A love story set amidst the chaos and horror of World War II, Dresden
tells the tale of a beautiful young German nurse who falls in love
with an injured British pilot.
Anna (Felicitas Woll) is engaged to a wealthy doctor, but she wants more
than the bland certainty he can offer her. While on her rounds at the hospital,
she discovers Robert (John Light), who is in hiding.
Anna knows little about him and is initially unaware that he is a British
soldier, and therefore her enemy.
What starts as a quiet, private romance escalates into an affair that the
couple has a difficult time containing.
Woll and Light make beautiful leads, but it's the supporting characters
who stand out. Dr. Carl Mauth (Heiner Lauterbach), Anna's father, is a
complicated and compelling man who will resort to stealing morphine if
his patients are in need. Watching his emotive face, viewers understand
his intent without having to hear him speak.
Dresden's filmmakers do a formidable job of presenting both the
Brits and the Germans as flawed people who aren't sure what is right and
wrong.
Set in January, 1945, prior to the Allied bombings of Dresden, the German
production team does a fine job of meshing soap opera type melodrama with
feverish action.
There are some scenes that are horrific and gruesome to watch.
But more often than not, they succinctly set the tone for the violence
that accompanies war. Though the three-hour miniseries (which offers both
English and German with English subtitles) has been favorably compared
with the epic love story portrayed in Titanic, it also shares some
of the sweet aspects of Summer of My German Soldier, a 1978 made-for-TV
movie that depicts the unlikely friendship between a young Jewish girl
and a German POW.
As with war, there sometimes is no explanation for love. It just happens. |