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The Reader (2008 film)

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The Reader
Directed byStephen Daldry
Written byDavid Hare
Produced by-Anthony Minghella
-Sydney Pollack
Starring-Kate Winslet
-David Kross
-Ralph Fiennes
Cinematography-Chris Menges
-Roger Deakins
Edited byClaire Simpson
Music byNico Muhly
Distributed byThe Weinstein Company
Release date
December 10, 2008
Running time
124 minutes
Countries-Germany
-United Kingdom
-United States
LanguageEnglish
BudgetUS$32.0 million[citation needed]
Box officeUS$108.7 million[1][clarification needed]

The Reader is a 2008 drama film based on the German-language novel of the same name (1995) by Bernhard Schlink.

The film adaptation was written by David Hare and directed by Stephen Daldry. Ralph Fiennes and Kate Winslet star along with the young actor David Kross. It was the last film for film producers Anthony Minghella and Sydney Pollack, both of whom died before it was released. Production began in Germany in September 2007, and the film opened in limited release on December 10, 2008.

It tells the story of Michael Berg, a German lawyer who as a teenager in the late 1950s had an affair with an older woman, Hanna Schmitz, who then disappeared only to resurface years later as one of the defendants in a war-crimes trial stemming from her actions as a guard at a Nazi concentration camp in the later years of World War II. Michael realizes that Hanna is keeping a personal secret she believes is worse than her Nazi past — a secret which, if revealed, could help her at the trial.

Winslet and Kross, who played the young Michael, received much praise for their performances. Winslet won an Academy Award for Best Actress at the 81st Academy Awards, a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture, a BAFTA Award for Best Actress, a Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress for her role in the film. The film was also nominated for several other major awards including the Academy Award for Best Picture.

Plot

The Reader begins in 1995 Berlin, Germany, where Michael Berg (Ralph Fiennes) is preparing breakfast for a woman who has spent the night with him. After she leaves, Michael watches an S-Bahn train pass by, flashing back to a tram in 1958 Neustadt[disambiguation needed], Germany. A teenage Michael (Kross) gets off because he is feeling sick and wanders around the streets afterwards, finally pausing in the entryway of a nearby apartment building where he vomits. Hanna Schmitz (Winslet), the tram conductor, comes in and assists him in returning home.

File:Kate Winslet and David Kross in The Reader.jpg
Michael (Kross) reads to Hanna (Winslet).

Michael, diagnosed with scarlet fever, must rest at home for the next three months. After he recovers, he visits Hanna. The 36-year-old Hanna seduces and begins an affair with the 15-year-old boy. During their liaisons, at her apartment, he reads to her literary works he is studying, such as The Odyssey, The Lady with the Little Dog, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, and Tintin. After a bicycling trip, Hanna learns she is being promoted to a clerical job at the tram company. She abruptly moves without leaving a trace.

After seeing the adult Michael, a lawyer, the audience sees him (played again by Kross) at the Heidelberg University law school in 1966. As part of a special seminar taught by Professor Rohl (Bruno Ganz), a camp survivor, he observes a trial (similar to the Frankfurt Auschwitz Trials) of several women who were accused of letting 300 Jewish women die in a burning church when they were SS guards on the death march following the 1944 evacuation of Auschwitz. Hanna is one of the defendants.

Stunned, Michael visits a former camp himself. The trial divides the seminar, with one student angrily saying there is nothing to be learned from it other than that evil acts occurred and that the older generation of Germans should kill themselves for their failure to act then.

The key evidence is the testimony of Ilana Mather (Alexandra Maria Lara), author of a memoir of how she and her mother, who also testifies in court, survived. Hanna, unlike her fellow defendants, admits that Auschwitz was an extermination camp and that the ten women she chose during each month's Selektion were gassed. She denies authorship of a report on the church fire, despite pressure from the other defendants, but then admits it rather than complying with a demand to provide a handwriting sample.

