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I shouldn't have posted this spoiler but I couldn't resist. It seems Winslett accidentally seduces a 15 year old lad in pre-war Berlin. She likes his youth and builds their relationship on his reading her great classics before they boink around. The affair lasts one summer before she mysteriously disappears and the lad turns into Ralph Fiennes.
The lad starts law school under the tutelage of Bruno Ganz (sans mustache). Ganz decides to expose his class to a trial of six women guards from Auschwitz by having them attend daily. Among the six is Winslett. The lad is devastated as he hears the charges and the testimony day by day. During the trial five of the defendants gang up on Winslett accusing her of ordering 350 Jews be held in a burning church by claiming she wrote the report of the incident which, logically, would mean she was in charge. Winslett, not wanting to reveal her illiteracy, assumes the guilt and gets a life sentence. One would say "how stupid" but you have to see the character Winslett portrayed to understand that point.
Lena Olin plays a Auschwitz survivor Fiennes visits in the end to settle up old accounts. Olin's character had written an account of her Auschwitz imprisonment which had brought the six women to justice in 1966. We see her as a younger woman and then, finally, as an unforgiving and hardened woman. Major irony is drawn when Fiennes enters her luxurious NYC apartment and he remembers the near squalor Winslett lived in before the war as well as the German prison.
This is not a must see. Well filmed with a good eye for cinematography it rambles a bit to the "long side" of the clock. If you are interested in the the era and "how did this happen" you might find it expository but no more enlightening than your present thoughts.
Oh yes, Winslett needs to keep her child-bearing breasts to herself.
Follow Ups:
...amazingly nuanced in it's ethical perspectives and deeply engaging on an emotional level.
And - FWIW - it was post war Berlin in which they first met. It was after she'd already been a guard.
She disappeared because they were going to promote her to a desk job at the trolley and she was illiterate and didn't want anyone to know.
And I think it's great that we see a naked woman who looks like a regular person and not some idealized version of the same.
"The man is only half himself, the other half is his expression." -- Ralph Waldo Emerson
I remember the Mercedes sedan in one scene and that explains her constipated personality--not that her personality becomes a guard but that being one does that to you. Yes, I knew that's why she didn't take the job.
I thought the puppy-love sex scenes were too often. It seemed too slow the pace.
d
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