The Edukators [DVD] [2004]
|
| List Price: | £19.99 |
| Price: | £4.58 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
15 new or used available from £3.38
Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #4438 in DVD
- Released on: 2005-09-26
- Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
- Format: PAL
- Original language: German
- Subtitled in: English
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 120 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
Jan, Peter and Jule are three leftist political activists who break into the homes of the rich, leaving a calling card from the 'Edukator'. When Jule leaves her mobile phone in a home that the trio have recently broken into, they return, only to find the owner waiting for them...
Customer Reviews
Good film - and not as simple as you might think...
This is an excellent film about a trio of young 'Edukators' who seek to 'enlighten' the rich in society by invading their homes. The early scenes are really rather disturbing as we watch them arrange furniture and plunder privacy. Then one night everything goes wrong when one of their victims arrive homes early and in their panic, they kidnap him...
But I do feel I must defend this film from some of the criticisms below, which seem not only unfair but a misinterpretation of the film.
One reviewer below (D Sutherland), states that this film is simplistic. The young trio kidnap and question him about society and his past and, in the words of this reviewer 'The rich man barely challenges the young people at all, and accepts much of what he has done is probably wrong.'
This is not the case at all. Remember that this isn't a Hollywood film. The characters are not black and white and they don't all have to be taken at face value. The rich man is an extremely shrewd character. The moment they take him to the mountain top, he carefully observes the trio, looking for weaknesses. He behaves in a jovial and friendly manner, but underneath he is clearly petrified - note the shock on his face when he sees they have a gun. He cunningly searches for any crack he can find, exploiting and manipulating the love triangle.
So to assume that when he goes along with their views that he is simplistically agreeing with them is a naive interpretation of his character. The question that arises, creating a fascinating narrative tension, is whether or not he really does agree with their views and is rethinking his values, or whether he is merely playing them and patronising them. After all, his main aim is to escape. He fears for his life. The ending, in fact, suggests that he is far from converted; and also that the trio are not as naive as the rich man (or indeed the audience) might consider them to be. In fact, one is left wondering whether or not the past he tells them has any shred of reality or is just a fiction; whether or not they did touch him and influence him or whether he just saw them as idealistic idiots - whether they made a difference at all.
If you take a moment to realise that this is a film with ambiguity and layers, you'll recognise that it's a lot more than a simplistic film with a 'message'.
A middle of the road film
A film of two halves really fails to ignite the radical tension that the always brilliant Daniel Bruhl generates. The first half is a good film, humerous and somewhat insightful but never overtly challenging. The second half breaks down into a study in relationships where the characters motivations are never any particular shade of grey.
There are some strong positives about the film, with excellent performances from the leading cast and the development of a firebrand rhetoric in what is a reasonably well thought out anarchic viewpoint. However, this film is not in the same class as Goodbye Lenin and is not as good as What To Do In Case Of Fire, both of which are superior films in pretty much every way. That doesn't mean that this is a bad film, just that there are some very good films that portray the same sense of anti-establishment hubris that this one attempts.
The concept of The Edukators is a good one, reaching into the disaffected mindset of a disenfranchised pair of rebels and providing them with a reality check. However, the reality check it presents is dealt with in a less then convincing manner and while I will not spoil the ending, I was disappointed by it.
There's more to this film
I disagree with the negative reviews about this film. They are short sighted. The film captures nicely, in an even-handed way, many central issues of our modern world. The injustices connected to the rich/poor divide are hard to deny but the wealthy character in the film makes no apologies about the wealth he has earned. The careful viewer will notice the strengths and weaknesses of both sides of the argument and ultimately is left to his/her own judgments. However, what captivated me even more was the way in which the film captures the idealistic - if unfocused - passion of youth and the compromising reality of adulthood. Also, I thought the film was beautifully shot and the sound track moving.
Scratch below the surface and you'll find a gem!
![The Edukators [DVD] [2004]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/5175HKJ87CL._SL210_.jpg)

![The Wave [DVD] [2008]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/61kg0q39hQL._SL75_.jpg)
![Sophie Scholl - The Final Days [2005] [DVD]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/514V4W9C11L._SL75_.jpg)
![Atomised [2006]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/513KpKhefYL._SL75_.jpg)