Michael then realizes Hanna's secret: she is a functional illiterate, and has concealed it her whole life. The other female guards who claim that she wrote the report are lying in order to place the brunt of the responsibility on Hanna. Michael informs Rohl that he has information favorable to one of the defendants but is not sure what to do since she wants to avoid disclosing this. Rohl tells him that if he has learned nothing from the past there is no point in having the seminar.

Hanna receives a life sentence for her admitted but untrue leadership role in the church deaths while the other defendants get shorter terms. Michael meanwhile marries, has a daughter and divorces. Rediscovering his books and notes from the time of his affair, he begins reading them into a tape recorder. He sends the cassette tapes and a tape recorder to Hanna. Eventually, she begins to check the books out from the prison library and teaches herself to read and write by following along with Michael's tapes. She is eventually able to write back to him in brief, child-like notes.

Michael does not write back or visit, but keeps sending tapes, and in 1988 a prison official (Linda Bassett) telephones him to seek his help with Hanna's transition into society upon her upcoming release. He finds a place for her to live and a job, and finally visits a week before her release. When they meet after 30 years, he remains somewhat distant and confronts her about what she has learnt from her past. Both end up being disappointed. The night before her release Hanna hangs herself and leaves a tea tin with cash in it and a note to Michael, asking him to give the cash from the tea tin and some money in a bank account to Ilana.

Michael travels to the United States to New York City, New York, where he meets Ilana (Lena Olin) and confesses his past relationship with Hanna. He tells her about the suicide note, and that Hanna was illiterate for most of her life. Ilana tells Michael there is nothing to be learned from the camps. Michael suggests that he donate the money to an organization that combats adult illiteracy, preferably a Jewish one, and she agrees. Ilana keeps the tea tin since it is similar to one stolen from her in Auschwitz.

The film ends with Michael getting back together with his daughter, Julia, at Hanna's grave and beginning to tell her the story.

Cast

File:Ralph Fiennes in The Reader.jpg
Ralph Fiennes as the older Michael
  • Kate Winslet as Hanna Schmitz. Winslet was the first choice for the role, although she was initially not able to take on the role because of a scheduling conflict with Revolutionary Road, and actress Nicole Kidman replaced her. A month after filming began, however, Kidman left the role due to her pregnancy, enabling Winslet to rejoin the film.[2] Entertainment Weekly reported that to "age Hanna from cool seductress to imprisoned war criminal, Winslet endured seven and a half hours of makeup and prosthetic prep each day".[3]
  • David Kross as Michael Berg when he is fifteen years old and falls in love with Hanna in post-World War II Germany, and turns sixteen, and when he is a twenty-three-year-old student.
  • Ralph Fiennes as Michael Berg as an adult. Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly wrote that "Ralph Fiennes has perhaps the toughest job, playing the morose adult Michael — a version, we can assume, of the author. Fiennes masters the default demeanor of someone perpetually pained."[4]
  • Alexandra Maria Lara as young Ilana Mather, a former victim of the concentration camp where Hanna Schmitz worked as a guard.
  • Bruno Ganz as Professor Rohl, a Holocaust survivor and one of Michael's teachers at Heidelberg University.
  • Lena Olin as Rose Mather (Ilana's mother) who testifies alongside her daughter at Hanna Schmitz's trial. She also plays the older Ilana Mather, whom Michael visits at the end of the film.
  • Vijessna Ferkic as Sophie.
  • Hannah Herzsprung as Julia, Michael Berg's daughter
  • Karoline Herfurth as Martha, Michael's love interest at university
  • Burghart Klaußner as the judge

