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The Reader (2008) Certificate 15


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The Reader

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Rated 4.0 stars
Average rating
(75%)
 
Starring: Kate Winslet | Ralph Fiennes | Bruno Ganz | Karoline Herfurth | Linda Bassett | Hannah Herzsprung | Susanne Lothar | David Kross | Volker Bruch | Matthias Habich
Director: Stephen Daldry
Studio: ENTERTAINMENT IN VIDEO
Run time: 122 mins
Collections: 100 Most Wanted
Genres: Drama | Romance
Languages: English
Released: May 25, 2009
Also available on: Also Available on: blu_ray

In postwar Germany, a young man’s decades-long obsession with an older woman runs headlong into a war crimes trial, where he learns an awful truth.

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Rating of 4 stars out of 5
Time Out

Ralph Fiennes is Michael Berg, the present-day narrator of this film and Bernard Schlinks 1995 novel, a middle-aged...

Highest rated reviews

156 out of 157 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4 stars
brilliantly acted, thought provoking

Julia Davison from Westcliff, Essex, 9th January, 2009

An excellent film which is quintessentially a powerful love story set in post-war Germany between a woman and a young (very young!) man. Their affair ends abruptly but their lives join once more many years later under very different circumstances. This film is very thought provoking and the viewpoint of the older vs younger generation on the atrocitites that happened during the war is very noticeable. I really enjoyed this film and thought about it long after viewing. Well worth watching.

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33 out of 36 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4 stars
The Reader

A Customer from Billericay, 13th January, 2009

David Hare and Stephen Daldry, the team responsible for the masterpiece 'The Hours' now go even darker with this period drama set in post-WWII Germany. In an articulate and compelling screenplay, Hare brings to life the controversial novel by Bernhard Schlink, in which bus conductor Hannah Schmitz (Kate Winslet) starts to romance a 15 year old school boy, Micheal (David Kross). This romance has a strange routine to it. He arrives at her flat, undresses, reads to her - passages from his school books, the classics or holiday guides - then they make love. This grows into a passionate and meaningful sexual relationship between them, as he starts to sacrifice spending time with his friends and family, in order to go to Hannah's apartment for their afternoon routine. This results in some frank, but well handled, sex scenes between the Michael and the woman twice his age. Then, unexpectedly, she disappears. He grows older, hurt by the sudden end to his new-found sexual desires and the love he had for Hannah grows into an ache. This leads him, moody and erratic, to take Law at university, thereby changing his surroundings and associates in order to forget the hurt. However, he does meet Hannah again, but in very different and shocking circumstances. There is no denying that the script's eloquence and intelligence are a gift to the actors, especially Kate Winslet, who builds on such wonderful dialogue with her usual excellence. As further plot revelations are uncovered, it may be hard for viewers to retain some sympathy for Hannah's character, but Winslet gives her such a high degree of humanity and depth it is impossible not to find Hannah Schmitz fascinating if not likable. It may be disconcerting to see the actors speaking in English with German accents, reading from English-language books, while things like street signs, public notices and even calendars remain written in German, but it doesn't spoil the mood of the piece, nor does it reduce its level of integrity or believability.

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26 out of 30 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 2 stars
well-polished expensive nothing

A Customer from Penrith, 16th January, 2009

Imagine that you are house-hunting. The estate agent hands you particulars of this new property that has everything on your list - spotless decor, quiet neighbourhood, the spaces, bathrooms, kitchen and family-friendly garden that you requested - but you hate it. It does nothing for your spirit but rather requires that you give it love instead of it being a positive factor in your life. That's what I felt about this film. It seems to say 'be impressed - this is heavyweight stuff. Love death and the holocaust - how not to be moved?' Well, sorry; for me it didn't work. Where was the magic of the cinema in this film? I wasn't moved, or shaken or stirred. I admired the professionalism and beautiful acting, but that wasn't enough.

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20 out of 22 people found the following review helpful:

*** May contain spoilers ***


Rated 0 stars
Unmitigated tosh

PedroK from , 1st March, 2009

While undoubtedly well crafted and technically accomplished, this film seeks to evoke sympathy for a character who remains seemingly more ashamed by illiteracy than the murder of scores of human beings. The sex scenes seem designed to make the audience better disposed toward Winslet's character in anticipation of her later exposure as an unrepentant Nazi and participant in mass-murder. Combine this with the Ralph Feinnes character who becomes devestated by facts that he could not have known about at the time and the film's general use of the holocaust to add thematic weight to the whole sorry tale and you have a film that is an insult to any thinking person

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Most recent reviews

Rated 5 stars
the reader

A Customer from wales, 20th November, 2009

thought provoking and unsettling, loved it.

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Rated 4 stars
The Reader

lutrasview from , 15th November, 2009

Some great acting and wonderful romantic story to start with, young man fantasising about an older woman, falls in love etc. then comes the war and their paths separate until he meets her in the war court trials and he faces great emotional turmoil in feelings for her and the atrocities of war, you may need to watch it twice as I did because I lost the plot the first time around as the stories got mixed up for me. Watching it again made a lot of sense, it's quite sad though I felt so beware.

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Rated 5 stars
The Reader

Chintan from , 14th November, 2009

Absolutely a brilliant film. Kate Winslet is at her best with a an excellent support of Ralph Fiennes. It is, in a way, a beautiful love story set in a tone of post-holocaust and the balance of both these aspects are managed very well in the film. The editing of the film is done very skilfully.

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Rated 4 stars
Interesting and thought provoking

A Customer from Norwich, 13th November, 2009

I rented this but when it turned up was confused as thought Leonardo was going to turn up in the film at some point. ( I also had Revolutionary road on my list) I found this film both moving and interesting to watch and thought the boy was a very talented actor. A really good film to watch. But I thought the film was very moving and sad at the end.

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