Wednesday, April 1, 2026
SOCIAL SPOTLIGHT
Actors don’t just light up the screen — they light up the feed. Social Spotlight takes a look at how today’s stars promote their movies through the platforms that matter.
This round we have an Instagram post from Wrong Turn star Sophie Thatcher....
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
Now Showing: Wrong Turn
Wrong Turn
Genre: Horror
Director: Christopher Landon
Writer: Ben Collins
Cast: Sophie Thatcher, Tanner Buchanan, Caylee Cowan, Rohan Campbell, Devyn Nekoda, Emily VanCamp, Penn Badgley
Plot: The moon is partly obscured by clouds as a thin mist winds through the trees. A pair of hikers, a man and a woman, dressed in technical clothing and camping backpacks, advance cautiously along a path lit only by their flickering headlamps. The woman looks around nervously, clutching her companion’s arm tightly. Their breathing is labored and their faces are sweaty despite the cold. Their whispers seem broken by fear. The two turn around often, hearing something or thinking they hear it. Suddenly a branch breaks behind them, then another, closer. A guttural sound, almost an animalistic breath with a human tone is heard by the two hikers. The man’s eyes peer between the trees. The torch shines through the trees but there is nothing except that light mist. They take a step forward… and the earth gives way. The man sinks into a hole camouflaged by leaves and dry branches. The woman turns around screaming when she sees the man's body impaled on long, sharp stakes driven into the ground. The woman kneels on the edge as she hears a noise behind her. Something suddenly grabs her ankle. The camera follows her as she is dragged away, her heels digging into the earth as her nails try to grasp anything. Then a muffled scream is lost among the trees as the woman disappears into the fog.
The sun is high on a scenic, winding road, surrounded by thick conifers. A dark SUV speeds along the asphalt. Inside, the atmosphere is lively and light. Lena (Sophie Thatcher) drives with one arm relaxed out the window. Her black hair is pulled back in a ponytail with a pair of large, round sunglasses that reflect the landscape. A faint smile creases her face as she drums her fingers on the steering wheel to the beat of the music. Next to her, Zane (Tanner Buchanan) leans casually against the open window, staring out at the view, then turns to say something that makes everyone laugh. In the backseat Riley (Caylee Cowan) takes a selfie with Jude (Rohan Campbell), who tries to ruin it by making faces. Maya (Devyn Nekoda) moves to the beat, raising her hands and tossing her hair as if she’s already at the festival.
Suddenly, Lena slows the vehicle to a stop. Ahead of them, a line of vehicles stops in the middle of the road. Some drivers are out of their cars, others are trying to reverse around the obstacle. A distant horn blares. In the distance, visible through the trees: an overturned truck, lying on its side, its cargo strewn across the asphalt, blocking both directions of travel. The group turns off the music. Windows roll down, heads poking out to see what’s happening. Zane and Maya exchange a bored look. After a moment, Jude opens the door.
A little time passes and some of them get out of the car to stretch their legs. Riley, Lena and Zane walk along the shoulder, passing other stopped vehicles. Other people are out there talking, smoking and taking shelter in the shade. The atmosphere is patient but frustrated. Lena looks around as she sees a couple leaning against an old, lived-in olive green van. Daniel (Penn Badgley) is relaxed, with an attentive look and a friendly smile. Claire (Emily VanCamp) a very pretty blonde woman is next to him, holding a steel canteen and calmly observing everything. Zane comes over to make a sarcastic joke to which Claire laughs naturally, while Daniel responds with a friendly wave. Claire offers the boys cold drinks with a spontaneous gesture. The group relaxes a bit. They start to chat calmly. What seems like a random connection forms. Meanwhile, the camera pans up to an aerial shot. We see the line of cars stuck in the middle of nowhere.
