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DVD / VIDEO
Title The lives of others [videorecording] = Leben der anderen / Weidemann & Berg Productions present ; a film by Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck.
Published [Surry Hills, N.S.W.] : Hopscotch Entertainment, [2007].

ITEM LOCATION CALL NO. STATUS
 GIP Multimedia  791.4372 L785.3 2007    AVAILABLE
 SMB Multimedia  943.10877 L267ot    AVAILABLE
Descript. 1 videodisc (133 minutes) : sound, colour ; 4 3/4 inches
Contents DVD extras: The making of 'The lives of others' ; feature audio commentary ; deleted scenes with audio commentary.
Notes Classification: MA 15+ (Not suitable for people under 15. Under 15s must be accompanied by a parent or adult guardian). Consumer Advice: Strong sexual references. OFLC Australia.
Credits Writer, director, Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck.
Cast Martina Gedeck (Christa-Maria Sieland), Ulrich Mühe (Hauptmann Gerd Wiesler), Sebastian Koch (Georg Dreyman), Ulrich Tukur (Oberstleutnant Anton Grubitz), Thomas Thieme (Minister Bruno Hempf), Hans-Uwe Bauer (Paul Hauser), Volkmar Kleinert (Albert Jerska), Matthias Brenner (Karl Wallner), Charly Hübner (Udo), Herbert Knaup (Gregor Hessenstein), Bastian Trost (Häftling 227), Marie Gruber (Frau Meineke), Volker Michalowski (Schriftexperte).
Summary "A potent narrative about the transformative effect of involvement in other people's stories, 'The Lives Of Others' turns its own story into a python-tight embrace of nuanced tension and emotional connection. It convincingly demonstrates that when done right, moral and political quandaries can be the most intensely dramatic dilemmas of all. Director Von Donnersmarck has set his film in the East Germany of 1984, five years before the Berlin Wall collapsed. It was a time when the terrifying Stasi, the secret police, made it their business to use an extensive network of spies and surveillance to know every secret thing about their citizens. Unlike other German films, most notably 2004's landmark 'Goodbye, Lenin', nostalgia is far from Von Donnersmarck's thoughts. Instead this is an inside look at how a surveillance society, set up to discover and prey upon human weakness, has the ability to make everyone a potential suspect and destroy everything it touches.
"'The Lives of Others' does all this beautifully, but it is too well-acted a film, too meticulously plotted and carefully directed, to be satisfied with that alone. It's also finally too smart to be content with telling anything like a familiar story. Instead it places its key characters in high-stakes predicaments where what they are forced to wager is their talent, their very lives, even their souls. Introduced first is Stasi Capt. Gerd Wiesler (immaculately played by Ulrich Muhe), someone we recognize, or think we do, as one of the worst of the worst, a soulless servant of the state shown both interrogating an overmatched prisoner and passing on his manipulative techniques to the next generation of secret police. Bruno Hempf, a high-ranking powerful minister with a wandering eye, and used to exploiting his position to eliminate rivals in politics or love, takes a fancy to Christa-Maria Sieland (Martina Gedeck), a beautiful, popular and very attractive actress.
"She is living with one of the country's most popular - and loyal - playwrights, Georg Dreyman (Sebastian Koch). However, the couple's apparently safe little world is about to be turned upside down, when Hempf puts Wiesler - the Zen master of surveillance techniques, a man who wouldn't hesitate to wiretap his own mother - on the job. With Wiesler dispassionately listening in, we get to know the playwright and his actress better, get to see their worries about being able to do meaningful work in a restrictive society. When you wiretap as conscientiously as Wiesler, you learn all sorts of things, perhaps even things you weren't supposed to know. He gathers information that hints at unsuspected motives behind the wiretapping. He also comes to increasingly empathize with the couple he spends so much time eavesdropping on, leading to complex and shattering results.
"As 'The Lives of Others' intricate plot unfolds and the acting takes hold in the most vivid way, as the line between survival and self-destruction becomes hard to see, the story's protagonists play increasingly dangerous double and triple games with each other. When the cracks begin to show, Wiesler's loneliness grows, and the hollowness inside his heart practically explodes. His journey toward self-awareness is fascinating, inspiring, even empowering." --Hopscotch.
Sys Details DVD-video; Region 4; Dolby digital 5.1 surround; aspect ratio 2.35:1 anamorphic; PAL.
Language In German with English subtitles.
Awards Notes Winner, Oscar (Academy Awards), 2007: Best Foreign Language Film of the Year.
Subject Germany (East). Ministerium für Staatssicherheit -- Drama.
Censorship -- Germany (East) -- Drama.
Internal security -- Germany (East) -- Drama.
Man-woman relationships -- Germany (East) -- Drama.
Politics and literature -- Germany (East) -- Drama.
Suicide -- Germany (East) -- Drama.
Suicide -- Germany (East) -- Sociological aspects.
State governments -- Public relations -- Germany (East).
Feature films -- Germany.
Foreign films.
Thrillers (Motion pictures)
Other Author Henckel von Donnersmarck, Florian, 1973-
Weidemann & Berg Productions
ISBN 9398710732498 (DVD)
ISBN/ISSN HOP0229 Hopscotch Entertainment
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