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Synopsis
An emotionally unstable young man saves the life of a mental health nurse, Sisi,
after she gets hit by a truck. She searches for him, and involuntarily becomes
enmeshed in a disastrous caper that binds their lives together.
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Born in Wuppertal, Germany, Tykwer began making films at the early age of eleven
and has worked as a production assistant, script reader and assistant director
Filmography
Deadly Maria (1994)
Wintersleepers (1997)
Run Lola Run (1998)
The Princess and the Warrior (2000)
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Director Tom Tykwer first came to world-wide attention with his astonishing
and electric hit Run Lola Run, also starring, like The Princess
and the Warrior, the punkishly blonde Franka Potente. Here she plays
Sisi, a soothing and expert nurse in a mental institution, where she is adored
by her patients. One day while walking with one her blind patients, she is hit
by a truck whose driver was yelling at Bodo (Benno Fürmann) hanging off the
back of it. Bodo, a troubled young ex-soldier who cries often and inexplicably,
performs an emergency tracheotomy on Sisi and disappears. The recovered Sisi
tracks him down but he violently rebuffs her, as he and his brother are planning
a heist on a local bank.Circumstance
dictates that these three are thrown together, and they are, in a heart stopping
cycle of suspense.
Benno Fürman as Bodo
shows a chameleon-like ability to shift from a fearful, almost simpleminded
creature to a man of supreme confidence. He is remarkably good-looking (along
Brad Pitt lines), prettier than Potente in fact, and it will be interesting
to note if he will be snatched up and styled by Hollywood as our next leading
man. Tykwer is unusual as a director. He excells with the edgy, quick-cut focus
on violence that has been so popular since Tarantino, but Tykwer directs Potente
and Fûrman's close-ups with a lingering eye. His story, while frightening, is
ultimately one of the redemptive power of love, and is strong, warm and human,
laced with bright threads of humour. Each of the supporting characters is well-rounded
and substantial. Tykwer is obviously working with a theatrically trained cast
here, a refreshing change from many North American film's pap characterizations.
Like the impromptu scene when everyone in the institution starts to dance, The
Princess and the Warrior often, as a film, simply breaks into song.
Mary-Lou Zeitoun
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