Martin May Movies

1996  
 
Hartmut Griesmayr directs this made-for-German-TV crime thriller about gambling. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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1988  
 
This German drama is set in the rural town of Coburg where a 20-year old insurance-company worker secretly manipulates the system to help those in danger of losing their benefits. When not working, the fellow enjoys hang-gliding and dreams of soaring off Bolivia's Mount Palomani to set a world record by gliding all the way across the jungle to Ixiamas. When others learn of his dream, they begin raising money to help him live out his daring dream. Once they do, the fellow is left with no choice but to try it. Will he succeed? ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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Starring:
Martin MayUlrike Kriener, (more)
 
1982  
 
In this drama with an undercurrent of incest, a truck driver spends so much time with his mentally impaired younger daughter that neighbors' protests bring in a social worker who manages to get the young woman placed with a distant pastor's family before tragedy can strike. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

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Starring:
Gerhard OlschewskiSusanne Lothar, (more)
 
1981  
R  
Add Das Boot to QueueAdd Das Boot to top of Queue 
Das Boot is one of the most gripping and authentic war movies ever made. Based on an autobiographical novel by German World War II photographer Lothar-Guenther Buchheim, the film follows the lives of a fearless U-Boat captain (Jurgen Prochnow) and his inexperienced crew as they patrol the Atlantic and Mediterranean in search of Allied vessels, taking turns as hunter and prey. There's very little plot, so the movie's power comes from both its riveting, epic battle scenes and its details of the boring hours spent waiting for orders or signs of the enemy. With the exception of one staunch Hitler Youth lieutenant, none of the crew is particularly loyal to the Nazis, and some are openly hostile toward their Fuhrer; this allows viewer sympathy with the men as they perform their laborious, monotonous duties in cramped, filthy quarters, or await death as depth charges explode all around the sub. Prochnow is excellent as the nerves-of-steel commander, and many of the supporting actors -- all German -- are solid as well, although the characterizations border on war movie clichés (the young crewman who has left behind his pregnant girlfriend, the Chief Engineer whose wife is seriously ill). The real star, however, is cinematographer Jost Vacano, who makes the sub's grimy, claustrophobic interior come to vivid life, as his camera follows the crew through hatches, up ladders, into bunks, and under pipes, creating a palpable sense of claustrophobia while injecting it with movement. Originally edited by writer/director Wolfgang Petersen as both a two-and-a-half hour theatrical release and a six-hour German miniseries, Das Boot was re-released in a restored version in 1997 with nearly one hour of added footage which made it even more suspenseful than before. ~ Don Kaye, Rovi

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Starring:
Jürgen ProchnowHerbert Grönemeyer, (more)
 
1980  
 
Die Wunderbaren Jahre is a routine political drama with a crusading veneer about life in East Germany from the perspective of a writer who left in protest. The film is based on the autobiographical book by director Rainer Kunze, and the story begins as tanks roll into Prague in the spring of 1968. Kunze and his family were there at the time because he was at work translating from Czech into German. Next, the teen-age daughter in the family is having a hard time in school because she is not doing so well in her communist youth group -- and after a friend of hers is ruined because he does even worse, the family rethinks their desire to stay in East Germany. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

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Starring:
Rolf BoysenDietrich Mattausch, (more)