August 22, 2009

The Reader (2008)

The situation one puts himself or herself in to watch The Reader is an interesting one. You know going in that this is not going to be a lighthearted film. Its story is connected to the Holocaust (although it is not a "Holocaust movie") and that's never a happy thing. On top of that it can be hard to connect to the characters for the first hour or so.

Just as I was considering dismissing the film, I found myself hooked and tied to the two main characters and they didn't let me go until the end.

One day on his way home in 1950s Berlin, Michael Berg (David Kross) falls ill. He is taken care of by a stranger who sees to it that he makes it home ok. Several months later he has recovered and goes to thank her. He finds her beautiful and mysterious and can't help but be drawn to her. Her name is Hanna Schmitz, she works on a tram, and that's mainly all we get to know about her for quite some time.

Even though Hanna is several years older than Michael, they embark on a romantic affair which ends up containing a routine in which she makes him read to her. One day Michael goes to her apartment and finds she's packed up and left. Several years later she's back in his life again. Now he's a law student and he's attending the trial of several female former Nazi prison guards. Hanna happens to be one of them. While Michael is dumbstruck about this revelation he makes another that could have a serious outcome on her sentencing. But the question is whether he will speak up or not.

Kate Winslet won an Oscar for her role as Hanna, a woman who suddenly becomes more human right in front of our eyes. The off-putting disposition Winslet buries into at the beginning (the same that played into my wanting to give up on the movie) is what allows her to really showcase the transition as she opens up a little and fights internal battles that play out on her face. Ralph Fiennes is also in the film as "present-day" Michael demonstrating a closed-off nature that much mirrors the one presented earlier by Winslet.

No spoiling of the ending will take place here, but I will say this: Watch it with someone you care about. You'll need a hug when it's over.

Rating: 4/5
Recommended for: Those looking for a film about human nature.

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