Maya runs nervously toward the group, waving her hands, her voice cracking with urgency. The boys turn as Maya struggles to explain. A thin column of grayish smoke rises from the hood of the SUV. Lena and Zane carefully open the hood and a dark cloud hits them. They notice the broken radiator and green liquid on the ground. Daniel and Clare also approach, curious as to what is happening. They then offer a solution: they know of an alternate route and an old rest stop a little further back, where they can leave the SUV safely. Daniel points with a crumpled map while Claire smiles encouragingly. Some of the group hesitates, but the alternative would be to be stuck for who knows how long.
Daniel and Clare maneuver and reverse, followed slowly by Lena’s dying SUV. Soon the vehicles stop in a hidden clearing where abandoned vehicles such as cars, vans, and trailers lie among weeds and moss. Some are rusted, covered in leaves, others are almost intact and practically new. Zane and especially Lena take a quick look at the cars around them. They notice an old child seat, a suitcase still closed in the trunk of a station wagon, a shoe on the seat of a pickup. She narrows her eyes, thoughtful, but says nothing. One by one, the kids transfer backpacks and jackets to Daniel and Claire’s olive green van.
The van starts to move. After a while the paved road gives way to gravel, then dirt. The sun begins to set. The inside of the van is fairly quiet, apart from the tinny sound of the suspension and the low music coming from an old cassette radio and the soft snoring of Riley as she falls asleep. Daniel and Claire speak to each other in low voices, holding hands, laughing like two lovers on a journey. The tranquility is suddenly shattered by a sharp bang, followed by a second explosion of rubber. The van skids slightly on the loose ground and comes to an abrupt stop. Two tires are completely destroyed, punctured by a series of homemade nails nailed to a board hidden in the dust. Daniel and Claire get out and check the tires. Claire picks up her backpack and, in a reassuring tone, tells the group that they know someone nearby who can help them and that if they get hungry they can get supplies from the trunk. Then they walk into the woods, walking side by side, holding hands. Claire turns and makes a light gesture with her hand as if to say they will be back soon.
The group stays by the van. Zane opens the trunk looking for something to eat. There is a cooler, some supplies, but also a small metal box with a handwritten note inside, carefully folded. Lena reads it aloud. The boys gather around her curiously. "If you're reading this, it means you've been chosen. Every year, our community organizes a sacred event: The Hunt. And this year, you've been chosen as the prey. You have an hour's head start... or maybe not. Good luck." The group remains frozen. Maya tries to laugh, thinking it's a joke. Jude shakes his head, but Riley immediately silences him, terrified. Zane instead tries to rationalize while Lena instead looks at the woods and listens, signaling the others to be quiet. A hunting horn echoes in the distance and after a few seconds, wild cries rise from the woods. A mix of war cries and tribal chants, distant but approaching. A few moments later, a sudden hiss. An arrow shot from a very long distance cuts through the air and forcefully sticks in a tree, a few inches from Maya's head, who remains petrified before her legs give out for a moment. Jude helps her to get back on her feet. Riley watches in the distance as the figures move armed with crude weapons, dressed in rags and skins with faces masked by skulls and woven branches. The group begins to run through the undergrowth.
The group runs panting through bushes and twisted roots, pursued by hunters. Suddenly, as they pass between two narrow trees, a metallic click is activated. A barbed fence snaps sideways, suspended on a rudimentary system. The ropes creak but the mechanism jams at the last moment: the fence stops in mid-air, brushing the boys. Lena stumbles but Zane picks her up in an instant. Maya screams to stay together as much as possible. A moment later another sharp sound. Jude, in the center of the group, is dragged up by a vine, suddenly lifted between the trees like a puppet. The boy thrashes, screams, kicks into the void. The others rush beneath him, trying to cut the rope, but a moment later a second mechanism hidden among the branches is triggered: a series of guillotine blades shoot out from multiple directions. Jude is cleanly sliced in the torso and legs. Blood explodes from above like a scarlet rain, spraying Maya in the face, who screams and falls backwards. Zane is paralyzed while Lena whirls around in shock. Jude, split in two, hangs high above. But there is no time to cry: in the distance the hunters are approaching, screaming in excitement.
