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Blue Hour (The)

Country: Germany, Language: German, 87 mins

Original Title

Die Blaue Stunde
  • Director: Marcel Gisler
  • Writer: Marcel Gisler; Andreas Herder
  • Producer: Kaete Caspar; Marcel Gisler

CGiii Comment

This is a low-key affair - the packaging is definitely misleading.

It is not a nude, hustling sex-fest.

This is a dark and painful look into loneliness and a dependency on others.

There's no respite from the desperation and despondency of the characters.

As for entertainment, funerals are cheerier than this - only for the maudlin.

An intelligent film.


There was a trailer...but, it has since disappeared.

 

The(ir) Blurb...

Theo, an attractive German call boy, markets himself to other men in the personal ads of Berlin papers and leads an otherwise quiet life across the hall from Marie. Marie and Paul share an apartment that Marie pays for by working at a record store. A would-be writer, Paul spends his days sleeping or staring at the blank sheet of paper in his typewriter. After Paul leaves Marie for what he calls her "grotesque mediocrity," the protracted silence from across the hallway concerns Theo. Finally, on returning home one day, he observes that Marie's door is half open and ventures into her apartment to see if she is okay. Marie is devastated by Paul's departure and Theo takes it upon himself to coax her back to life. Strangely enough, he finds that she also awakens in him a desire for life that he had lost or given away to the countless men with whom he shares his body. When the two become intimate, Theo feels -- perhaps for the first time in a very long time -- that he is loved.

Cast & Characters

Anton Rattinger as Felix Baum;
Dina Leipzig as Marie;
Cyrille Rey-Coquis as Paul;
Christoph Krix as Laszlo;
Andreas Herder as Theo;
Arne Baur-Worch as 3. Freier;
Walter Bohnke as Bademeister;
Dagmar Cassens as Maries Chetin;
Nanette Consovov as Kartenverkauferin;
Eva Medusa Guhne as Bademeisterin;
Wolfram Haack as 2. Freier;
Isa Jank;
Alberto Kitzler as 1. Freier;
Frederic Moriette as Frederic;
Rudolf Nadler as Kunde