Anatomy | |
Director: | Stefan Ruzowitzky |
Producer: | Andrea Willson |
Starring: |
|
Music: | Marius Ruhland |
Cinematography: | Peter von Haller |
Editing: | Ueli Christen |
Studio: | Deutsche Columbia Pictures Filmproduktion[1] Claussen + Wöbke Filmproduktion |
Distributor: | Columbia TriStar Film Distributors International |
Runtime: | 103 minutes |
Country: | Germany |
Language: | German |
Budget: | DEM 8,400,000 (estimated) |
Anatomy (de|'''Anatomie''') is a 2000 German horror film written and directed by Stefan Ruzowitzky that stars Franka Potente. The film became the highest-grossing German-language movie in 2000.[2] Columbia Pictures released the film's English-dubbed version in the United States theatrically.[3] [4] However, the dubbed version underperformed at the United States box office.[5]
A sequel, Anatomy 2 (Anatomie 2), was released in 2003.
Medical student Paula Henning wins a place in a summer course at the University of Heidelberg, where her grandfather had been a renowned professor. During one of her classes on anatomy, the body of David, a young man whom Paula encountered on her train to Heidelberg, turns up on her dissection table. Her instructor, Professor Grombek, humiliates her by daring her to dissect the heart. Paula finds that David's body bears strange incisions and decides to investigate the mysterious circumstances surrounding his death. As she proceeds to cut a sample for an independent test, she is intrigued to find a triple "A" mark near David's ankle. She is then startled by the school's mortuary attendant, who wants to know if Grombek is aware of her investigation.
Paula finds clues pointing to an ancient secret society, the Anti-Hippocratic Society, which performs gruesome experiments on living people who they deem undesirable. She also comes across research about the rituals that they perform on transgressors of their rules, or those who inquire too much. One night, Paula sits on her bed and realizes it has been soaked in blood, with candles lit underneath, as a sign of warning from the Society. She then attacks a figure that enters her room, but it turns out to be her friend Hein, who is seeking consolation over his recent breakup from his girlfriend Gretchen. While they talk, Paula's boyfriend Casper stops by and storms off when he sees she is not alone. Hein leaves, apparently more at peace.
As Gretchen and her new boyfriend Phil prepare to have sex in one of the morgue halls, Hein murders Phil in a jealous rage. He then injects Gretchen with poison, telling her that he will preserve her body. He is so absorbed in the work that he falls asleep without having disposed of Phil’s body. Hein hides it in the morgue and removes the head to prevent identification. When Paula tries to share her findings about the Society the next day, Hein menacingly tells her it's dangerous to know too much. Grombek reveals that Paula's grandfather was a member of the Society, and that the drug he became famous for developing was the result of his experiments in Nazi concentration camps. Paula flees to the hospital to confront her grandfather but is told that he has died.
At the assembly of the Society, Hein expresses no remorse for the murders and defiantly accepts their punishment, slashing himself three times in the face. Grombek takes responsibility for the killings and leaves to call the authorities to arrest Hein. Later, while Paula destroys the diplomas granted to her grandfather, a crazed Hein kills Grombek in his house. Paula gets back to the school but is trapped by Hein and his accomplice, Ludwig. While they are preparing her for preservation, Paula's bindings are partially cut by Casper. Paula gets loose, poisons Ludwig, and runs away until Hein strikes a high voltage cable and dies. Casper and Paula then escape together.
Halfway through the end credits, a sequence shows two of Paula's classmates praising Hein's abilities in dissection and preservation, discussing Grombek's imminent replacement, and how in their respective practices they will keep a low profile while experimenting for the Anti-Hippocratic Society.
Anatomy opened on 386 screens and grossed 3.9 million Deutsche Marks over the four-day weekend from 320,000 admissions, placing fourth at the German box office.[6] [7] The film had its North American premiere at the Fantasia International Film Festival on July 25, 2000,[8] where it won a prize in the Best International Film category.
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 62% based on, with a weighted average rating of 5.3/10.[9] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 33 out of 100, based on 4 critics, indicating "Generally unfavorable reviews".[10]
Dennis Schwartz from Ozus' World Movie Reviews gave the film a grade B, calling it "both eerily written and directed".[11] Stephen Holden from The New York Times gave the film a negative review, stating that the film "lacks the raucous, anything-for-a-shock carnival humor of its American prototypes".[12]