The four survivors move blindly without knowing where to go, careful where they put their feet. Maya sobs, still shaken. Riley, further back, loses her rhythm and trips on a wet log, hitting her face on the ground. As she gets up and puts her foot on the ground, a metal trap snaps, clamping her ankle with a horrible crack. Riley screams with all her strength. None of the three in front hear her. She tries desperately to open the trap with her bloody hands. She looks at the wound: torn flesh and blood dripping. Her breathing becomes labored, for a moment she thinks about the movie “Saw” and for a moment she really considers whether it is worth looking for something to amputate her foot with.
Lena, Zane and Maya emerge from the vegetation in a small clearing. In front of them, a worn wooden hut, with a corrugated iron roof and broken windows. They stop, debating whether to go in or not. Maya looks back realizing that Riley is not with them. They look around, unsure whether to go back or not.
Riley in the meantime is still there. Her breathing heavy and with shaking hands. When she hears footsteps, she raises her head. Some figures surround her with masks of bone and wood and clothes of skins holding weapons of various types.
Riley begins to insult them, throwing rocks, pieces of bark and even her canteen. One laughs in her face. Another passes her a stick, speaking in a serious voice "You have ten seconds. If you can get free… you are free." Riley looks at the stick. Time begins. With a burst of pure adrenaline, she forces the trap, using the stick as leverage. Her flesh tears again, but the metal jaw opens wide enough to let her foot out. Riley collapses, cursing the hunters, then smiles, her face sweaty and bloody, looking at her executioners.
For a moment they seem shocked. Then a sharp whistle. A first arrow pierces her side. Then another. And another. And another. Riley collapses, to her knees. She is breathing hard, blood dripping from her nose and mouth, her face contorted with pain.
The camera zooms in on her right eye: a tear falls as her gaze fixes on the hunters dancing and screaming with joy. Suddenly one of them is grabbed by the neck, thrown to the ground and dragged away. Another is hit in the head by something massive. Large, misshapen, humanoid shapes, covered in mud and sewn cloth, emerge from the trees. In a few moments all the hunters are slaughtered. One of the mutants, huge and deformed, with only one eye and protruding jaws, approaches Riley. In his hand he holds a rusty cleaver. Riley, already dying with short gasps, looks at him before breathing her last.
Top 10 World War II Films
Sherman J. Pearson here for another Top 10. Films about World War II have been a part of Hollywood since, well, World War II. I took a deep dive down the studio's history of WWII films for this round's Top 10 list.
Top 10 World War II Films
10. Nation's Pride
9. Tokyo Rose
8. Sgt. Fury
7. Nick Fury and His Howling Commandos
6. The Molander Case
5. Wolfenstein
4. Captain America
3. Hiroshima
2. Solution
1. To the White Sea
Monday, March 30, 2026
Release: The Molander Case
The Molander Case
Genre: Drama/War
Director: Christian Petzold
Writer: Wyatt Allen
Based on the novel Lichtspiel by Daniel Kehlmann
Producer: Christoph Waltz
Cast: Daniel Bruhl, Jonas Dassler, Christian Friedel, Sandra Huller, Lazar Simaifar, Burghart Klaussner, Christoph Waltz
Budget: $28,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $13,490,005
Foreign Box Office: $27,155,348
Total Profit: -$11,003,130
Reaction: A historical war/drama about a German filmmaker in Nazi Germany probably never had huge box office hopes, so this one probably did about as well as it possibly could have - which we have to be okay with.
