Tough Love (2015 film) explained

Tough Love
Director:Rosa von Praunheim
Producer:Rosa von Praunheim
Music:Andreas Wolter
Cinematography:Nicolai Zörn
Elfi Mikesch
Editing:Mike Shepard
Runtime:89 minutes
Country:Germany
Language:German

Tough Love (German: '''Härte''') is a 2015 German semi-documentary drama film directed by Rosa von Praunheim and starring Hanno Koffler, Luise Heyer and Katy Karrenbauer.[1] For example, the film was screened at the 2015 Montreal World Film Festival and at the Hong Kong International Film Festival in the same year.[2]

Plot

Andreas (Hanno Koffler) was physically mistreated by his father from a young age, while his mother (Katy Karrenbauer) sexually molested him for years. Traumatized by these experiences of violence and rape, he slipped into crime as a young man and earned his money as a brutal pimp. But the police noticed him. After an outbreak of violence, Andreas ends up in prison, where he manages to come to terms with his past over the years, also with the help of his faithful girlfriend Marion (Luise Heyer). From then on he did everything he could to get out of crime and the prostitution scene. Later he takes action against what he had to go through himself: the physical, sexual and psychological abuse of children.

Awards

Reception

The culture magazine Kunst+Film wrote that the title would do the film credit: "Like its protagonist, it portrays the dazzling life of its protagonist harshly and relentlessly." The minimalist setting of the film was praised as a successful stylistic device, this "restriction to the essentials characterizes intense atmospheric density [...]. In addition, Praunheim has found wonderful actors. Katy Karrenbauer as a mother shows great courage to face unsympathetic ugliness with full, even naked, physical exertion. Hanno Koffler as young Andreas is just as convincing as Luise Heyer as his long-term girlfriend Marion."[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Härte. cineman.ch. 27 April 2015.
  2. Web site: Tough Love. m-appeal. 2022-05-03.
  3. Web site: Härte. Kunst+Film Kulturmagazin. 20 April 2015. 2022-05-03.