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The White Ribbon
Overlook Pick

The White Ribbon

75
User Score1,138 ratings
TMDB 7.516+20092h 24mGerman
DramaMystery

Synopsis

An aged tailor recalls his life as the schoolteacher of a small village in Northern Germany that was struck by a series of strange events in the year leading up to WWI.

Director
Michael HanekeFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Lucky Red4 production companies
Release
September 24, 2009Released
Box Office
$12MBudget $22M

Top Cast

8 of 84
Christian Friedel
Christian Friedel
The School Teacher
Ernst Jacobi
Ernst Jacobi
The School Teacher as an Old Man (voice)
Leonie Benesch
Leonie Benesch
Eva
Ulrich Tukur
Ulrich Tukur
The Baron
Fion Mutert
Sigmund
Ursina Lardi
Ursina Lardi
Marie Louise
Burghart Klaußner
Burghart Klaußner
The Pastor
Steffi Kühnert
Steffi Kühnert
The Pastor's Wife

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
May 12, 2024

It all starts when the local doctor (Rainer Bock) is knocked from his horse by some wire carefully strung between two trees. Incapacitated and sent to the (not so) nearby hospital, his is just the start of some fairly brutal mishaps that befall this small rural community as Europe drifts towards the start of the Great War. It's a sort of feudal existence for this community were everything stems from the baron (Ulrich Tukur). When his young son is violently assaulted, tensions run high in the village and as more atrocities emerge they all start to turn on each other and suspicions run high. It might be, though, that the children of the pastor might hold the key. That's what the narrator, and rather naive teacher (Christian Friedl) eventually concludes, but as he investigates as surreptitiously as he can, we find a great deal more going on amidst a village of child molesting, cruelty, adultery and basically anything that could easily contribute to the negative mindset of those carrying out these acts of pretty calculated wickedness. Each of the villagers has their moment in the cinematic sun as we are taken, almost door to door, on a tour of their foibles and peccadilloes. It delivers quite a potent look at the almost, sometimes literal, incestuous nature of country life where people live in fear of losing their patronage and their survival depends on the harvest - and that depends on a God who is represented by Burghart Klaußner's enigmatically characterised pastor. This is a conflicted man more concerned with a status quo than necessarily with the truth. There is mystery here, but that rather fades into the background of quite a disturbing character study that is puzzling and intriguing.

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