"The Molander Case is a haunting meditation on artistic compromise under authoritarianism, rendered with the quiet precision that defines Christian Petzold’s best work. Daniel Brühl gives a devastating performance as G.W. Pabst, portraying a man who convinces himself that survival and art can coexist, even as both slip irreparably through his grasp. By the time the film circles back to its framing device, it becomes clear that this is not just a story about a lost film, but about the lies people tell themselves to live with what they’ve done. The Molander Case, based on the novel The Director by Daniel Kehlmann, is easily one of the better novel adaptations in recent LRF memory." - Dave Manning, Ridgefield Press
"The Molander Case is an absorbing but uneven historical drama, carried by strong performances and Christian Petzold’s reliably cool visual precision. While the film’s moral questions about art, compromise, and collaboration are compelling, the pacing often drags and certain narrative threads feel underdeveloped. It’s a film filled with impressive moments rather than a fully cohesive whole, but those moments linger and they linger for a long time." - Lina Hartmann, Die Zeit
"While The Molander Case is undeniably rich in atmosphere and anchored by strong performances, its deliberate pacing and elliptical storytelling may test the patience of many viewers. Daniel Brühl is excellent, but the film’s focus on suggested and uneven internal conflict over the absolutely fascinating real external stakes occasionally leaves the narrative feeling overly distant." - Greta Vale, The Silver Screen Almanac
Rated R for thematic material, war-related violence, and brief language.
Fact to Film: The Molander Case
Welcome back for another Fact to Film! This time we're taking a look at (some of) the cast of the adaptation of Daniel Kehlmann's historical novel The Director / Lichtspiel, which depicts filmmaker G.W. Pabst being caught between alliances in Nazi Germany. The film is directed by Christian Petzold and adapted by Wyatt Allen.
Sunday, March 29, 2026
Now Showing: The Molander Case
The Molander Case
Genre: Drama/War
Director: Christian Petzold
Writer: Wyatt Allen
Based on the novel Lichtspiel by Daniel Kehlmann
Producer: Christoph Waltz
Cast: Daniel Bruhl, Jonas Dassler, Christian Friedel, Sandra Huller, Lazar Simaifar, Burghart Klaussner, Christoph Waltz
Plot: An old man (Burghart Klaussner) sits backstage getting prepared to be on TV, he is telling the staff around him that the people in his retirement home will be very jealous about his appearance on the show. Heinz Conrads (Christoph Waltz) is moderating the show back on just after the end of a commercial break, Conrads is introducing the viewer to Franz Wilzek, a director and a frequent collaborator of one of the biggest directors of German cinema G. W. Pabst. Wilzek (Burghart Klaußner) insecurely walks into the studio. He seems irritated and blinded by the bright studio lights. Conrads is welcoming him to the show, asking him some basic questions to lose his nervousness. Then Conrads asks Wilzek about his work with Pabst, he asks why Pabst returned to the Third Reich. Wilzek doesn’t remember. The next question is about a lost movie called „The Molander Case“ and if he can confirm that prisoners from the concentration camps where used for it and if he knows where it could be. Wilzek gets a little bit angry and tells him that they never started filming it. Conrads reads his moderation cards and tells him, that he has the information that it was indeed finished. Wilzek gets furious, he tells him the should check his facts better, they are going into commercial break.
Wilzek is quickly brought off from the show and to the back. He asks the people in the back how his appearance was and once again tells them how jealous everybody in his retirement home will be when they see this. While Wilzek is brought out of the studio we can see Heinz Conrads in the back screaming at people to never put someone like Wilzek again on the show.
1935 in Hollywood. Georg Wilhelm Pabst (Daniel Brühl) is sitting at a pool talking to another man about his newest idea for a movie in very bad English. Pabst is explaining to him that it’s a movie about passengers on a boat at the moment a war is declared. The man is not impressed, he tells Pabst that his first movie made in the states „A Modern Hero“ was a flop and he may have to start a little bit further down the pecking order for now. He does compliment Pabst for the movie Metropolis. Pabst thanks him, but mentions that Fritz Lang did Metropolis and not him. Pabst explains that they told him to do the same type of movies that he did in Germany but he was only allowed to do A Modern Hero. A screenplay he never liked and was forced to direct.
