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Kaffeine Buzz
reviews independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
The Ninth Day (Volker Schlondorff)
The Ninth Day is a
story about a Luxembourg priest who, after slaving
away at the Dachau labor camp, is released to
return home and persuade the bishop of Luxembourg
to back the Germans. This is a little talked about
subject, but the Pope during WWII kept fairly
silent about what the Nazi were up to. This film
explores that silence and conundrum the church
was in while the Nazi machine was plowing through
Europe.
Regardless that it is subtitled, acting and dialogue
is rich and moving beyond many films out today.
Director Volker Schlondorff’s
displays true film craftsmanship: every frame
has texture, depth and merit. The beat of the
film is like a soft sobbing. That said, its gloom
is not the nucleus of the film but rather the
source of our main characters courage.
It is deep but not torturous; we have a story,
not a moral whipping.
Obliviously, it’s not going to be everyone’s
cup of tea to watch a serious film about the Nazis
and the Curia when we have these lovely days of
summer, but it would do you a great service to
sacrifice an hour and half to see good film work.
-David Joaquin Soto
Playing at the Chez Artiste
In German with English subtitles
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