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33 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Major Neo-Realist Work in Need of Restoration.
GERMANIA ANNO ZERO is a film made in the Neo-Realist tradition by the Neo-Realist master Roberto Rossellini. It tells the simple but powerful story of Edmund - a boy trying to survive between the ruins of Berlin right after WWII. His family is as ruined as the city he lives in: his father is confined to a bed, his older brother fears prosecution for his Nazi past and his...
Published on October 5, 2002 by Paulo Leite

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29 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars BUYERS BE FOREWARNED!!!

This has to go on record as the worst quality DVD I have ever seen in my life. The image quality is so wretched, so absolutely horrendous, that it makes watching this masterpiece of a film quite literally impossible. The pixellation, at times, eats up not just individual shots, but entire sequences of the picture.

Actually, I've long found that a number...
Published on May 21, 2005 by Nathan C. Southern


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33 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Major Neo-Realist Work in Need of Restoration., October 5, 2002
By 
Paulo Leite (Lisbon, Portugal) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Germany Year Zero (DVD)
GERMANIA ANNO ZERO is a film made in the Neo-Realist tradition by the Neo-Realist master Roberto Rossellini. It tells the simple but powerful story of Edmund - a boy trying to survive between the ruins of Berlin right after WWII. His family is as ruined as the city he lives in: his father is confined to a bed, his older brother fears prosecution for his Nazi past and his sister is a prostitute. Just like everybody else, Edmund manages to get some money from selling the things he finds here and there on the ruins; until one day he runs into his old school teacher: an old man who still preaches the Nazi ideology and defends the elimination of the weak. Influenced by those ideas, Edmund poisons his own father.

This is a powerful film that shows like no other the horrors of war (and the Nazi insanity) that inevitably destroy the lives of the ordinary inhabitants of the city. Rossellini, with his keen eye for detail (and his unique taste in composition), makes an impressive portrait of a chaotic city of empty ruins and basic survival.

GERMANIA ANNO ZERO is the third and final film in Rossellini's famous Neo-Realist war trilogy and is as strong and poignant as the others: OPEN CITY (ROMA CITTÀ APERTA) and PAISAN (PAISÀ).

...On the down side, this is a film that (like many european masterpieces) badly needs a restoration. There are print demages and the sound sounds like it was recorded a decade before.

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29 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars BUYERS BE FOREWARNED!!!, May 21, 2005
By 
Nathan C. Southern (Beverly Hills, MI USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Germany Year Zero (DVD)

This has to go on record as the worst quality DVD I have ever seen in my life. The image quality is so wretched, so absolutely horrendous, that it makes watching this masterpiece of a film quite literally impossible. The pixellation, at times, eats up not just individual shots, but entire sequences of the picture.

Actually, I've long found that a number of DVDs from Image Entertainment have this problem. Ecstasy (by Machaty) suffers from it as well.

It should not be legal to sell a disc whose image quality is this atrocious. I'm aghast that the company can even stay in business if they are marketing pieces of garbage like this DVD release.

Bottom line: Germania Anno Zero is a magnificent film. But avoid buying it on DVD and shoot for the VHS instead. Only that edition is watchable.
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rossellini's Best, September 30, 2004
By 
Alex Udvary (chicago, il United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Germany Year Zero (DVD)
Some of the greatest movies of all-time have the ability to make us care about their characters as if they were real human beings. We forget they are only characters, we forget it's only a movie.

I've always said the greatest movie I've ever seen was "The Bicycle Thief" because it, more than any other movie, displayed the passion I'm talking it. The first time I saw that movie I was amazed. I had not seen many movies that could touch me in such a way. The only one that may have come close was Bergman's "Wild Strawberries".

All of these feelings resurfaced again as I watch Roberto Rossellini's "Germany Year Zero" easily one of the greatest films I have ever seen. All of the emotion, the human drama needed to make a great film is here.

This was the first Rossellini film I had seen at the time, since then I have seen "Open City", "Paisan", and "Voyage in Italy", but none of them seemed to touch me and provoke the power I thought this film had.