1938. A restaurant in France. G.W. and Trude Pabst (Sandra Hüller) are drinking wine together with friends. They are talking about the political situation but G.W. seems absent, lost in his thoughts. He gets asked what’s next for him, he tells him that he wants to go back to the states to make movies. After doing some decent movies in France, he thinks he is ready for it. Passion starts to be seen through his eyes as he starts talking about his movie idea with the passengers on the boat getting the announcement that a war has been declared. But first he wants to visit his mother in Austria. Their friends are shocked and calling him crazy for thinking of going back in to the Nazi-Reich. Trude backs her husband telling them that G.W.‘s mother got sick and they have to look after her.
A train drives past forests, mountains and castles. Inside the train, Jakob Pabst (Lazar Simaifar) just finished using the restroom and is now making his way back to his parents. He stops just before reaching the corridor, as he can hear his parents having a loud discussion. Trude is saying that they shouldn’t be here and that this is all a pretty bad idea. G.W. tells her that he has no choice and he would have expected a little bit more understanding from her side. Jakob enters the corridor and they of course stop the talking. G.W. is asking Jakob if he remembers the castle that they will stay in. Jakob doesn’t, it was too long ago since they have been there. The train stops they are in Switzerland, it’s said that this is the last stop before reaching Nazi Germany. Most of the passengers leave the train, the Pabst’s stay seated. A lady passing by politely warns them and asks them if they really want to enter the Third Reich – yes they want to. The train leaves the station. Jakob asks how long it will be until they arrive in Austria. G.W. tells him not to use this name when they are here as this country doesn’t exist anymore, they get interrupted by an officer in Nazi uniform. He wants to see their passports. USA and France as last destinations is what the officer notices and he asks about Pabst’s political opinion. Pabst tells him that him returning to Germany should be enough proof of his political opinion. The officer nods, he gives them their passports back.
They enter their estate consisting of an old castle and big forest, while Pabst explains the story on how he got it for cheap. A janitor and his family are living here keeping the castle clean while living from the yield of the castles surroundings. His mother is living on the first floor, she is happy to see her son G.W. but she doesn’t recognize Jakob and ignores Trude. The janitor and his family are in a very weird way overwhelmingly friendly with the Pabsts and in awe when talking about the Nazi regime. At night Trude begs G.W. that they should take his mother with them and leave, G.W. agrees. They want to leave in the morning, but only with very light baggage so that they think they wil return soon. In the morning G.W. tells the janitor to get the car ready as the Pabsts will leave for a short trip to Vienna. Then Pabst enters the castle’s library going through his old screenplays and movie requisites, the janitor watches him closely. When Pabst tries to get something from the top of a very large shelf he steps on a very high ladder, the janitor helps to stabilize it. He grabs the things he saw from the shelf, just before he can sense the ladder moving. The ladder gets pushed away and Pabst falls to the ground.
Pabst wakes up in bed, calling for his wife. Trude notices him finally being awake and has to tell him something. But G.W. tells her to call the police as the janitor pushed him off the ladder. Trude tells him there is no police anymore and him falling down the ladder was an accident. G.W. replies that he was indeed pushed. Trude tells him that there is a war, Germany just invaded Poland, the borders are closed. They can not leave anymore.
A huge office in Berlin. A big golden framed picture of Hitler on the wall. Kuno Krämer (Christian Friedel) sits behind the desk, talking on the phone giving instructions to subordinates. Pabst is brought to the office and signaled by Krämer to sit down across from him, who is just about to end his call. Krämer hangs up and greets Pabst as the „Red Pabst“, a communist, hero of the left-wing. He asked him what made him want to talk to him. Pabst replies that he was ordered to come here today. Krämer says that that’s the wrong answer. Krämer says that Pabst is a known enemy of the regime, someone who has worked with Jews and is a known communist and he should apologize for that and ask for forgiveness. He lets him know that they can offer him many things, the concentration camp for example. But they can also offer him a big budget, any actor he wants, any screenplay he wants to make, the best medical care for him and his family, he just has to say the right things. Pabst has no other choice other than to apologize for his past. Krämer is happy that Pabst decided to ask to meet him just to ask for forgiveness. He tells him they have a screenplay for him and then says goodbye to him by doing the Hitler salute. Pabst hesitates but after seeing Krämer’s skeptical look he does the Hitler salute too. „Heil Hitler“ he mumbles dejectedly.
