Downfall (2004) Movie Review
IMDB Rating: 8.3/10
Downfall (2004) Film Summary
In April 1945, Germany stood on the brink of defeat, with the Soviet Armies closing in from the west and south. In Berlin, the capital of the Third Reich, Adolf Hitler proclaims that Germany will still achieve victory and orders his Generals and advisers to fight to the last man.
“Downfall” explores these final days of the Reich, where senior German leaders (such as Himmler and Goring) began defecting from their beloved Fuhrer in an effort to save their own lives, while still others (such as Joseph Goebbels) pledged to die with Hitler. Hitler himself degenerates into a paranoid shell of a man, full of optimism one moment and suicidal depression the next. When the end finally does come and Hitler lies dead by his own hand, what is left of his military must find a way to end the killing that is the Battle of Berlin and lay down their arms in surrender.
User Reviews:
This magnificent film goes where no one else has dared to go to show us the last days of Adolf Hitler. The director, Oliver Hirshbiegel, working with a big cast, brings to life the madness of the last days of the monster, as observed by a young and impressionable secretary who witnessed most of the crisis.
At the beginning of the film, we watch as five young women are brought in to be interviewed by Hitler for a job as his personal secretary. Young Traudl Junge is selected. She is a pretty woman who is naive in many ways and probably had no inkling about the trip she was going to embark on.
The film captures the tragic figure of Hitler as everything caves in on him and his grand plans for victory. We watch a man at the beginning of the film who is still thinking he is in command of the German forces, but his authority has eroded as it becomes clear to the people under him that the war is lost and it will be a matter of time before they are defeated.
We watch the life of privilege the higher ups led inside the bunker. It was a fortification in which all comforts the regular Germans could not imagine existed. We get to know the people in Hitler’s inner circle.
The Goebbels, both Joseph and Magda, supporters of the regime, maintain the loyalty to the Fuhrer until the end.
The scene where Magda Goebbels murders her children is hard to take, and we keep sinking in our seats as we can’t believe such cruelty existed. In her narrow view of things, Magda must take her family with her to a death these children didn’t deserve.
The film is totally dominated by Bruno Ganz. As Hitler, he makes us see
this man as he probably was in real life. Mr. Ganz’s uncanny resemblance with Hitler is what makes the film works the way it does.
At times, Mr. Ganz is totally irrational, and at times, he is presented as a lost man who can’t see what he has done to Germany and to Europe and the world.
As Traudl Junge, the young secretary, Alexandra Maria Lara gives a subtle performance. She saw plenty inside the bunker and lived to tell it to the world. The other excellent performance is given by Corinna Harfouch, who, as Mrs. Goebbels, makes us cringe in horror because of what she is capable of doing.
Juliane Kohler, as Eva Braun, is an enigma. At times, she is presented as a carefree young woman who might have loved Hitler. Yet, we don’t ever know what made Eva Braun tick. Ulrich Matthes as Joseph Goebbels and Heino Ferch as Albert Speer are equally effective as these two men.
The director and his team have to be congratulated for taking us on a voyage to see the last moments of the Third Reich.