The movie is set after WW2 as a family tries to get by and rebuild their lives. A young boy, Edmund (Edmund Moeschke) feels it is up to him to provide for the family since his father is dying, his brother may be wanted for war crimes, and his sister, he suspects has become a "working girl".

They way these events are played out, the way Rossellini presents these characters to us our hearts have to go out to them. I was completely absorb while watching this film hopefully many more will feel the same way I do about this masterpiece.

Bottom-line: Easily one of the most powerful films I have ever seen. A masterpiece by Roberto Rossellini. He is able to make the viewer forget it's only a movie us our hearts go out to the characters.
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5.0 out of 5 stars stunning!, April 16, 2009
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This review is from: Germany Year Zero (DVD)
Being an admirer of Mr. Roberto Rossellini, the great genius of cinema, I had the greatest expectations when I rented this movie--and oh boy, this film was everything except disappointment; it had everything that was truly great. I was left wondering why Criterion Collection did not bother to clean and save this cinematic masterpiece (maybe they are busy transferring every Kurosawa films!). Passionately recommended.
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1.0 out of 5 stars My copy from Amazon only came in Korean subtitles!, January 3, 2009
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This review is from: Germany Year Zero (DVD)
I've seen part of this great movie on TV, but wanted to watch the entire thing. I purchased a DVD copy here on Amazon and took delivery. I kept the copy for several months without viewing it. Well, tonight I tried to view it for the first time and guess what? The ONLY subtitle it will display is Korean! There was no mention from the seller that this was the case. Since I don't speak Italian nor Korean, I just wasted my money on this dog.

I wonder if there are others who are getting the wool pulled over their eyes also?
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5.0 out of 5 stars Germany Year Zero, June 22, 2007
This review is from: Germany Year Zero (DVD)
Filmed amid the spectral ruins of Berlin in 1947, and cast with actual residents of the rubble-strewn capital city, Rossellini's harrowing portrait of war's catastrophic impact on everyday people is a haunting classic of Italian neo-realism. Of particular interest is the character of Herr Enning, an ambiguous figure with vaguely pederastic leanings, whose worldview has been unalterably twisted by Nazi ideology. When he gives Edmund a set of tapes--speeches by Hitler--for him to sell on the black market, he also dispenses a bit of corrosive advice about the weak and the strong that Edmund takes, tragically, very much to heart. "Zero" in on this brutal, yet heartrending drama.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Devastating statement!, November 7, 2005
This review is from: Germany Year Zero (DVD)
This seminal, absorbing and arresting picture preceded by far, the famous ones Zinemmann `s The Search (1947), Joseph Losey 's The boy with the green hair (1948) and Rene Clement ` s Forbidden Games(1953). And comparing in what stature artistic concerns it with Andrei Tarkovsky `s Ivan childhood is just one echelon bellow, equaled with Forbidden games. .
I have seen them all these in the last two months and I can tell you with all the possible objectivity. This is another magisterial masterpiece of the Italian Realism. There is no way out along this struggling and gradually increasing tension. A true slap in the face that will make you think around a lot of things. An ethic deficit, perhaps?
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Incredible, January 15, 2006
This review is from: Germany Year Zero (DVD)
Masterful work of Italian neo-realism by the grand old man, Roberto Rossellini and filmed in war-torn Berlin and widely regarded as the precursor to Rossellini's 50's masterpieces.

A young boy is manipulated by his teacher who later turns out to be an appalling Nazi sympathizer who manipulates the boy into murdering his father.

Mesmerizing and always stylized and breathtaking form. This film conveys the horror and destructive inevitability of war far better than the gross Hollywood extravaganza's of the Longest Day variety.

Rossellini was criticized by the neo-realists for injecting greater melodrama and lighting control than was though appropriate, but the film still exists in a magnificent documentary style, and it runs circles around DeSica's Umberto D.
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0 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Post apocalyptic wasteland, September 15, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Germany Year Zero (DVD)
Too bad has to be in Italian rather than the original German. Scenes of devastated Berlin are limited. European depiction of life at its basest, a decimated civilization trying to rebuild itself as the elements responsible for its downfall dominate. Not as harsh as might be expected.
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Germany Year Zero [VHS]
Germany Year Zero [VHS] by Roberto Rossellini (VHS Tape)
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