Jakob and two friends of his are sitting in the train. They all wear their school uniform. One of his friends his mentioning that he loves the Nosferatu movie his father did, Jakob tells him his father didn’t make that. Arriving at the Dreiturm castle, Trude and Wilhelm greet their son happily and ask him about his time in the boarding school. Jakob tells them he is having a great time and proudly announces that his whole class joined the Nazi party and he can’t wait to be drafted and fight for his country. His two friends agree, Trude and G.W. are speechless. Later Pabst has a quiet moment just with his son Jakob alone to tell him that he doesn’t want him to fight for the Nazis. Jakob calls him a traitor and accuses him of only returning because he couldn’t live with the thought of being a nobody in America.
With Jakob gone again, Trude and G.W. talk about the latest project „The Molander Case“ pitched to Pabst. It’s based on a book by Alfred Karrasch, a writer who is known to support the Nazi ideology in his works. Trude is worried, G.W. tells her he doesn’t know if he can say no to them any longer. He says you can’t say no to them too often and he has been putting them off for years now. It’s not a good story but G.W. says he will try to rewrite it to fit his standard.
Franz Wilzek (Jonas Dassler) is visiting the Dreiturm castle and is introducing himself as the new assistant to Pabst. Kuno Krämer send him, as Pabst asked for help. Together they write the screenplay, the book is about young violinist Fritz Molander who inherits a Stradivari that he sells until they figure out that it’s fake and he gets accused of fraud. Pabst hates it and is thinking hard to find the core of the play, meanwhile he opens a letter from Jakob who announces that the was „finally“ drafted. In this times it’s hard for Pabst to find inspiration and Wilzek, while being a good writer, doesn’t offer much help. They meet up with a couple actors in an inn in Vienna to talk to them about the project, but their plan gets interrupted by a bombing in the city. It was already over until they noticed what’s happening, but we can see the aftermath. People screaming on the streets, burning buildings, warn signals going off.
They head off to Prague, one of the last places that was not bombed and is presentable on film. Pabst is worried about the concert hall scene, which he calls the most important scene. He wants to have the hall look really big and filled with people, they need to hire many extras. Kuno Krämer is on set to overlook the project, he is happy he finally got Pabst to do movies again. A day before shooting the concert hall scene it’s brought up to Pabst that a big part of the extras was drafted and they are now unavailable. Pabst has an idea that he discusses with Krämer, he talks very vague but Krämer seems to get it, somehow Krämer asked Pabst a couple of times if he is really sure if he wants to do it. Wilzek stands next to them but doesn’t seem to get it.
Wilzek walks on set the day they shoot the concert hall scene, it is one the last scenes they have to do. He takes a look at the extras and is in shock. The extras can barely sit straight, their clothes are way too big for their thin bodies, they look tired, lifeless. It is evident that they are prisoners brought in from the concentration camps. Wilzek feels terrible and wants to talk to Pabst, but Pabst doesn’t listen to him he is too obsessed with making the best scene possible for the circumstances. He tells Wilzek to help out with a scene. Wilzek stands on the side looking at the extras until he notices familiar face. A small flashback to the times shortly before the war, Wilzek is at the dentist, getting his teeth checked by a dentist with a friendly warm smile. Back to the present, it is the same friendly warm smile looking at Wilzek. Wilzek feels sick he has to leave. Wilzek sits down in front of the building, Pabst noticed him leaving and went outside too to talk to him. Wilzek tells him, that they should have never started working on this movie. Pabst tells him that this is what art is about, making the best out of the circumstances. The people wouldn’t be better without them doing the movie, he justifies himself.
