Conversation with the Beast explained

Conversation with the Beast
Native Name:Gespräch mit dem Biest
Director:Armin Mueller-Stahl
Starring:Armin Mueller-Stahl
Bob Balaban
Katharina Böhm
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Conversation with the Beast (German: '''Gespräch mit dem Biest''') is a 1996 German film directed by Armin Mueller-Stahl, and written by Mueller-Stahl and Tom Abrams. The film is about an American researcher (played by Bob Balaban), who interviews a 103-year-old man claiming to be Adolf Hitler.[1] [2] The film was released on 10 September 1996 at the 1996 Toronto International Film Festival, shown at over twenty film festivals worldwide, but never released on video.

Plot

The film is based on the idea that Adolf Hitler, the "beast" of the film title, is still alive—hidden in a bunker—at the age of 103 (in 1992).[3] The protagonist sits in a wheelchair and speaks English. This "real" Hitler invites six Hitler doubles into the bunker, furnished with Nazi paraphernalia, in which he lives with his apparently very young wife Hortense.Webster, an American journalist, breaks into the bunker and asks uncomfortable questions. He interviews the self-proclaimed Hitler for ten days before shooting him on the last day of the interview, as he is now sure that he is facing the real Hitler.

Cast

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Conversation with the Beast . rudolf-steiner-film.de . 8 December 2020.
  2. Web site: Conversation with the Beast . djfl.de . https://web.archive.org/web/20070929083115/http://www.djfl.de/entertainment/djfl/1095/109747.html . 8 December 2020 . 29 September 2007 . de.
  3. Web site: Der Frühling des Patriarchen . zeit.de . 21 February 1997 . 8 December 2020 . de . The Patriarch's Spring.