A young Austrian Jew hides out in the nightclub scene in this 1930s-set drama based on a real story – and inspired by countless other tales of Jews in exile in Europe

It is 1938 and the Austrian Anschluss is unfolding. In Vienna, the Jewish Knoller family must make some hard choices. While one brother is sent to stay in America, younger sibling Freddie (Lucas Lynggaard Tønnesen) must fend for himself as his parents opt to stay behind – a choice that is clearly not going to end well. While the film cuts back and forth between periods, we see Freddie on a death march with other Jewish prisoners in one timeframe, and trying to make his way to the UK via France in another.
In the westward-bound section, Freddie ends up in Paris, broke and desperate but eager for a bit of glamour all the same. An encounter with raffish but slippery Christos (Fernando Guallar), another immigrant, results in Freddie securing a job in the Opéra neighbourhood persuading Nazi soldiers with his perfect fluent German to come to a nightclub he and Christos work for. This is how he hopes to raise enough money to pay for forged papers. What follows tracks closely to dozens of similar stories about Jews in exile in Europe during the second world war, compelled to keep their identities secret, and while the film is in fact based on the story of a real-life Freddie Knoller, the cliched treatment rather drains it of the plausibility it needs to make it distinctive.
Clara Rugaard co-stars as vampy Jacqueline, Freddie’s love interest, a cabaret chanteuse who may be hiding secrets of her own. Elsewhere we get Til Schweiger as Officer Kurt, essentially the same menacing character Schweiger always plays (apart from his policeman in Muppets Most Wanted). In the lead, Tønnesen has a certain endearing openness of feature, although his facial resemblance to Elle Fanning is quite distracting.
The whole package is another bizarre zag in the chevron-shaped career of director Annabel Jankel, who started out directing The Max Headroom Show and the notorious 1993 version of Super Mario Bros. before re-emerging in 2019 after a long gestation with literary lesbian love story Tell It to the Bees.
News
Losing A Best Friend, Going To Prison, And A Broken Appointment In The Delivery Room: The Steep Price Behind Matt Wright’s Freedom
Outback Wrangler star Matt Wright has been released from prison, narrowly missing the birth of his newborn son. The celebrity crocodile…
Chaos on the streets: Around 200 teenagers converged on George Street to carry out a dangerous social media trend
Teens have run riot in Brisbane’s CBD after a failed attempt to storm the Church of Scientology building as part of a…
The two daughters of the 81-year-old victim, who perished beneath the vehicle on Railway Road, have arrived at the scene: The agony of losing a loved one so abruptly is beyond the reach of words…
A family has been shattered after an 81-year-old man was hit and killed outside a train station in Sydney in what police…
The Assassin In The White Sedan: A Horrific Midnight Crash And A Traceless Escape – The Victim’s Condition Is Critical
Police are searching for the driver involved in an alleged hit and run that has left a woman fighting for life…
Red alert: Gu.nman in bright orange shirt on the loose – Police helicopters and riot squad launch massive manhunt!
A driver allegedly fired shots in the air in Sydney’s west after police tried to pull him over. Officers tried to stop…
After losing the love of her life of half a century, Patti Newton reveals for the first time the ‘angels’ who saved her soul amidst the depths of her grief
Patti Newton has revealed the final promise she made to her late husband Bert Newton before his death, saying it gave…
End of content
No more pages to load






