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IMDbPro

Berlin Blues

Original title: Herr Lehmann
  • 2003
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
7.8K
YOUR RATING
Christian Ulmen in Berlin Blues (2003)
ComedyDrama

Barkeeper Frank, semi-formally called "Herr Lehmann", is part of a lethargic West Berlin-microcosm. His lifestyle is disturbed when his parents show up for a visit, things go awry with his g... Read allBarkeeper Frank, semi-formally called "Herr Lehmann", is part of a lethargic West Berlin-microcosm. His lifestyle is disturbed when his parents show up for a visit, things go awry with his girlfriend and his best friend acts strange.Barkeeper Frank, semi-formally called "Herr Lehmann", is part of a lethargic West Berlin-microcosm. His lifestyle is disturbed when his parents show up for a visit, things go awry with his girlfriend and his best friend acts strange.

  • Director
    • Leander Haußmann
  • Writer
    • Sven Regener
  • Stars
    • Christian Ulmen
    • Katja Danowski
    • Detlev Buck
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    7.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Leander Haußmann
    • Writer
      • Sven Regener
    • Stars
      • Christian Ulmen
      • Katja Danowski
      • Detlev Buck
    • 16User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 5 nominations total

    Photos4

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    Top cast29

    Edit
    Christian Ulmen
    Christian Ulmen
    • Herr Lehmann
    Katja Danowski
    Katja Danowski
    • Katrin
    Detlev Buck
    Detlev Buck
    • Karl
    Janek Rieke
    • Kristall-Rainer
    Annika Kuhl
    • Heidi
    Hartmut Lange
    • Erwin
    Martin Olbertz
    • Marco
    Uwe Dag Berlin
    • Jürgen
    • (as Uwe-Dag Berlin)
    Michael Beck
    • Klaus
    Michael Gwisdek
    Michael Gwisdek
    • Der Trinker
    Stephan Baumecker
    Stephan Baumecker
    • Kiffer
    Tim Fischer
    • Sylvio
    Karsten Speck
    • Die Lederuschi
    Margit Bendokat
    Margit Bendokat
    • Mutter Lehmann
    Johann Adam Oest
    Johann Adam Oest
    • Vater Lehmann
    • (as Adam Oest)
    Sven Martinek
    Sven Martinek
    • Streifenpolizist
    Bernhard Schütz
    Bernhard Schütz
    • Gebissener Streifenpolizist
    Thomas Brussig
    • DDR-Zöllner, Verhör
    • Director
      • Leander Haußmann
    • Writer
      • Sven Regener
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    7.17.7K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    10kruks

    incredible soundtrack, marvellous cast...

    1. a remarkable screenplay (based on a contemporary literary classic) with several truly hilarious lines

    2. fresh, charismatic characters and actors, all the more convincing for their random quirks and non-supermodel appearance

    3. unconventional direction

    4. one of the best soundtracks EVER!

    a recommendation with five exclamation marks!!!!!
    10ethone

    One of the best German movies ever

    Of course you can't really compare Herr Lehmann to dramatic history reenactments like Der Untergang.

    But Herr Lehman is so full of comedy, but also full of authenticism and a plot not devoid of drama. It's dialogues are outstanding, but then the book the film is based on was exceptional to begin with. And the best thing is, if you like the movie, you will like the books. Sven Regener managed to show his talent in storytelling and humour in both art forms, book and movie. The connections he makes, the way he connects what actually happens to Frank Lehmann's thoughts is the best use of basic rhetoric means I ever saw. He doesn't use the "rhetoric artillery" so to speak, but achieves literary greatness nevertheless.

    The acting is on par with the quality of the script though. Even if I didn't expect Christian Ulmen to do any good acting ever, he produced the perfect rendition of the lazy, slightly hedonistic, disoriented Herr Lehmann. Detlev Buck is outstanding as well, as is nearly everybody in the supporting cast.

    10/10 for humour, artistic style, acting, all that while staying serious.
    5meyerzwo

    Incredible bad Boye Buck Stuff

    Hmm, who's the set director of Leander Hausmann? He should look out for a new one. The story is quite good, the main actor is great, but the set decoration makes me sick and remembers me all the time to Sonnenallee. Watch out or for the recycling bins after the scene where Frank and Katrin dispute in the Döner takeout. Leander, please remember, the story took place in the eighties. Another example? Did anyone read the story? Frank Lehmann came from Bremen, north of Germany.. And the slang of his parents? They sound like east Germans. And the hidden propaganda for Beck's Bier all the time... Boye, Hausmann, Buck, please stay away from making films.
    Camera-Obscura

    Laidback portrait of life in Kreuzberg-36

    BERLIN BLUES (Leander Haussmann - Germany 2003).

