The Reader (2008) [Blu-ray]
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close  The Reader (2008) [Blu-ray]
Rated:  R 
Starring: Ralph Fiennes, Kate Winslet, Jeanette Hain, Bruno Ganz, David Kross.
Director: Stephen Daldry
Genre: girl
DVD Release Date: 04/28/2009

Academy Award winner Kate Winslet (Revolutionary Road) delivers a dynamic performance in this "tale of eroticism, secrecy and guilt" (Claudia Puig, USA Today) set in turbulent post-Nazi Germany. Bringing to life the celebrated international novel, Winslet is riveting as Hanna Schmitz - a lonely, working class woman who experiences a brief but intense affair with a teenage boy. Years later they meet again: Hanna now a defendant in a notorious case and her ex-lover, now a law student, holding the secret to her salvation. Directed by three-time Academy Award nominee Stephen Daldry (Billy Elliot, The Hours) and featuring Ralph Fiennes (The Duchess) as the grown man still reeling from Hanna's influence, The Reader is a "moving romantic and poignant story" (Roger Friedman, Fox News) about different distance between truth and reconciliation.

Cast Notes: Ralph Fiennes (Michael Berg), Jeanette Hain (Brigitte), David Kross (Young Michael Berg), Kate Winslet (Hanna Schmitz), Susanne Lothar (Carla Berg), Alissa Wilms (Emily Berg), Florian Bartholomäi (Thomas Berg), Friederike Becht (Angela Berg), Matthias Habich (Peter Berg), Frieder Venus (Doctor), Marie-Anne Fliegel (Hanna's Neighbor), Hendrik Arnst (Woodyard Worker), Rainer Sellien (Teacher), Torsten Michaelis (Sports Master), Moritz Grove (Holger).

User Comment: The_Film_Addict from El Paso, Texas, 8 January 2009 • There's an urgency in human nature to understand. When it comes to the Holocaust, history's bleak, unsettling period, it doesn't matter what book you've read, film you've seen or account you've heard; in the end, your response it halted by its incomprehensible conclusion. How could humanity course its way towards such a violent, destructive path? How could people knowingly send men, women, and children to their impending doom? Most puzzling, how could the world allow it? Even though its been 63 years since the blood-drenched annals of World War II, its aftermath today is still bone chilling.

After a six year celluloid dry spell, Stephen Daldry returns to the director's chair in a brilliant, sexually charged, and oddly heartbreaking tale about the complexity of human morality and the lifelong repercussions that result from our actions. Adapted from Bernhard Schlink's best-selling German novel, "The Reader," Daldry's visual translation is a powerful, emotionally absorbing film that is one of the year's best. It's superbly crafted.

With World War II over, Germany, in 1958, is still recovering. Deep within Heidelberg, Germany, Michael (David Kross), a young pubescent teenager haven fallen ill, is comforted by Hanna (Kate Winslet), a hard working woman who is twice his age. Taken by her generosity, Michael revisits Hanna to offer his gratitude. What begins as an awkward reunion escalates into a seductive, forbidden affair that intensifies when Michael begins reading to the distant, empty Hanna, who is deeply awakened by Michael's spoken literature. Too young to understand love's complicated implications, Michael is emotionally devastated when Hanna suddenly disappears. Nearly a decade later, unable to forget his passionate summer while studying law, he attends a Nazi trail, and to his dismay, hears Hanna's distant voice.

"The Reader" is a complex film; maybe a little too complex for some. Though the film pertains to Nazism and the "sins of our fathers," in essence, "The Reader" is a film that reflects the emotions inside all of us. During a lecture, Michael's professor comments, "Societies like to think they operate on morality but they don't." In this cynical age, how far from reality is that statement? During Hanna's trial, she's questioned why she participated in the Nazi party's horrendous war crimes, broken she replies, "It was my job." Oddly enough, that seems to be the justification most people use. Surprisingly, though, "The Reader" isn't about her exposure as a war criminal, but an exposure on an individual who took the wrong path. She's not a bad person; she's simply made wrong choices. However, when it comes to having involvement in the Nazi's liquidation of the Jews, how "wrong" can you get? "You ask us to think like lawyers," cries on student, "what are we trying to do?" A distraught Michael replies, "We are trying to understand!" But, just who exactly is trying to grasp a deeper understanding: the court or Michael? How can Hanna's past be forgiven? Director Stephen Daldry brings the much needed emotional layer that a character such as Hanna Schmitz desperately needs. Although her actions are beyond unforgivable, strangely, we sympathize with her. Maybe it's her other shameful secret. Maybe it's superb character development.

"The Reader" is a film that is driven by it's raw performances. In one of her finest hours, Kate Winslet gives the performance of a lifetime. It's a haunting and heart-breaking. David Kross, who's only 18, is impressive as the teenager with raging hormones; it's such a daring performance. Winselt and Kross bring this picture together. Their performances are jaw-droppingly brilliant. Completing the role of Michael, as the tortured grown man, is Ralph Fiennes, who balances Michael's despair through his melancholic emotion when he encounters a grown Jewish woman, played by Lena Olin, who was also at Hanna's trail. Although her scenes clock in less than 10 minutes, Olin, too, is breathtaking.

When "The Reader's" credits rolled, I sat quietly shaken by what I had witnessed. It's a film that is impossible to forget. When a grown Michael asks Hanna, "Have you spent much time thinking about the past?" Heartbroken, she replies, "It doesn't matter what I think. It doesn't matter what I feel. The dead are still dead." She's right.

Summary: The Reader is a brilliant, sexually charged, and oddly heartbreaking tale about the complexity of human morality and the lifelong repercussions that result from our actions.

IMDb Rating (08/20/09): 7.7/10 from 32,740 users

Additional information
Copyright:  2008,  Weinstein Company
Features:  • Deleted Scenes
• Adapting A Timeless Masterpiece: Making Of
• A Conversation With David Kross & Stephen Daldry
• Kate Winslet On The Art Of Aging Hanna Schmitz
• A New Voice: A Look At Composer Nico Muhly
• Coming To Grips With The Past: Production Designer Brigitte Broch
• Theatrical Trailer
Subtitles:  English SDH, English, Spanish
Video:  Widescreen 1.78:1 Color
Screen Resolution: 1080p
Audio:  ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1
ENGLISH: Dolby TrueHD 5.1
FRENCH: Dolby Digital 5.1
Time:  2:04
DVD:  # Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1
UPC:  796019819596
Coding:  [V4.5-A5.0] MPEG-4 AVC
D-Box:  No
Other:  Producers: Sydney Pollack, Anthony Minghella, Donna Gigliotti, Redmond Morris; Directors: Stephen Daldry; Writers: David Hare; running time of 124 minutes; Packaging: HD Case.

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