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Two terminal patients leave their hospital beds for the open highway in this German road movie, a popular success in Germany. When cancer victim Rudi (Jan Josef Liefers) meets Martin (Til Schweiger), who has a brain tumor, they knock back tequila one night and decide to head north to experience life at the seashore, something Rudi has hoped to do his entire life. However, the car they've stolen belongs to two thieves and contains a million marks. Soon they're being pursued by both thugs and cops. (official distributor synopsis)

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Reviews (8)

lamps 

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English German film = bullshit. For many years, this equation was the first thing that popped into my mind whenever someone mentioned the cinema of our western neighbours. But then I heard about this film, saw its high rating and I watched it full of expectations. Well, I’m speechless! All the praise that has been mentioned and rehashed so many times in the reviews here is doubly true. The amazingly unique and groundbreaking direction, the precise combination of black humour and a hackneyed detective plot, and the very honest and detailed portrayal of the two main characters, a bit in the style of Jarmusch, make this crazy and unconventional "last party" one of the best European films of the last decade. ()

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DaViD´82 

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English Jahn watched a few Tarantino movies and said to himself that he should make a movie like that too. Unfortunately, just before the filming began he also watched some Zwei Nasen tanken Super movies. Too bad that the cringe humor (with the title you would expect black humor, but nope) comes out on top here, because a couple of the serious scenes work really well. ()

Othello 

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English A gleeful copy of everything that was cool back then in the East. Gangsters, male bonding, rock soundtracks à la Tarantino, copying Western formal practices, and the sheer license to make fun of everything, no matter what the level of fun it happens to be. Some of the stuff from that era still feels fresh, some you're glad it's gone. ()

Stanislaus 

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English After this year's The Most Beautiful Day, I had to watch this film immediately, from which the first mentioned piece drew a lot and according to some users, it was even a significant rip-off (which is not entirely true). Knockin’ on Heaven's Door is definitely an unconventionally conceived tragicomedy about illness, (ubiquitous) death, car chases, mobsters, theft, etc., but despite all these seemingly negative elements, it retains a certain comic detachment. The two main characters simply want to enjoy the last few days they have left, but in doing so they set off a chain of events of a primarily humorous nature, even if there are shootings and escapes all the time. All in all, a well-made film, peppered with references to Pulp Fiction in particular, which, while it didn't grab me by the seat of my pants, still deserves the viewer's attention. ()

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