    The film is set during the fall of 1989 in the run-down West-Berlin neighbourhood of Kreuzberg 36, an isolated corner of the city right next to the Berlin wall, mainly populated by a collection of misfits, artists, philosophers and drop-outs of all kinds. This is the world of Frank, alias Herr Lehmann (Christian Ulmen), who works as a bartender, takes live as it comes and generally lives in a pleasant bubble, unaware of the major events occurring in the outside world. His friend Karl (Detlev Buck), an artist who builds huge metal constructions, works in another bar, as does Katrin (Katja Danowski), the new chef, with whom he soon starts a turbulent relationship.

    There are quite a few well-observed hilarious observations about Herr Lehmann's life in Kreuzberg, like an encounter with a whiskey-drinking dog, a confrontation with his visiting parents, a chaotic visit to East-Berlin and trouble in a gay-bar with "leather-Lily." The film's backdrop, with the fall of the Berlin wall in November 1989, Herr Lehmann's adventures seem to assume a certain importance, somewhat impaired with the occasionally flimsy and ridiculous occurrences in his life. In any other setting, the film would probably be less memorable than it is now. But that's probably the essential element what makes it work on many levels. The setting, Kreuzberg, and time in history, 1989, are the most potent ingredients for the film's relevance.

    The late eighties' atmosphere is well served, with a good soundtrack by Eels, Violent Femmes, Calexico, Ween, Cake and Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds. Above all, I watched this with great pleasure, because I lived in this particular part of Berlin and it still is my absolute favorite part of the city. It seems very little has changed since 1989. Many of the bar scenes were shot in Café "Zum Elefanten" on Heinrichplatz, typically the kind of place where the interior and personnel hasn't changed since 1970. The kind of place where you only come to get served, get a drink and talking is restricted to a minimum.

    Frank Griebe, who also lensed Tom Tykwer's LOLA RENNT (1998), did the cinematography, but here it's not nearly as flashy as in as in LOLA RENNT. Whether that's a good or thing or not, i'll leave that decision to you. And, as one other commenter from that proud Hanseatic city in Northern-Germany already noted, the film displays one of the most conspicuous product placements in recent German film.

    Camera Obscura --- 7/10
    QueenNadine

    See it, even if just for the mullet!

    Frank is a barman in 1989 West Berlin. Everyone calls him Herr Lehmann, much to his annoyance at times- but then, he's not really all that bothered, as he lives his life day to day, beer to beer, without much of a plan or direction, happy just to hang out with his mates and do the same bar hopping routine over and over. His comfortable state of leisure is disrupted when he meets attractive but tough chef Katrin, his parents visit him unexpectedly, and his best friend Karl starts going insane. And of course, a couple doors down, on the other side of the wall, a whole new level of turmoil is starting to brew...

    Well, where to start? The acting is great, with former MTV cutie Christian Ulmen giving a brilliantly lazy, laconic "am I bovveeeered?!" kind of performance. Detlev Buck steals many of Ulmen's scenes as artist stroke party animal Karl. I know Buck's a director, producer, and whatnot, but I love him as an actor. He's just able to create these hilarious, memorable characters, does deadpan like no other- and as Karl he sports the most incedible mullet (or Vokuhila, as we call it).

    I'd expected more eighties nostalgia in set and costume design, and music, but the film pretty much stayed clear of that. Even the dialogue sounded like it could have come from any period. (The mullet does make up for that, though. Big time.) I did think the atmosphere of late 80s West Berlin was captured well enough though, with the countless Eckkneipen and these types that just live for the next night out and are simply to cool to be bothered about what's happening around them. I've met enough of those myself, albeit not in Berlin, and love how the film manages to thoroughly take the mickey out of them while still presenting them as likable characters.

    Dialogue is witty, with some great, pointless beer conversations about basically nothing.

    There are points when the film seems to drag a little, just like Herr Lehmann's life- nothing much happens.

    The soundtrack is well-picked, though like with all modern German movies seems to have been put together by someone who hasn't quite realised that there have been songs written in languages other than English. That said, there is some seriously funky music in there.

    All in all, I absolutely loved this and would strongly recommend it. Even just for the mullet.

    9/10

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Christian Ulmen had to go to nine casting sessions before landing the role of Lehmann.
    • Goofs
      The position of the dog in the whisky scene changes without visible moving of the dog.
    • Crazy credits
      Before the soundtrack, the following can be found: "Alle Tiere im Film arbeiteten ohne Alkohol oder sonstige Drogen und freiwillig mit." [All animals in this film have been working without alcohol or other drugs and on voluntary basis.]
    • Connections
      Featured in Auge in Auge - Eine deutsche Filmgeschichte (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      Novocaine for the Soul
      Written by Mark Oliver Everett and Mark Goldenberg

      Performed by Eels

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    FAQ16

    • How long is Berlin Blues?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 2, 2003 (Germany)
    • Country of origin
      • Germany
    • Official site
      • Official Site (Germany)
    • Language
      • German
    • Also known as
      • 西柏林戀曲
    • Filming locations
      • Berlin, Germany
    • Production company
      • Boje Buck Produktion
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €6,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $4,143,889
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 45 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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