agmtw logo
search
The Forest for the Trees (2004)

The Forest for the Trees (2004)

A promising debut from one of Germany's most accomplished contemporary filmmakers

7.6

Movie

Germany
German
Comedy, Drama
2004
FEMALE DIRECTOR, MAREN ADE
Daniela Holtz, Eva Löbau, Heinz Röser-Dümmig
81 min

TLDR

We need a new word for 'awkward' after this.

What it's about

Melanie is a young teacher who moves town for a new school, where she struggled to make friends and deal with the unruly students.

The take

More than a decade before she made Toni Erdmann, German filmmaker Maren Ade turned her eye on a small-town school, a socially awkward teacher, and the inarticulate in between. Even with her debut, Ade showcased a talent for spotting the hidden comic potential of situations that can be wounding, turning vulnerabilities into power through comedy. The Forest For the Trees is a dilemma-film, in the ways in which it both invites and rejects identification with Melanie. A frighteningly optimistic person, she misreads most if not all social cues and finds herself in embarrassing situations. Even more, her devotion to making it all work, after moving away from the big city for said teaching job, is something a lot of viewers can recognize and support, but her borderline unlikeability is sometimes too hard to ignore. However, a majestic finale crowns the film with a scene that is worth rewatching again and again, like a dream you wish to appropriate for yourself.

What stands out

This is, in fact, Maren Ade's graduation film and is based on stories her parents—both of them teachers—have told her. A somewhat personal project whose digital look is easily considered distasteful today, The Forest For the Trees utilizes the 2000s aesthetic to the fullest. Sure, the unpolished look is far from fashionable today, but the rawness of the material as we see it alludes to the protagonist's thin-skin-attitude. An under-appreciated Sundance winner, The Forest For the Trees represents its times impeccably: the anxiety of the unaltered digital image and the awkwardness it projects imbue the scenes of the film with a specific kind of trepidation, one that comes with the advent of something big and paradigm-shifting. 

Comments

Add a comment

Your name

Your comment

UP NEXT 

UP NEXT 

UP NEXT 

Victoria (2015)

Filmed in one continuous take and in real time on the streets of Berlin, ‘Victoria’ immerses the viewer in a heart-stopping drama

9.8

In Order of Disappearance (2014)

Norwegian Kill Bill

7.3

Head-On (Gegen die Wand) (2004)

This raw, punk drama about a star-crossed love in modern Germany is as timely now as it was when it came out

9.3

Things to Come (2016)

A beautiful, bittersweet portrait of resilience

8.5

Youth (2015)

8.1

Bagdad Café (1987)

A fun West German movie set in a route 66 motel

7.0

Pearl (2022)

The technicolor slasher follow-up to Ti West's X is all about female rage and love for the movies

8.1

Toni Erdmann (2016)

7.9

The Lives of Others (2006)

The 2006 winner of seven German Film Awards wowed viewers worldwide with an authentic look at East Germany's sinister secret police Stasi

6.9

Soul Kitchen (2009)

8.0

Curated by humans, not algorithms.

agmtw logo

© 2024 agoodmovietowatch, all rights reserved.