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« Finding Linky | Main | Best Acting, Male Division: Personal Ballots & Oscar Charts »
Tuesday
Jan262016

Retro Sundance: 1999's Run Lola Run

Team Experience is looking back on past Sundance winners since we aren't attending this year. Here's Manuel on a late 90s German flick...

Tom Tykwer’s Run Lola Run (Lola rennt) won the 1999 Audience Award (World Cinema) at Sundance in 1999, an early accolade that would make it one of the most critically acclaimed foreign films of the year, a notion more than cemented close to a year later, when it would win the Independent Spirit Award for Best Foreign Film, a BAFTA nomination and seven aptly titled Lola (German Film) Awards. In case you’re wondering, Germany didn’t submit Tykwer’s film as its Foreign Language Oscar entry*—they went instead with the lesbian Nazi film Aimée & Jaguar, which failed to make the cut with the Academy who eventually bestowed the prize on Pedro Almodóvar’s All About My Mother. [*Edit: Actually as Harmodio points out in the comments, the film was submitted the year before, in 1998, though it was passed over. I was somehow okay with it missing a spot the year Pedro won, but that it didn't even make the cut the year Life is Beautiful won? Well... that's just depressing.]

I hadn’t revisited it since I first caught way back in college and all I could remember was its propulsive storytelling and near-frantic filmmaking. And really, on second viewing, that remains the film’s most distinctive feature...

 Run Lola Run centers on Lola (Franka Potente) a young woman whose moped gets stolen, a small incident that derails her small-time criminal boyfriend Manni (Moritz Bleibtreu) from delivering 100,000 marks to his boss. With only twenty minutes until Manni has to drop off the money, Lola has to find a way to come up with a plan. What the film offers is three potential outcomes, following one at a time until Lola successfully manages to stave off a bloody end and assures herself the possibility of a happy ending. The film is an exercise in pulsating tension, teasing out an adrenaline-pumping vision of the butterfly effect: in brief moments when Lola’s narrative affects her interaction with a random passerby we see the newly potential future ahead of them.  

It’s the type of flashy filmmaking that lives and dies on its editing, and boy does first-time editor Mathilde Bonnefoy deliver (you may not know this but she edited last year’s documentary feature winner Citizenfour). Looking back at it, Tykwer’s film almost feels of its time, sitting pretty alongside movies like Fight Club, The Matrix, Requiem for a Dream and Snatch, all released within months of one another, whose kinetic filmic energy all but propel the narratives they help sculpt.

If nothing else, the film should remind us that Hollywood never quite knew what to do with Potente who is so very good in this demanding, if limited role, though maybe her role in the upcoming The Conjuring 2 will remedy this?

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Reader Comments (10)

Moritz Bleibtrau is so sexy in this film.

January 26, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterSan FranCinema

Still one of my all-time favorite films. The build and release of tension is so stellar and the editing is indeed out of this world - can't believe this was the editor's first feature!

I so wanted a big career for Franka but she was wasted in the Bourne films and that was seemingly it. She was incredible as Anne Frank in American Horror Story's second season, though. Hopefully that reignited some interest in her, because she's so fascinating to watch.

January 26, 2016 | Unregistered Commenterdenny

It is absolutely of its time, great call. I will always love this movie, and the two stars. Franka and Morlitz forever!

January 26, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterSawyer

Dude on the right looks like Theo James! Yum.

January 26, 2016 | Unregistered Commenterbrookesboy

She was pretty good, if my memory serves, in Eric Bana's ROMULUS, MY FATHER in a very stock standard role.

January 26, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterGlenn Dunks

One of my favourite films. Among the many things I love, is the reversion of the roles in in the intercut bedroom scene (when either of them doesn't want to day), and the amazing fitting of the soundtrack underscoring the pulsing of the movie (and Franka actually provided the voice in some tracks)

January 27, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterIvonne

" In case you’re wondering, Germany didn’t submit Tykwer’s film as its Foreign Language Oscar entry—they went instead with the lesbian Nazi film Aimée & Jaguar"

Actually Germany submit Lola Rennt as its Oscar 1998. I just do not was nominee.

January 27, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterHarmodio

Halo Lola Ich brauche Schampu!

January 27, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterSean

Harmodio, you are correct! It was the release dates that tripped me up (and the fact that Tykwer's film and Aimée & Jaguar competed in 1999 for the Lolas). The fact that it was passed over the same year Life is Beautiful won makes it all the more depressing, actually.

January 27, 2016 | Registered CommenterManuel Betancourt

Run Lola Run still holds a special place in my heart.

I finally got to see Victoria, which, of course, was directed by Tykwer regular Sebastian Schipper (he plays the guy with the bicycle in Run Lola Run), a week ago and I'm still thinking about it. Amy Nicholson wrote about how it should have been the new Run Lola Run, but somehow wasn't:
http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/the_movie_club/features/2015/best_movies_2015/victoria_the_voices_what_we_do_in_the_shadows_and_other_great_movies_you.html

January 27, 2016 | Unregistered Commenteranna
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