Pabst and Wilzek are on a walk. Pabst explains to him that they have something good going on but they now have to finish it, this is where a lot of people fail. After they release this they will have all the opportunities, especially when the war is over. Wilzek asks Pabst about his son and wife. Pabst seems surprised, almost shocked by the question as if it is something he completely repressed. He answers that Trude is staying safe in their castle in Austria and he doesn’t know about Jakob. The letters don’t seem to reach him anymore. Pabst quickly changes the topic back to the movie. He tells him that this will be his masterpiece, his magnum opus, the thing the world will remember him for.
Still in Prague, Pabst and Franz Wilzek are sitting together in a room with rolls of film. Pabst informs Wilzek that this is the most important part of making a movie – the editing. They are locking themselves in the room, working hard to make the best out of it. Wilzek doses off, Pabst wakes him up after a while. Soon after Pabst doses off getting woken up by Wilzek. They struggle with power failure and a slight panic starts when they can hear an explosion going off not too far away followed by gunshots. Wilzek wants them to leave but Pabst wouldn’t let that happen, he wants them to finish his masterpiece, he will not leave without it. It takes them two days to finish up the movie. The explosions and gunshots get more frequent. They pack the film rolls into a knapsack and run to the nearest train station to leave the bombarded Prague.
They just make it into the crowded train, lay down the knapsack and sit down on the ground. Wilzek bonds with a farrier over him also carrying a big and heavy knapsack with him. They talk about the tough times and play cards. Pabst dozes off.
While sleeping Pabst is dreaming of the premiere of The Molander Case. A red carpet, all the lights on them. Everybody is dressed nice, the actors are there, Wilzek is there, Trude is next to him wearing a beautiful dress. The press can’t get enough of him, asking him if he is taking the call from Hollywood again or if he will stay in Germany. But suddenly a young man in a Nazi uniform is slowly stumbling torwards him. The sound of explosions are starting to appear and the young man comes closer. He is crippled and has a huge scar over his face, but Pabst recognizes him. It’s his son Jakob. Jakob stops shortly before reaching Pabst and asks why he took him to the Nazis.
After a very long ride they arrive in Vienna. Most of the passengers already left the train stations before. Pabst gets woken up by Wilzek, they have to get up and leave. Pabst reminds them that they have to get copies of the film as soon as possible. Pabst grabs the knapsack but he notices something is wrong. He opens it up and instead of his film there is just a bunch of horseshoes in the knapsack. Pabst is panicking, he throws the horseshoes out of the knapsack in search of his film, a label, a clue. Wilzek tries to calm Pabst down, he tells him they will find the one who grabbed their knapsack. Pabst nods. They leave the train. On the train station we can see a lot of happy people, hugging friends and family members they thought they might never see again, thankful that they made it out of there. Pabst is between them, eyes unfocused, staring into nothing.
After the war:
Franz Wilzek is visiting his friend G.W Pabst on set. He carefully watches the actors perform and Trude Pabst is directing them. Wilzek is asking someone on set where G.W. is at. Wilzek gets the answer that Pabst is only a shadow of what he once was and only giving his name for his wife directing the movie. Wilzek now sees Pabst sitting a little bit on the side, not really involved in the process. He approaches him, Pabst is happy to see him. He congratulates Wilzek on finally directing his own movies and than he can’t help but ask if Wilzek has heard anything about their movie. Wilzek says he hasn’t but there is a small nervousness in his demeanor.
Pabst was a different man after losing the movie that he called his masterpiece. At first he could remember the film scene for scene, but with the years passing by it got more and more blurry, until there weren’t many memories left off it. Pabst died in 1967 without ever seeing The Molander Case ever again.
In the retirement home. An old Franz Wilzek (Burghart Klaußner) wants to show his appearance at the famous talk show with Heinz Conrads but the TV doesn’t work. He is furious, now no one will see him on TV. He stomps away angrily. In his room he sits on the bed, deep in his thoughts. He reminisces about the time he was in his fathers gardener shop about a year after his return from Prague. A giant of a man with a big knapsack on his bag enters the shop, it is the farrier from the train ride. He lets the knapsack down and shows Wilzek the film rolls. Wilzek replies that Pabst will be really happy.
