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Max
(VHS, 2003) Other Editions...

Leading Role: John Cusack, Noah Taylor
Director: Menno Meyjes

BEST PRICE
$9.61
Format: VHS
May 2003
Rated R
Recording Mode: (unknown)
Sound: Stereo
108 min.
Color
Extra Info: Spanish Subtitled
UPC: 031398829034
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Movie Description
MAX, directed by Oscar-nominated screenwriter Menno Meyjes, stars John Cusack as the title character, Max Rothman, a German-Jewish man who lost his right arm while fighting for his country during WWI. Although Rothman is no longer able to pursue his dream of becoming an artist, he channels his love of art into a successful gallery that shows the work of many European modernist painters, including George Grosz (portrayed by Kevin McKidd). At one of his gallery openings, Rothman meets an artist and fellow WWI soldier, an intense young man named Adolf Hitler (Noah Taylor). Largely out of a veteran's bond, Rothman agrees to buy some of Hitler's work and encourages the frustrated painter to channel his emotions onto the canvas. However, angered and disillusioned by Germany's impoverished state, Hitler also begins flirting with politics and public speaking. As Rothman comes closer to selling his work, Hitler's interests take a turn--a turn that will change the course of world history.


Stirring up controversy even before its release, MAX largely avoids the pitfalls often associated with taking on major historical figures. Although the film is about Hitler, as the title implies, it focuses more on the intriguing and complex character of Max Rothman, who is excellently portrayed by Cusack. In spite of his lost arm and his country's decline, Rothman tries to remain optimistic and finds solace in his appreciation of art. Meanwhile, Hitler's artistic output is largely unimaginative, and Taylor's performance as the future dictator and mass murderer is far from flattering or sympathetic. A smart and unusual film that handles its delicate subject matter well, MAX is a engaging look at the lives of two men just before they are irrevocably altered.

Credits
Cast:John Cusack, Noah Taylor
Director:Menno Meyjes
Producer:Andras Hamori

Film Notes
Theatrical Release: DECEMBER 27, 2002

Industry Reviews
"...It presents a fascinating and psychologically credible interpretation of events that may have been crucial to that monster's formation....The film has extravagantly stylized visual imagination..."
New York Times - Stephen Holden (12/27/2002)

"...This is a fascinating and engrossing film that deals intelligently with a great many ideas, and Cusack and Taylor are brilliant in it..."
Premiere - Glenn Kenny (01/01/2003)

"...[A] provocative historical fantasy....It challenges, this nervy oddity, like modern art should..."
Entertainment Weekly - Lisa Schwarzbaum (01/17/2003)

"...John Cusack gives an adroit performance..."
Movieline - Stephen Farber (02/01/2003)

"...Meyjes is surprisingly successful at recreating the tumult of early-Weimar Germany....It's testament to Meyjes' storytelling abilities that there is some suspense about a film whose ending every audience knows long in advance..."
Sight and Sound - Geoffrey Macnab (07/01/2003)

"In context, the drama is immense."
Total Film - Jon Brown (04/01/2004)


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Other Editions

VHS, May 2003 - $0.75
DVD, May 2003 - $2.50 Save 89%

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