
Mpaa Rating : Unrated
Release Date : May 29, 2013 Limited Actors :Barbara Sukowa,Axel Milberg,Janet McTeer,Julia Jentsch,Nicholas Woodeson,Klaus Pohl,Ulrich Noethen,Michael Degen,Sascha Ley,Victoria Trauttmansdorff,Friederike Becht,Megan Gay,Tom Leick,Harvey Friedman
Hannah Arendt Synopsis: The sublime Barbara Sukowa reteams with director Margarethe von Trotta (Vision, Rosa Luxemburg) for her brilliant new biopic of influential German-Jewish philosopher and political theorist Hannah Arendt. Arendt's reporting on the 1961 trial of ex-Nazi Adolf Eichmann in The New Yorker-controversial both for her portrayal of Eichmann and the Jewish councils-introduced her now-famous concept of the "Banality of Evil." Using footage from the actual Eichmann trial and weaving a narrative that spans three countries, von Trotta beautifully turns the often invisible passion of thought into immersive, dramatic cinema. An Official Selection at the Toronto International and New York Jewish Film Festivals, Hannah Arendt also co-stars Klaus Pohl as philosopher Martin Heidegger, Nicolas Woodeson as New Yorker editor William Shawn, and two-time Oscar Nominee Janet McTeer (Albert Nobbs) as novelist Mary McCarthy. (c) Zeitgeist
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Review For Hannah Arendt
Like A Hidden Method, David Cronenberg's drama about Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung, Hannah Arendt takes seriously the life of the mind.Bill Stamets-Chicago Sun-Times
In an era of sleepwalking surrender, "Hannah Arendt" is a welcome wake-up call, a ringing reminder that warring forces first assemble on the battlefield of conscience.
Joe Williams-St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Balanced portrayal, makes a persuasive case that Arendt was a valuable voice, whose dedicated work in trying to unravel the causes of Europe's moral collapse was worthy of study and consideration.
Mick LaSalle-San Francisco Chronicle
A film that ultimately says more about banality than evil.
Peter Keough-Boston Globe
[A] moving examination of the limits of human understanding when confronted with evil.
Spencer Doar-Minneapolis Star Tribune
Mixed bag, fascinating in its treatment of the Eichmann case, but stilted in its treatment of Arendt and her coterie.
John Anderson-Newsday
For those who value the life of the mind and the responsibility of the public intellectual, it's an engrossing--indeed important--film.
Frank Swietek-One Guy's Opinion
Von Trotta's direction is assured and the film has an incredibly strong performance at its core, and it asks a number of important questions, even though it doesn't dare to answer them.
Ali Arikan-RogerEbert.com
Not for everyone, but the character is very much worth investigating for her own sake.
Kelly Vance-East Bay Express
Arendt is so measured and elegant that the filmmaking seems effortless.
Matthew Sorrento-Film International
Barbara Sukowa is powerful as the chain-smoking and independent Hannah and inhabits her character with passion.
Robin Clifford-Reeling Reviews
While Hannah Arendt is commendable work, Sukowa makes it a necessary sit, watching the actress slip into the skin of a thrillingly sophisticated woman, flawlessly communicating every single beat of her intellectual firepower.
Brian Orndorf-Blu-ray.com
You'd be better off reading Arendt's work.
Chris Hewitt (St. Paul)-St. Paul Pioneer Press
Hannah Arendt succeeds at articulating the complex ideas that defined the subject's life, which makes the movie a lingering intellectual exercise as well as an eye-opening examination of 20th century thought.
Katherine Monk-Canada.com
Hannah Arendt is hagiography of the most egregious kind. It makes Lincoln look like a smear job.
Michael Sragow-Orange County Register
Fifty years later, von Trotta's given us a reminder that what we now accept as proven and basic facts and concepts caused outrage in their time...
Laura Clifford-Reeling Reviews
While it could easily be shorter and move a bit faster, especially at the beginning, it appears to move at a speed that's true to the heroine's thought process...If this portrait is true to Arendt, then let it stand.
Mark Zhuravsky-The Playlist
Forceful portrayal by Sukowa humanizes an intellectual whose persona is remembered as grim as her philosophical observations. . . without her key controversial claims.
Nora Lee Mandel-Film-Forward.com

Special TagLine Hannah Arendt Her ideas changed the world
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