The old Wilzek in his room in the retirement home gets up and over to a closet. He opens it and we can see an old knapsack with film rolls inside of it. “I should have told him” Wilzek says to himself.
In Development
The Molander Case: The WII-set drama The Molander Case, which is about to be released, has announced its final casting with Burghart Klaussner (Brecht, Bridge of Spies) and Jonas Dassler (Bonhoeffer, A Sacrifice) set to officially round out the cast. Christian Petzold is at the helm as director. Wyatt Allen penned the script based on the novel Lichtspiel by Daniel Kehlmann.
The House of Black: The Wizarding World will have more company with Laurie Davidson (The Hammer of Thor, Blood and Glory), Kit Connor (Warfare, "Heartstopper"), Emily Carey ("Geek Girl", The Lost Girls), Niamh Cusack (We Live in Time, Four Mothers), and Alun Armstrong (The Choral, "Breeders") all joining the cast of the first in a (hopeful) new blockbuster universe for LRF. Davidson will play Rodolphus Lestrange, Kit Connor and Emily Carey will play James and Lily Potter - who fans know will eventually become Harry Potter's parents, Cusack will play Euphemia Potter, and Alun Armstrong will play Fleamont Potter. Chan-wook Park is directing from a script by Sammy-Jo Ellis.
Wrong Turn: The lastest horror franchise reboot from Last Resort films is also filling out its cast with the additions of Penn Badgley (Vindicators, "You"), Emily VanCamp (The Day, Alien: Out of the Shadows), Devyn Nekoda (Vicious, Scream VI), and Caylee Cowan (The Beast Within, The Instigators). Badgley and VanCamp play a couple the main character encounter during a traffic jam, while Nekoda and Cowan will be part of the group of friends at the center of the story. Christopher Landon is directing while Ben Collins penned the reboot.
New Christianity: Brooklynn Prince (ThunderCats, Collapse), Madison Hu (Rosemead, Night Shift), and David Cross (The Dark Divide, You Hurt My Feelings) have joined the upcoming horror/drama film from director Francis Ford Coppola. Prince will play the younger sister of the protagonist played by Noah Jupe, Madison Hu will play a high school classmate of the main character, while David Cross will play the father of Prince and Jupe's characters. Alex Conn wrote the script.
The Woman Who Walked on Red Snow: Writer/Director Meirad Tako (Either/Or, On Life and Living) is back behind the camera with a new historical drama. Yuliya Snigir (Her Dying Wish, The Master and the Margarita) is set to lead the film as a former governess left adrift by the Russian Revolution. Snigir's real-life husband Yevgeny Tsyganov (1993, The Master and the Margarita) will play a Red Army veteran who recruits her into an underground cell of dissidents. Konstantin Khabensky (Yura Was Here, Guest from the Future) has also joined the project as a weary revolutionary soldier. Acclaimed Russian filmmaker Andrey Zvyagintsev (Leviathan, Loveless) is lending a hand on the project as a producer.
Batman: Duality: Jake Gyllenhaal (Control, Justice League War) is set to return once again as Batman for LRF's DC Comics Universe in a story where he must deal with the fallout of the events of Knightfall, caught between new vigilantes, opportunist politicians, the mob, and a former public hero turned villain. Chris Rock (Batman: Knightfall, Spiral) is also back as Harvey Dent, fractured by the destruction of the city and death of his wife, who becomes Two-Face. Al Pacino (Escape, Joker vs. Deadshot) is set to appear as mobster Lou Maroni and Orlando Jones (Batgirl, "The Family Business: New Orleans") is back as Batman's tech guy Lucius Fox. Joseph Kosinski (At the Mountains of Madness, Batman: Knightfall) is back behind the camera, once again from a script by APJ (Joker vs. Deadshot, Broadway Joe).
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