‘Fatherland’ Review: Pawel Pawlikowski’s Meditation On Postwar Germany Is A Masterclass In Artistic Discipline – Cannes Film Festival

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- Fatherland premiered in competition at the Cannes Film Festival.
- Pawel Pawlikowski directed the 82‑minute film, which follows Nobel‑Prize‑winning writer Thomas Mann in 1949.
- Thomas Mann is portrayed by Hanns Zischler, while his daughter Erika Mann is played by Sandra Hüller.
- Klaus Mann (played by August Diehl) appears naked on a bed in a square‑frame, black‑and‑white opening scene set in a French hotel room.
- Fatherland explores post‑war German identity by depicting Mann’s tour to commemorate Goethe’s 200th anniversary, with both East and West Germany vying to claim the literary icons.
Why it matters: Pawlikowski’s 82‑minute film gets Cannes competition exposure, boosting the production company’s marketability and likely increasing box‑office returns while drawing wider audience interest to post‑war German cinema.




