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A Woman in Berlin
A nameless woman keeps a diary as the Russians invade Berlin in the spring of 1945. In her desperation, she decides to look for an officer who can protect her. She meets a Russian officer, an encounter which develops into a complex symbiotic relationship that forces them to remain enemies until the bitter end.
















6 August 1965, Göttingen, Lower Saxony, Germany


28 May 1946, Vladikavkaz, USSR

25 May 1974

30 October 1977, East-Berlin, German Democratic Republic

26 April 1972, Waiblingen, Baden-Württemberg, Germany





1956

14 May 1942, Warthausen, Biberach, Württemberg [now Baden-Württemberg], Germany

28 May 1985, Berlin, Germany


4 January 1976, Berlin, Germany

1964

19 June 1958, Hamburg, Germany


1979, Berlin, Germany

7 July 1975, Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Germany

4 April 1965, Leningrad, RSFSR, USSR [now St. Petersburg, Russia]

25 January 1927, Groß-Weikersdorf, Lower Austria, Austria

16 December 1961, East Berlin, East Germany

1978, Suhl, East Germany [now Thuringia, Germany]

1979, Potsdam, German Democratic Republic



December 04, 2009
It's a rigorous adaptation, handsomely mounted and with fine performances, but totally impersonal.
September 15, 2009
This sobering account of such tragic events deserves kudos for avoiding sensationalizing a subject matter that easily could be exploited.
October 06, 2009
Though deliberately paced and somewhat repetitive, it's...powerful and enlightening.
February 16, 2010
An honourable effort to illustrate a period in post-war German history that remained conveniently shrouded for years.
October 09, 2009
That rarest of wartime dramas: an intimate, sorrowful glimpse into the heart and loins of the hellish aftermath of war.
August 21, 2009
Sometimes a movie based on true events is forceful out of all proportion to its middling presentation.
December 18, 2009
The suffering of these Berlin women, however tragic, is decontextualized from the infinitely greater crimes against humanity's millions by Germany at the time, which in fact was responsible for their fate.
November 06, 2009
A clear-eyed portrait of a highly charged chapter in Germany's history, a history that once again proves rewarding fodder for an alert artistic imagination.
August 07, 2009
[A] brutal, unforgettable film.
July 17, 2009
Though the story is based in truth, an emotionally removed Hoss feels more like a symbol than an actual person, while her detached narration keeps us at further remove.
September 24, 2009
The film is well-acted, with restraint, by Hoss and Sidikhin. The writer and director, Max Faerberboeck, employs a level gaze and avoids for the most part artificial sentimentality. The physical production is convincing.
October 02, 2009
No one is guiltless-not the Russian commander (Yevgeny Sidikhin) who takes the heroine as his lover, nor her bourgeois landlady (Fassbinder alumnus Irm Hermann), who welcomes the occupiers for their black market goods.