Reclaim Your Brain
Reclaim Your Brain
| 11 September 2007 (USA)
Reclaim Your Brain Trailers

Frustrated, because he is forced to produce bad TV-shows, a manager of a TV-station, enters the station and manipulates the ratings, to initiate a TV-revolution.

Reviews
Ploydsge

just watch it!

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Holstra

Boring, long, and too preachy.

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Neive Bellamy

Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.

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Fulke

Great example of an old-fashioned, pure-at-heart escapist event movie that doesn't pretend to be anything that it's not and has boat loads of fun being its own ludicrous self.

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Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de)

"Free Rainer" is a German movie from almost 10 years ago that runs for over 2 hours and was written and directed by Hans Weingartner, one of Germany's most acclaimed and successful filmmakers these days. And he made something pretty good here. I enjoyed watching this one for the most part and despite its massive runtime, it never dragged only a bit. The lead actor here is Moritz Bleibtreu, one of Germany's most famous for a long time now. Female protagonist is played by Elsa Sophie Gambard, who interestingly never appeared in a film again after this one and works in the field of medicine today. The supporting cast includes a couple actors that you may have come across in other films, but who are not too famous. most known may be Milan Peschel, who plays a man with social phobia, but who is usually better than in this one here. Austrian Gregor Bloéb on the other hand was a positive surprise as the main antagonist, who takes "aaöglatt" to the next level.The best thing, however, about this film is the excellent and spot-on criticism on the German television landscape. There is so much crap on television right now that makes me wonder why television is on such a high level over there in the United States, but here it sucks so hard. Even almost 10 years after this movie, nothing has changed. Actually, the already bad courtroom television shows got replaced by even worse fake reality television programs. So yeah, all these references alone are reason enough to check out the movie. It has some problems in other areas though. First of all, it is a bit on the predictable site, but that's not the worst problem. The film is hurt more by a lack of shades. People are either 100% likable or 100% unlikeable and there is nothing in-between sadly. This also results in some cringeworthy moments when the dialogs are just a bit on the holier-than-thou side.However, "Free Rainer" is absolutely worth checking out for its social commentary that, in 2016, applies more than ever. I recommend this movie to everybody who reads this review here and has not yet seen it. It certainly also helps if you like Bleibtreu. I myself am fine with him without being a really big fan, however, so you don't need to adore him to appreciate his and Weingartner's efforts here. Yes it is not a very realistic film (but with a huge fun-ride early on when Bleibtreu's character is still one of the bad guys), but a very authentic one and also pretty entertaining for the most part. Go check it out.

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Brooke Morriswood

(This review was written after I saw the film at the Toronto film Festival in September '07)For anyone struggling to find an artistic direction, a new voice, or inspiration, this is a must. Blisteringly angry, intelligent, subversive, and furiously cynical about contemporary society, this is film-making as it should be.Wingartner's target is the dumbing-down of popular culture, primarily via the medium of lowest common denominator television. It tells the story of Reiner, a TV executive specialising in Reality TV - his latest project involves a sperm race between three contestants to win the opportunity to impregnate a woman - who experiences a Damascene conversion following an encounter with a woman whose grandfather committed suicide after being falsely indicted in one of Reiner's news shows. When his attempt to introduce intelligent programming bombs, Reiner decides to artificially manipulate the TV ratings to force the channels to alter their schedules in favour of more informed material. Gathering a motley collection of unemployed workers - the unlikeliest band of anarchists you'll ever see - he audaciously sets off his own cultural revolution.A relatively simple story is wonderfully elaborated by a marvellously sympathetic cast. Moritz Bleibtrau (now definitely laying claim to being the most interesting actor working today - just look at his resume for the last 9 years) gives a tour de force as Reiner. His character's metamorphosis from coke-snorting, brash yuppie to contemplative, passionate man of reason is never less than convincing and a wonderful exhibition of his range and charisma. He's ably supported by the luminous Elsa Shultz Gambard (unbelievably making her major film debut) as his guiding angel. The direction - though potentially overindulging in montages just a bit - is uniformly superb, allowing the actors free rein to tell the story. Nonetheless, Weingartner's deferential camera is fully capable of stepping to the fore - the opening 6 minutes constitute probably the most exhilarating car sequence I've seen this year. Though dealing with decidedly academic, political and radical themes, "Reclaim your brain"'s 129 minutes absolutely fly by. It's a blast.Anyone into cinema should see this film. Anyone who's bewailed current popular culture should see this film. Anyone who'd champion education over soma, action over passivity, or quality over quantity should see this film. And I mean SEE. At the post-movie Q&A, Weingarter was disturbingly pessimistic about his ability to continue to make films. Getting the money to make this feature has apparently been a real struggle, and he claims to have sunk most of his money from "The Edukators" into the project. "How can I continue," he asked "if the people who aren't interested in this never see it (he reckons it'll never be on TV), and those who are copy the DVD or download it? Cinema tickets and DVD sales are all I have." I'm not going to preach regarding the crime of copying/downloading, but it'd be a genuine atrocity if this man went out of work. PLease, go see.

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kalafudra

The acting was exceptionally well for a German movie - I don't know if I just notice bad acting more easily when it's in German (it is my mother tongue after all) or if it's really rare in the German film biz to have good actors. Anyway, in this movie it was well done (and if I think about Stipe Erceg in "Die fetten Jahre sind vorbei" that's also not always the case in Weingartner's movies). Unfortunately the actors had to fight with cliché after cliché being thrust upon them. The cocaine-sniffing, not giving a damn about anything media guy, the socio phobic computer nerd who spends his time with conspiracy theories (by the way, Weingartner should probably talk with the psychiatric association - he obviously has buried somewhere in his movie a miraculous cure for a psychosis, seeing as Philipp is socio phobic and then a couple of weeks later he isn't anymore, not really anyway) and the revolutionary who is just a hurt little girl inside. Characterisation gets a little better towards the end, at least for the main characters. Sadly, it's not enough to give them any depth. The directing style was very conservative - the initial characterisation of Rainer, the news paper clips or the raid - there's nothing we haven't seen before. It's not badly directed but in connection with the "revolutionary" content (not the content itself being revolutionary - we've all seen movies about the bad bad media biz, but the film being about revolution) it could have used some more revolutionary directing. As in "Die fetten Jahre sind vorbei" (I'm sorry for the constant comparison between those two movies but they are so similar, not only in style but also in content that it just forces itself on me :), Weingartner uses lengthy monologues to explain why revolution is good/necessary/the thing to do, which can and does get boring. Fortunately, there are some funny scenes, although he sometimes tries too hard. The morale of the story is inconsequential at best. Because it obviously is a victory for everybody that people stop watching TV altogether to read books or to go for a walk: So bad TV makes people stupid and good TV makes people stop watching TV? Also, Rainer stresses more than once that you should trust people to be able to handle intelligent TV. But by manipulating the quota, he doesn't even give them a choice. Isn't his approach to force-feed them the good stuff as bad as force-feed them the bad stuff?

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CORITO1

I saw this movie yesterday in the San Sebastian Film Festival. I liked the message a lot.A German TV executive has a wake-up call and changes his life ,supporting a culture-driven society.In these days , TV programs are usually rubbish, and a lot people think in that way, it's difficult to find programs with real interest. So Reclaim your Brain for me is a very good title. We,Citizens, are very tired of this rubbish we are sold day over day. we can change the world!.But this change is not in the movies, but In our everyday's life.thank you to all the crew of this movie for doing this picture.

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