Führer Ex

Führer Ex is a German neo-nazi drama film directed by Winfried Bonengel. It was entered into the 59th Venice International Film Festival.[1]

Führer Ex
Directed byWinfried Bonengel
Produced byLaurens Straub
Clementina Hegewisch
Rainer Mockert
Written by
Starring
  • Aaron Hildebrand
  • Christian Blümel
Music byLoek Dikker
Michael Beckmann
CinematographyFrank Barbian
Edited byMonika Schindler
Production
company
MBP (Germany)
Next Film
StudioCanal
Release date
August 31, 2002 (2002-08-31)
Running time
107 min.
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman
Budget€5 000 000

Plot

Hacky friends Heiko and Tommy dream of escaping from communist Berlin that has become disgusting to them. Attempting to cross the border leads them to jail. In contrast to the sluggish and closed Heiko, the experienced and courageous Tommy is already familiar with the harsh orders of the model prisons of the GDR, where neo-Nazi groups are in charge. Caught in this hell, where only the snitches and mad beasts survive, Heiko escapes, enlisting the friendship of a local fascist leader, and Tommy decides to desperately escape.

They were destined to see each other only four years later, in Berlin, where Heiko, who became a staunch Nazi, commanded a team of skinheads who had left the underground after the fall of the Wall.

Cast

Reviews

Encyclopedia of international Film

Exciting narrated feature film, which stimulates a critical examination of German past and present. Disturbing are his potential for violence as well as some theatrical and dramaturgical inadequacies; The motivations of the protagonists are not always convincingly developed.[3]

Tobias Kniebe, Süddeutsche Zeitung

'Führer Ex' is not a particularly clever or even elegant film. He achieves a directness that otherwise only B-films allow [...] 'Lack of differentiation', 'showmanship', 'one-dimensional characters', 'simplified schemata of cause and effect' — such and similar phrases are the two [Winfried Bonengel and Ingo Hasselbach] have heard so often, until the nausea made further conversations impossible [...] But it could be that Bonengel and Hasselbach, after years of dealing with right-wing youths, simply had no desire, a film for critics and television editors close. That they may have seen their audience elsewhere, on the street perhaps, and that they wanted to get into heads that the ruling discourse just can not reach,

References

  1. "59. Mostra Internazionale d'Arte Cinematografica — Fuori Concorso". labiennale.org (in Italian). Retrieved 11 June 2018.
  2. Christian Blümel at the actorscut.com
  3. Führer Ex at the Zweitausendeins
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