Production

In April 1998, Miramax Films acquired the rights to the Schlink's novel,[5] and principal photography began in September 2007 immediately after Stephen Daldry was signed to direct the film adaptation and Fiennes was cast into a lead role.[6][7] Winslet was originally cast as Hanna, but scheduling difficulties led her to leave the film and Kidman was cast as her replacement.[8] In January 2008, Kidman left the project, citing her recent pregnancy as the primary reason.[citation needed] She had not filmed any scenes yet, so the studio was able to re-cast Winslet into the lead role without affecting the production schedule.[2] In an unsigned contact, Kidman had agreed upon a salary of $100,000 plus $450,000 if the film broke even.[9] Naomi Watts, Marion Cotillard and Uma Thurman were considered for the role.[citation needed]

File:Kate Winslet as old Hanna in The Reader.jpg
Kate Winslet in age makeup as the sixty-six-year-old Hanna in the latter half of the film.

Filming took place in the cities of Berlin and Görlitz and was finished in Cologne on July 14.[10] Filmmakers received US$718,752 from Germany's Federal Film Board.[11] Overall, the studio has received US$4.1 million from Germany's regional and federal subsidiaries.[12]

Schlink insisted the film be shot in English, rather than German, as it posed questions about living in a post-genocidal society that went beyond mid-century Germany. Daldry and Hare toured locations from the novel with Schlink, viewed documentaries about that period in German history and read books and articles about women who had served as SS guards in the camps. Hare, who rejected using a voiceover narration to render the long internal monologues in the novel, also changed the ending so that Michael starts to tell the story of Hanna and him to his daughter. "It's about literature as a powerful means of communication, and at other times as a substitute for communication", he explained.[8]

The primary cast, all of whom were German besides Fiennes, Olin and Winslet, decided to emulate Kross's accent, since he had just learned English for the film.[8]

Chris Menges replaced Roger Deakins as cinematographer.

One of the film's producers, Scott Rudin, left the production over a dispute about the release date and has had his name removed from the credit list. Rudin differed with Harvey Weinstein "because he didn't want to campaign for an Oscar along with Doubt and Revolutionary Road, which also stars Winslet."[13] Winslet won the Best Actress Academy Award for The Reader, the film for which she was awarded a Golden Globe as best supporting actress. Marc Caro wrote, "Because Winslet couldn't get best actress nominations for both movies, the Weinstein Co. shifted her to supporting actress for The Reader as a courtesy."[14]

The sex scenes were shot last, after Kross had turned 18.[15]

Release

On December 10, 2008, The Reader had a limited release at eight theatres and grossed $168,051[citation needed] at the domestic box office in its opening weekend. The film had its wide release on January 30, 2009, and grossed $2,380,376[citation needed] at the domestic box office. The film's widest release was at 1,203 theatres[citation needed] on February 27, 2009, the weekend after the Academy Award win for Winslet.

As of September 4, 2009,[needs update] the film had grossed $34,194,407 at the domestic box office and $108,709,522 worldwide.[16] The film was released in the U.S. on April 14 (DVD)[17] and April 28 (Blu-ray), 2009[18] and in the U.K. on May 25, 2009 (both versions)[19]. In Germany two DVD versions (single disc and two-disc special edition) and Blu-ray were released on September 4, 2009.[20]

Reception

Critical reception for the film was positive to mixed, having a sixty-two percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Variety wrote that the film was well-realized and dramatic, but that it came "across as an essentially cerebral experience without gut impact."[21] Manohla Dargis in The New York Times was very critical of the film's flashback structure and its tendency to treat horrific subjects artistically.[22]

...you have to wonder who, exactly, wants or perhaps needs to see another movie about the Holocaust that embalms its horrors with artfully spilled tears and asks us to pity a death-camp guard. You could argue that the film isn’t really about the Holocaust, but about the generation that grew up in its shadow, which is what the book insists. But the film is neither about the Holocaust nor about those Germans who grappled with its legacy: it's about making the audience feel good about a historical catastrophe that grows fainter with each new tasteful interpolation.[22]

Patrick Goldstein, writing in the Los Angeles Times, said "The picture's biggest problem is that it simply doesn't capture the chilling intensity of its source material," and noted that there was a "largely lackluster early reaction" to the film by most film critics.[23]

Ron Rosenbaum in Slate was highly critical of the film's fixation on Hanna's illiteracy.

