SYNOPSICS
Im Sommer wohnt er unten (2015) is a German,French,English movie. Tom Sommerlatte has directed this movie. Sebastian Fräsdorf,Alice Pehlivanyan,Godehard Giese,Karin Hanczewski are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2015. Im Sommer wohnt er unten (2015) is considered one of the best Comedy,Drama movie in India and around the world.
Matthias is the younger of the two Landberg brothers. While his brother David has followed in their father's footsteps on the path to success, Matthias lives his life far away from ambitions and career options. He shares his family's holiday home at the French Atlantic coast with his girlfriend Camille and her 6-year-old son Etienne from a previous relationship. Together they idle about day after day. The story begins when David and his wife Lena arrive with the intention of spending their holiday in the family home. Matthias' carefree days are over in a beat, David's presence changes everything. Within ten minutes after his arrival, David insists on sleeping in the room Matthias and Camille have made their own and demands that Etienne is brought to his father, as he wants peace and quiet. Matthias quietly complies because "what David wants, David gets" has been a rule for him from early age on. Camille, however, disgusted by David's bossy behavior, and unwilling to accept his air of ...
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Im Sommer wohnt er unten (2015) Reviews
Not how you want to spend your summer
"Im Sommer wohnt er unten" is a German 95-minute film from two years ago and after one short film from the year before, it is the first effort was writer and director by young German filmmaker Tom Sommerlatte. The cast includes names that maybe some of the very biggest German film buffs have not yet come across. I only know Giese somehow. You could probably call it a relationship drama as the serious scenes were more frequent in my opinion than the lighter comedy material. "Relationships" in this context includes love and family as both fields play a major role. I would say that this was a pretty mediocre work, nothing special at all, which is why I am genuinely baffled by the great deal of awards attention it received. Going for the flawed unlikable focus when it comes to the key players here may also not have been the best decision. But I would not really blame the cast, they are decent. Oh yeah, production country is also France, not just Germany and the consequence is visible and major parts are in French in here. So perhaps look out for a good set of subtitles. If you can't find any, don't worry and just skip the film altogether as you won't be missing much of value. Like I said, for a first feature it is decent, but it is nothing that makes me curious about Sommerlatte's next efforts behind the camera and unless he improves drastically, sticking to acting may be the right path for him. I give "Summers Downstairs" a thumbs-down. Not recommended.