Sunday, April 15, 2007

No such thing as "others" in East Germany

The last person with whom I'd agree on a film review is a regular reader of The Corner (well, I'm one, but I don't send Jonah Goldberg and K-Lo Lopez sunny letters); but this letter from a person less than impressed with The Lives of Others summarizes my reservations about that overpraised film:

1. The fundamental element of the plot, the Stasi officer Wiesler helping Dreymann, is such utter nonsense that it ruins the whole movie. It would never happen that some one with over 20 years of continuous indoctrination by the Stasi would help a mortal enemy of the State (and by Stasi definition, that's what Dreymann was). Even if Wiesler could have somehow come to see Dreymann as something other than an enemy, he still would have done what the Stasi expected, because he (Wiesler) would always have been watched and his work constantly checked.

2. That Dreymann could think he was not being observed and bugged is also utter nonsense. This guy was a top playwright who associated with the highest cultural officials and he thought he was not of interest to the State !?!? My wife was continuously watched and bugged simply because she had foreign diplomats as patients. Being watched and bugged was something every East German assumed was part of their life.

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