

Downfall
In April of 1945, Germany stands at the brink of defeat with the Russian Army closing in from the east and the Allied Expeditionary Force attacking from the west. In Berlin, capital of the Third Reich, Adolf Hitler proclaims that Germany will still achieve victory and orders his generals and advisers to fight to the last man. When the end finally does come, and Hitler lies dead by his own hand, what is left of his military must find a way to end the killing that is the Battle of Berlin, and lay down their arms in surrender.
Director(s)
Hanuš Polak jr.
Oliver Hirschbiegel
Cast & crew

Rolf Kanies
General der Infanterie Hans Krebs

Thomas Kretschmann
SS-Gruppenführer Hermann Fegelein

Götz Otto
SS-Hauptsturmführer Otto Günsche

Justus von Dohnányi
General der Infanterie Wilhelm Burgdorf

André Hennicke
SS-Brigadeführer Wilhelm Mohnke

Ulrike Krumbiegel
Dorothee Kranz

Devid Striesow
Feldwebel Tornow

Bruno Ganz
Adolf Hitler

Alexandra Maria Lara
Traudl Junge

Fabian Busch
Obersturmbannführer Stehr

Matthias Habich
Prof. Dr. Werner Haase

Jürgen Tonkel
Erich Kempka

Thomas Thieme
Martin Bormann

Ulrich Noethen
Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler

Juliane Köhler
Eva Braun

Corinna Harfouch
Magda Goebbels

Dietrich Hollinderbäumer
Ritter Robert von Greim

Ulrich Matthes
Joseph Goebbels

Heino Ferch
Albert Speer

Christian Berkel
Prof. Dr. Ernst-Günter Schenck

Birgit Minichmayr
Gerda Christian

Michael Mendl
General der Artillerie Helmuth Weidling

Christian Redl
Generaloberst Alfred Jodl

Thomas Limpinsel
Kammerdiener Heinz Linge
Donevan Gunia
Peter Kranz

Alexander Held
Walter Hewel

Dieter Mann
Feldmarschall Wilhelm Keitel

Bettina Redlich
Frl. Constanze Manziarly

Heinrich Schmieder
Rochus Misch

Anna Thalbach
Hanna Reitsch

Karl Kranzkowski
Wilhelm Kranz

Thorsten Krohn
Dr. Stumpfegger

Christian Hoening
Reichsarzt SS Grawitz

Dirk Borchardt
Panzerkommandant

Elizaveta Boyarskaya
Schwester Erna

Michael Brandner
H. Fritzche
Igor Bubenchikov
Schadle

Martin Butzke
SS-Soldat 1

Dmitriy Bykovskiy-Romashov
Soldat 2

Mathias Gnädinger
Hermann Göring
Bohdan Graczyk
Oberst Clausen

Norbert Heckner
Standesbeamter Wagner
Enno Hesse
Oberleutnant

Julia Jentsch
Hanna Potrowski

Michael Kind
SA-Mann / Ruinenkeller
Elisabeth von Koch
Margarete Lorenz

Konstantin Lukashov
Älterer Soldat

Stefan Mehren
Verwundeter Soldat

Katerina Poladjan
Russische Arzthelferin

Tanja Schleiff
Russische Ärztin
Christian Schmidt
SS-Mann Greifkommando

August Schmölzer
Baur
Jurij Schrader
Dolmetscher

Mariya Semyonova
Rothaarige Frau

Klaus-Jürgen Steinmann
Offizier 1

Veit Stübner
Obergruppenführer Tellermann

Oliver Stritzel
Maschinist Hentschel

Vsevolod Tsurilo
Russischer Adjutant

Henning Peker
Wachsoldat vor der Wolfsschanze (uncredited)
Dieter Rupp
Mohnke's Adjutant im Bunker (uncredited)

Andrey Blagoslovenskiy
Soldat im Ruinenkeller

Valeriy Salomakhin
Staryy Tsivilist

Igor Sergeev
Russischer Soldat

Traudl Junge
Self (archive footage)
Hanuš Polak jr.
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Oliver Hirschbiegel
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Details
Reviews
Wuchak
**_Hitler’s end_** As the Red Army encroaches upon Berlin in late April, 1945, the final days of Hitler in his bunker (Bruno Ganz) are told from the perspective of his secretary, Traudl Junge (Alexandra Maria Lara). "Downfall” (2004) is not a conventional war movie due to its downbeat subject and is more educational than entertaining, but it’s a necessary piece of the puzzle in understanding WW2. If you appreciate movies like "Enemy at the Gates" (2001), "The Pianist" (2002), "Black Book" (2006), "Valkyrie" (2008), "Rommel" (2012), "Warsaw '44" (2014) and "Fury" (2014), you’ll appreciate this one too. It's hard to rate a flick like this because it’s not an enjoyable experience, but it works superbly as means to go back in history and view Hitler’s final days. The film runs 2 hours, 36 minutes, and was shot in Germany (Berlin, Munich and Bavaria Studios) and Russia (St. Petersburg). GRADE: B
CinemaSerf
Though he might not much like the compliment, Bruno Ganz is superb as the Führer in this dramatisation of his last few days in Berlin. If you saw George Schaefer’s attempt at this, with Anthony Hopkins in the title role (1981) then you’ll already have the gist of what occurs, but this has an altogether less dramatic, more natural, feel to it. It helps, of course, that those of us watching know now just how precarious his situation was, but for him surrounded as he was by yes men, Ganz portrays a man who genuinely believes the war is there to win. None of his acolytes have the courage to tell him he is defeated, and those who do appreciate it are all too often working on plans to save their own skins. The assembled supporting cast here, including many of those playing the wives like Corinna Harfouch (Goebbels) and Juliane Köhler (Braun) as well as that of secretary Trudi (Alexandra Maria Lara) help to keep this chronology remarkably human. This is a personification of their situation and though we know that evil lived here, this illustrates more a man who is sick. Physically and psychologically sick. That’s not to suggest it makes apologies for the man, but oddly enough it makes him a little more comprehensible amidst histories that unequivocally vilify the man. This isn’t so much about Naziism, or the politics of hate and bigotry - we join the timeframe too late for those to be relevant, it’s more about a realisation of failure, it’s ensuing panic and even the surprising degree of loyalty from those (usually) lower ranks who really were his true disciples. On that last point, Oliver Hirschbiegel also powerfully illustrates the power of indoctrination with children not yet in their teens enthusiastically manning the city’s defences whilst still proudly sporting their swastikas. Clearly just a little thought might have encouraged their officers to let them get back to what remained of their homes and families instead of facing the oncoming Soviet troops. It’s the cumulation of the threads as we build to quite a delicately paced denouement that gives this a considerable degree of plausibility. The production design and visual effects as the city collapses mirror nicely the mental collapses going on under the ground, and though we won’t often have seen a film that attempts this kind of level of objectivity about these events, this is certainly a poignant way to see a destructive man destroy himself.
