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Cracks in the Shell

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Cracks in the Shell

An insecure drama student is given the lead role in a play by her director, but the role she is supposed to play is at odds with her real personality. The fusion of her stage persona and her real life persona becomes a psychological tour de force for the young woman, changing her private life.

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Release : 2012
Rating : 7
Studio : ARTE,  teamWorx,  ARD, 
Crew : Director of Photography,  Director, 
Cast : Stine Fischer Christensen Ulrich Noethen Dagmar Manzel Christina Drechsler Ronald Zehrfeld
Genre : Drama

Cast List

Reviews

Alicia
2021/05/13

I love this movie so much

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Solemplex
2018/08/30

To me, this movie is perfection.

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Hottoceame
2018/08/30

The Age of Commercialism

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Lawbolisted
2018/08/30

Powerful

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Radu_A
2014/02/02

(This review has been deleted based on an anonymous abuse report. I find nothing in it that would justify such an action and therefore humbly ask to revert that decision. I'd otherwise feel prompted to withdraw my rather numerous contributions here. If someone doesn't like the opinions I express in this review, feel free to tell me so in a comment or mail. Do not suppress other people's opinions.) If you should have the incredible misfortune of having to sit through this thoroughly unwatchable film, you may find a little comfort in its answering the question why so many German films are equally painful to watch. After all, it shows how acting classes in Germany work, and if you sit this one out, you will not only be immunized to terrible acting just about anywhere, you will also realize why many good German films feature actresses who were not (yet) professionally trained - for example, Franka Potente (Run Lola Run) and Nina Hoss (Barbara) were cast for their first feature films when they had only just begun acting school.As for the story, it is typical for the projects realized in a film industry which depends on state subsidies and public broadcasting: dull acting student gets cast by a sexist experimental theater director to perform as the nymphomaniac lead in his latest play, and gradually loses her psychological balance while having to deal with her Down-syndromed sister at the same time. You know, the usual 'poor girl suffers and gets sexually exploited' shtick. A love affair, which she initiates using her daring stage persona, doesn't save her. The prospective partner is played by Ronald Zehrfeld, who is making the best of an otherwise ridiculous script written by director Christian Schwochow and his mother.Some people seem to like this sort of thing, but if you're under 50 and more into Tom Tykwer than Oskar Roehler - whose films evoke the same tedious Freudian boredom - you know what you want to stay away from. It's so terrible that, as a German citizen, I feel an obligation to apologize to non-German audiences forced to watch this prime example for the degeneration of our movie industry. Fortunately, there are still German directors - like Andreas Dresen - who work in more creative ways.

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Terezia Filipkova
2013/05/06

I have seen this movie in German language, even if I speak German a little. Even though, Die Unsichtbare really hit me. It was so intense, real and full of emotions, that it's even impossible to feel untouched by it. The acting was perfect, the storyline direct and the story was frighteningly real. The character of Josephine was believable mainly because of the pain and suffering she has been through. This movie reminds me of Black Swan, but the main difference is that Black Swan was more abstract and visual. Black Swan was interwoven by Nina's hallucinations, we saw mainly her broken perspective of the world. Die Unsichtbare is more real and therefore even more emotional. Josephine is played very well by young actress Stine Fisher Christensen, and as a psychotic directer shined Ulrich Noethen. This movie is not for everyone, it's really rough (the last half hour mainly) and emotionally smashing, even more than Black Swan.

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JvH48
2012/10/28

I saw this film as part of the Rotterdam Film Festival 2012. This film started as a seemingly simplistic, tragic love story (actress mingles with famous director, director drops her later on, and so on), but it progressed splendidly after half an hour. All the ingredients found their proper place in the well constructed film script. As a bonus we got an inside view in what happens back stage among the participants, and more importantly the "making of" process before a stage play is ready for a performance. Of course, we can never be sure this being typical for any stage play, but it certainly had the outlook of being realistic and truthful.Some of the plot ingredients became apparent not until after a while, like the mother of the actress bearing the burden of a handicapped daughter. The latter needed so much attention that her sister, our main character, seemed invisible for the mother (hence the title). Freud et al would have immediately caught this to be the foundation under the story. As a layman, I needed some time to catch up. Same was the case with the stage director, who made use of the underground frustrations in the process of creating a play. Even the relatively small role of the tunnel worker has its place in the overall story line.It serves no useful purpose to condense the story here in a few sentences, and I certainly do not want spoilers to be given away. Trust me that the net result is convincing and impressive. I found it worthy of the maximum score for the audience award when leaving the theater.

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Sindre Kaspersen
2012/03/27

German screenwriter and director Christian Schwochow's third feature film which he co-wrote with his father Heide Schwochow is a German-French co-production which was produced by Jochen Laube and Fabian Maubach. It tells the story of Josephine Lorenz who lives with her mother Susanne and her disabled younger sister Jule. She goes to a drama school and is auditioning for a part in a play called "Camille" which is to be directed by a famous theater director named Kaspar Friedmann. Josephine's first audition doesn't go that well and she thinks she has lost her opportunity to get the part, but after meeting the director for the first time and impressing him with her acting skills, she surprisingly lands the leading role. Josephine is ecstatic about having gotten the part she desired, but as she begin to know the character she is going to interpret and the director's strict demands, she utterly dedicates herself into meeting Kaspar's requirements and getting into character. Her mother who spends most of her time looking after Jule is happy on her eldest daughter's behalf, but the deeper Josephine sinks into the core of her character "Camille", the more distant she becomes from her family.Finely and engagingly directed by German filmmaker Christian Schwochow, this rhythmic fictional tale draws an intimate depiction of a complicated relationship between an actress and her director and an authentic portrayal of a young woman who whilst preparing for the main role in a play, lays her heart and soul on the line, exceeds her personal boundaries and takes on the persona of a severely afflicted character that drags her out of her shell. While notable for it's naturalistic milieu depictions, sterling production design by art director and production designer Kobita Syed and cinematography by cinematographer Frank Lamm, this character-driven and dialog-driven psychological drama which contains acting within acting and theater within film, is an invigorating study of acting and character development which examines themes such as family relations, coming-of-age, devotion and love.This tense, atmospheric, romantic and multifaceted study of character which is somewhat reminiscent of Darren Aronofsky's "Black Swan" (2010), is impelled and reinforced by it's stringent narrative structure, the magnificent and impressive acting performance by Danish actress Stine Fischer Christensen that surpasses her memorable acting performance in Susanne Bier's "After The Wedding" (2006), the riveting acting performance by German actor Ulrich Noethen and the reverent supporting acting performances by German actresses Dagmar Manzel, Anna Maria Mühe and Christina Drechsler in her second feature film role. A consistently gripping and strikingly compassionate independent film which gained, among other awards, the award for Best Actress Stine Fischer Christensen and the award of the Ecumenical Jury at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival in 2011.

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