I just finished watching the new German film “Er
ist wieder da“ (translated “He is back“) on Netflix. While the film is in German, Netflix does
provide English subtitles for the linguistically-German challenged. The film can be found on Netflix by searching
for “Look Who’s Back.”
Like all good satire, the movie utilizes humor
to great effect in the pursuit of exposing key weaknesses in contemporary society. The film is a fictional account of the mysterious
return of Adolf Hitler to 2014 Berlin. With
his last recollection being that of his Berlin bunker in May 1945, Hitler begins
exploring contemporary society. While
his interpretation of 21st Century society is amusing, the most
interesting parts by far were the interactions the actor had with real
bystanders. You see, the film was made
on the streets of Germany and many of the people “Hitler” interacts with are
not actors themselves.
I am not going to give any more details about
the movie because I would really rather you see it for yourself. However, I will say that the end does a great
job bringing everything around and leaving the viewer with some good “food for
thought.” While some (many?) will find
the thought of a Hitler satire to be distasteful (not unwarranted) I took the
moral of the story to be that the horrors that occurred from 1933-1945 under
Hitler’s reign were nothing special to him or that place or time; rather they
could all happen anywhere, anytime. Why? Because humans are sinful. Hitler (the real one), while I believe an
agent of Satan, merely tapped into the inherent sin of mankind. We have plenty of examples of such sin around
us today, which is what precisely makes this movie a “must see” right now; it
shines a much needed light on the very weaknesses that make our society ripe
for a leader to abuse. In the US, we see
leaders, and those that seek such positions, abuse power, shirk culpability,
and flaunt their immunity to the repercussions of their illegal activity. Others speak in ways that foster hate. Or do they just tap into it? The moral of the movie “Look Who’s Back” is
that the characteristics of a leader reflect more about those that follow them
than it does about the leader themselves.
In the movie, the character Hitler reminds another character that he was
elected by the people.
While the real Adolf Hitler is more than
deserving of the distain and contempt for generations to come, let us never
forget a nation’s leader is really a reflection of the people. Nothing could be more applicable to our
nation today as we head into a presidential election.
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