"so much is made of the deep, deep exculpatory shame of illiteracy — despite the fact that burning 300 people to death doesn't require reading skills — that some worshipful accounts of the novel (by those who buy into its ludicrous premise, perhaps because it's been declared "classic" and "profound") actually seem to affirm that illiteracy is something more to be ashamed of than participating in mass murder... Lack of reading skills is more disgraceful than listening in bovine silence to the screams of 300 people as they are burned to death behind the locked doors of a church you're guarding to prevent them from escaping the flames. Which is what Hanna did, although, of course, it's not shown in the film."[24]

Kirk Honeycutt in The Hollywood Reporter was more generous, concluding the picture was a "well-told coming-of-age yarn" but "disturbing" for raising critical questions about complicity in the Holocaust.[25] He praised Winslet and Kross for providing "gutsy, intense performances", and noted that Olin and Ganz turn in "memorable appearances".[25] He wrote that the cinematographers Chris Menges and Roger Deakins lent the film a "fine professional polish".[25] Colm Andrew of the Manx Independent also rated it highly and said the film had "countless opportunities to become overly sentimental or dramatic and resists every one of them, resulting in a film which by its conclusion, has you not knowing which quality to praise the most".[26]

In her blog at The Huffington Post, Thelma Adams found the relationship between Hanna and Michael, which she termed abusive, more disturbing than any of the historical questions in the movie:

Michael is a victim of abuse, and his abuser just happened to have been a luscious retired Auschwitz guard. You can call their tryst and its consequences a metaphor of two generations of Germans passing guilt from one to the next, but that doesn't explain why filmmakers Daldry and Hare luxuriated in the sex scenes — and why it's so tastefully done audiences won't see it for the child pornography it is.[27]

When asked to respond, Hare called it "the most ridiculous thing ... We went to great lengths to make sure that that's exactly what it didn't turn into. The book is much more erotic." Daldry added, "He's a young man who falls in love with an older woman who is complicated, difficult and controlling. That's the story."[28]

The film appeared on several critics' top-ten lists of the best films of 2008. Rex Reed of The New York Observer named it the second-best film of 2008. Stephen Farber of The Hollywood Reporter named it the fourth-best film of 2008,[29] Tasha Robinson of The A.V. Club named it the eighth-best film of 2008,[29] and Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times put it on his unranked top-twenty list.[29]

Special praise went to Winslet's work in the movie, which then went on to sweep the main prizes in the 2008/2009 award season, including the Golden Globe, the Critic's Choice Award, the Screen Actor's Guild Award, the BAFTA and ultimately the Academy Award for Best Actress.

Nominations and awards

Awards
Award Category Name Outcome
Academy Awards Best Actress Kate Winslet won
Best Cinematography Roger Deakins and Chris Menges nominated
Best Director Stephen Daldry nominated
Best Picture Sydney Pollack, Anthony Minghella, Redmond Morris and Donna Gigliotti nominated
Best Adapted Screenplay David Hare nominated
BAFTA Awards Best Actress Kate Winslet won
Best Cinematography Roger Deakins and Chris Menges nominated
Best Director Stephen Daldry nominated
Best Film nominated
Best Screenplay – Adapted David Hare nominated
Broadcast Film Critics Association Top-10 Films of the year won
Best Film nominated
Best Supporting Actress Kate Winslet won
Best Young Performer David Kross nominated
Golden Globe Awards Best Director – Motion Picture Stephen Daldry nominated
Best Picture – Drama nominated
Best Screenplay David Hare nominated
Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture Kate Winslet won
San Diego Film Critics Society Best Actress Kate Winslet won
Satellite Awards Top-10 Films of 2008
Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama Kate Winslet nominated
Best Director Stephen Daldry nominated
Best Film – Drama nominated
Best Adapted Screenplay David Hare Nominated
Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role Kate Winslet won

