A Decent Man

2016
6.6| 1h32m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 11 February 2016 Released
Producted By: Teleclub
Country: Switzerland
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Conflict-avoidant Thomas just wants a relaxing holiday in the Swiss Alps. But, it's a slippery slope from the beginning. In an effort to repair his own family ties and to impress his boss, he takes his family and his employer's daughter with him. Tragedy strikes and Thomas feels responsible. Should he be his typical passive self? Or risk doing the right thing at the expense of his relationships with his family and employer?

Genre

Drama, Thriller

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Director

Micha Lewinsky

Production Companies

Teleclub

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A Decent Man Audience Reviews

Evengyny Thanks for the memories!
Curapedi I cannot think of one single thing that I would change about this film. The acting is incomparable, the directing deft, and the writing poignantly brilliant.
Invaderbank The film creates a perfect balance between action and depth of basic needs, in the midst of an infertile atmosphere.
Paynbob It’s fine. It's literally the definition of a fine movie. You’ve seen it before, you know every beat and outcome before the characters even do. Only question is how much escapism you’re looking for.
Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de) "Nichts passiert" or "A Decent Man" is a Swiss German-language film from 2015, so still relatively new and this one is a definite contender for the most known work by writer and director Micha Lewinsky, even if he made 2-3 other films that are about on the same level of popularity. It runs for approximately 1.5 hours and the most known actor in this award-winning work is without a doubt Devid Striesow, even if some of the others have a fairly prolific body of work too. Striesow plays the central character here, a man who is keen on avoiding all kinds of conflict in his life, even if it has a negative impact on him. The consequence is that basically nobody takes him seriously (including his wife and daughter) and that many people use him for their own good like another male character who enjoys a relaxing weekend and gives his daughter to Striesow's character, so he takes her on a skiing trip with his family. And there are many other examples like for example discussions with his wife about how long the girls are allowed to go out at night etc. He is basically treated disrespectful by everybody, but he takes it because he is not ready to confront others and prefers to stay in his comfort zone instead. I think some of the details about the character were written extremely well and Striesow also nailed the part with his execution. You will see these moments when they show up at the screen. At least I hope you will and not that it's just people who may be slightly similar to the character who recognize these situations that were depicted in an extremely accurate fashion. This is when the film is at its best and Striesow truly shines there. Sadly in the second half the film takes a few turns about a girl potentially (no pun intended!) being sexually abused as well as the outburst near the end where it felt to me as if the film sacrifices a great deal of its depth and convincing story-telling for cheap thrills and the desperate attempt to tackle controversial issues. Further pursuing the path of subtlety (instead of going for a poor man's version of the ending from Fassbinder's amok movie) may have been the key, the better choice. I may have thought about giving the film a ****/*****, but with the final developments this is really out of the equation. But maybe it is just my personal opinion, who knows. It may all have to do with a subjective perspective what you like the most in here. And it's not a negative deal breaker either. I still enjoyed the film, even a lot at times thanks to Striesow's portrayal. That's why I definitely give it a thumbs-up and this one is definitely underseen. Go change it guys.
krocheav There's not a great deal to enjoy in this overstretched, depressing French movie. If taken as a vehicle for showing urban detachment, it might please some but overall, it's simply telling us what we already know. Long drawn out hand-held camera shots following actors in and out of doors etc, is the first sign of not having enough story to carry the distance over a full feature. The main character obviously had some serious personal problems well before being savagely worked over by local no-hoper criminals so, this incident alone was not the sole reason for his escalating, destructive bad attitudes. Simply setting part of your story in a major retail store, then blending cross-cut images of consumerism and its effect on our daily lives - is a rather poor excuse for going on a suicide mission and gunning people down in public places. As it stands, A Decent Man is just another depressing homemade-indie type movie. Performances are OK if you're in the mood for these now, sadly overly familiar, angry antics but, there's little of any true depth here. It might prove more valuable investing your hard earned time looking for more uplifting material.
colaya Sometimes little things become snowballs. That is the premise of this movie. The main character is indeed a decent man trying to do the right thing, which proves to be difficult. We play in life different roles that are not easy to harmonize, each one in different scenarios with different rules, expectations and colors. Father, husband, employee, friend, citizen: these are the roles that the protagonist wants to reconcile.But those roles do not always add up. This is an unpretentious, well-photographed movie with such simple premise and it delivers. Acting is a little bit uneven but there are also strong performances and a realistic atmosphere.Overall this film reminds us the fragility of our seemingly inertial and routine life driven by the complexity of the diverse roles that we simultaneously play, which leads us to a life full of shades of grey rather than simplistic tones of black and white.