades ago. All the townsfolk are reluctant to talk to them about what happened except one female who also offers them a place to stay in her hotel.There are many references about premonitions, visions and nightmare dreams and the atmosphere created at the start of the film is only sufficient to keep the audience attracted for 30 minutes at best. The story is just pretty weak all in all and the acting from the protagonists isn't particularly captivating either. Yet to see a movie where Fürmann really wows me, although he is not as bad here as he is in some of his other works. Most of the swampy landscape scenes are pretty meager and there are also some devil references. I did not understand why he would not simply leave the place when he realizes his son's life may be in danger, not to mention his own. And same can be said for Lara's character near the end when she does not join the two and flee from this cursed place.The film runs for under 90 minutes, but nonetheless it felt occasionally as if it dragged to me. The visual side and atmosphere just cannot make up for all its other deficits. It's the mix of a poor man's version of "The Suixth Sense" that meets the poor man's version of "Where the Wild Things Are". The people in furry costumes felt pretty ridiculous to me, and not in a good way. Basically, it's the epitome of "style over substance, so I cannot recommend watching it. Not even the fact that it is very loosely based on a true story makes it particularly interesting with that execution.

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Herbert Heart

The movie is about repression of guild (and how it will continue to haunt you) in a tiny place in deepest Bavaria, well supported by the local rituals (which are authentic, I guess, at least I have seen similar masquerades and "devil expulsions" in Austria). At times the movie reminded me of "Angel Heart" - but situated in the blackwood forest. And the revelation is different, and - as the currently only other reviewer stated - it may be a bit too far fetched. However, this did not stop my enjoyment of the film.Acting is flawless, Benno Fürmann is Germany's top crop and Alexandra Maria Lara (played Hitler's secretary "Traudl" in "Der Untergang") is gorgeous but still manages to fit into the image of the Hinterwädler. Thankfully the movie never looses its focus for some superfluous romance.Not that I do not like many Hollywood productions, but this one clearly is a different breed, without being super-artistic like Hanekes "The White Ribbon" which I loved, too, and which is more profound - but also less entertaining, at least for me.I think a fair rating for "Hinter Kaifeck" is 7.9. I rate it 9 just for some offset.

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Alison

Marc Barenberg (Benno Furmann, with intense steely blue eyes reminiscent of Daniel Craig) is a 30-something father of young (10-ish) Tyll (Henry Strange), from whom he's been estranged since his marriage broke up. A photographer, Marc takes Tyll out on assignment with him, to find and photograph quaint Bavarian folkways; together, the bored Tyll and exasperated Marc find the village of Kaifeck, which holds an annual festival between Christmas and Epiphany, during which villagers dress up as monsters and chase the devil away for another year. An ideal setting for Marc's assignment, and Tyll finds the tales of the monsters very interesting too; soon, they are set up in a converted barn that intrepid villager Juliana (Alexandra Maria Lara) has renovated as a guest house, although her mother Alma (Erni Mangold) disapproves and ancient grandmother Martha (Monika Hansen) seems unsure about the whole scheme - but not about Marc, when she sees him; "I knew you'd come," she croons, stroking his face. Once settled in, Marc starts having discomforting nightmares about a farmhouse in the woods that surround the village - a farmhouse now deserted and crumbling, but once the scene of a vile mass murder of an entire family 80 years previously, the perpetrator having never been found and the skulls of the victims having mysteriously vanished. Rumour has it that among the dead is a small baby, the product of incest between the father and eldest daughter of the clan, but that has never been proved....Why is Marc having these dreams about this ancient evil? More, why is he waking up to find himself at the abandoned farmhouse? What do the villagers know that they're not telling him? Why does Martha seem so familiar to him, and why is he so worried that young Tyll might be in danger in this place? The answers to all of those questions lie squarely in the past, a past that refuses to stay buried....I had a few problems with this film, but first the good stuff: the acting is very strong (especially Furmann in the lead role, I quite believed his growing paranoia and determination) and the film is wonderfully atmospheric - it being winter in Bavaria, there's no snow on the ground, but plenty of fog rolling in, and loads of bare woods that seem trackless and threatening without doing anything more than existing. But the Big Reveal - which I won't give away here - was just a tad unbelievable to me, and without believing in that particular piece of information, the film loses its cohesion. It's a very spare film, barely 86 minutes long, which means there's no filler, but the last 20 minutes or so just strained my credulity to the point where I can't quite give this a whole-hearted recommendation. Definitely a work of art in terms of atmosphere and setting, but for me the story needed one more rewrite to make the ending work.

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