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=reader.htm
  2. ^ a b Meza, Ed (January 8, 2008). "Winslet Replaces Kidman in 'Reader'". Variety. Retrieved January 10, 2008. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ Labrecque, Jeff ((January 30/February 6, 2009). "Best Actress". Entertainment Weekly. Issue #1032/1033; pg. 45.
  4. ^ Schwarzbaum, Lisa (December 19, 2008). "Review of The Reader". Entertainment Weekly. Issue #1026; pg. 43.
  5. ^ Roman, Monica (April 22, 1998). "Miramax Books 'Reader' — Options Novel by German Law Professor". Variety. Retrieved March 9, 2010. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  6. ^ Fleming, Michael (August 17, 2007). "Kidman, Fiennes Book 'Reader' Gig". Variety. Retrieved December 28, 2007. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  7. ^ Koehl, Christian (September 14, 2007). "Senator Inks Rights to 'Reader'". Variety. Retrieved December 28, 2007. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  8. ^ a b c (registration required)Kaminer, Ariel (December 5, 2008). "Translating Love and the Unspeakable". The New York Times.
  9. ^ Ortega, Tony (July 7, 2008). "Trash Talking with Harvey Weinstein — Juicy Details Plucked from the Garbage of a Movie Mogul". The Village Voice. Retrieved January 14, 2010. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  10. ^ "Gestern Letzter Dreh für 'Der Vorleser'". (in German). Sächsische Zeitung. Retrieved July 15, 2008. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  11. ^ Meza, Ed (October 26, 2007). "'Reader' Receives German Funds". Variety. Retrieved December 28, 2007. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  12. ^ Meza, Ed (January 8, 2008). "Nicole Kidman Quits 'Reader'". Variety. Retrieved January 8, 2008. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  13. ^ Thompson, Anne (October 9, 2008). "Scott Rudin Leaves 'The Reader'". Variety. Retrieved February 7, 2009. {{cite journal}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |journal= (help)
  14. ^ Caro, Marc (February 7, 2009). "How Kate Winslet Outdid Herself". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved February 7, 2009. {{cite journal}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |journal= (help)
  15. ^ [1]
  16. ^ "The Reader (2008)". Box Office Mojo. June 1, 2009. Retrieved June 1, 2009. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |work= (help)
  17. ^ "amazon.com". Retrieved March 18, 2009.
  18. ^ "amazon.com". Retrieved March 19, 2009.
  19. ^ "amazon.co.uk". Retrieved March 18, 2009.
  20. ^ "areadvd.de". Retrieved March 31, 2009.
  21. ^ McCarthy, Todd (November 30, 2008). "The Reader". Variety.
  22. ^ a b Dargis, Manohla (December 10, 2008). . "Innocence Is Lost in Postwar Germany". The New York Times.
  23. ^ Goldstein, Patrick (December 3, 2008). "No Oscar Glory for 'The Reader'?" Los Angeles Times.
  24. ^ Rosenbaum, Ron (September 2, 2009). "Don't Give an Oscar to The Reader". Slate.
  25. ^ a b c Honeycutt, Kirk (November 30, 2008). "Film Review: The Reader". The Hollywood Reporter.
  26. ^ Review by Colm Andrew, IOM Today
  27. ^ Adams, Thelma (blog) (December 2, 2008). "Reading Between the Lines in The Reader — When Is Abuse Not Abuse?". The Huffington Post. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  28. ^ The Baguette ("The Carpetbagger" blog) (December 4, 2008). "Sex and the Younger Man". The New York Times Company. Retrieved March 11, 2009. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  29. ^ a b c "Metacritic: 2008 Film Critic Top Ten Lists". Metacritic. Retrieved January 11, 2009.

External links