It's been a long time. But here it goes anyways. There's nothing funny about it. It's sad. It represents the end of everything that woman fought for in other to overcome and forget the rash reality of her past. It's drama. Poetry at best.
I'm so glad to 👂🏼hear that 👥others were also 🤝🏻introduced to this wonderful 📽film in a similar way, and that you guys 🙏🏼appreciated💛 it just as 📊much as I did. As a sort of 'free🎊day' at the very 🔚end of my senior year in high🏫school, my 🇩🇪German 👩🏼🏫teacher 📀showed us this 📽movie. It pretty much went ⤵️over my 👥classmates'/peers' heads and they all🚶🏻♂️left🚶🏼♀️the🚶🏽♂️room without a ✌🏼second 💭thought - except of our 🎓graduation 🗞ceremony in a few 📇days. I, however, 🧠mentally 🤔lingered on what I had just 👀seen. Even despite the fact that I ❔missed most of the 💬dialogue because Frau👩🏼🏫Carter insisted we 👀watch it 🚫without 🆒️subtitles (thus 🤜🏻forcing us to recall, exercise, and utilize our very limited 📚knowledge of 🇩🇪German - 😄haha), I still could tell that I had witnessed something very ❗interesting, 📘historically ✔relevant, 🎭emotionally ⚛complex, and simply impactful in general. Over ☀️summer 🕶vacation that year, I 💳bought the 📽movie on 📀DVD and 👀watched it again, only this time with the 💬subtitles. Mind you, I had understood the overall gist of the 📽movie the ☝🏼first time 👀watching it, but this time actually hearing/understanding🆗️ all the 💬dialogue truly put it into perspective📐 for me - and I ❤loved it even more. I 👂🏼listened to the 💿soundtrack periodically since then and even 🤝🏻introduced the 📽movie to a few of my new 🏫college 👫🏼friends over the next couple 📅years. Two 📅years later while 🤝🏻visiting a few of my 👍🏻favorite high🏫school teachers during early ☀️summer 🕶break (including Frau👩🏼🏫Carter), I told her how much I truly 🤲🏻cherished this rather 👌🏼stellar 📽movie and how 🙏🏼thankful I was that she 📀showed it to us. Needless to say, this made her very 😊happy and she was 👐🏼delighted that her efforts of 🤝🏻sharing some 👌🏼quality 🇩🇪cultural 🧠awareness had 🚫not been done in 🤦🏼♀️vain. To this 📆day, I still regard 👋🏻 *Goodbye, Lenin!* ⭐ as one of my personally favorite 📽movies and embrace the fact that some of its 😥poignantly important 🎬scenes stick in my mind so vividly, 💪🏼strongly, and ❣meaningfully.
That's really strange: even I born in 1989 in another post USSR country for many years I felt some warm feelings to DDR and then I saw the "Goodbye, Lenin"... For me it was visualisation of the country about I heard so much from parent etc. Movie is amazing, very well filmed, with great soundtrack and also it has the "feeling".
One of the best plays on the political movies history, the dropped furnitures, the political and religious symbols, the advertising showing the transition from one car to another; is the transition from one kind of life to another kind, all the environment that sourrounds that woman who wakes up to that new world; and the powerfull and merciesless image of Lenin flying and leaving towards the skyes, is a fierce beating to the mind, is a fierce wipe to history. Thanks for sharing!!!. I love this kind pf moments on movies.
I love this movie "Goodbye Lenin" very, very romantic. I visit East Germany the DDR for one day in East Berlin in 1985 with some of my friends in the USA military. The East Berliners the "Ossies" were very nice - sure they weren't as rich as their West German counterparts but they were ... well good people. God bless them then and now. Love this movie.
This has always been one of my favorite scenes in cinema and I think it was, when filmed, remains, today, and will be, forever, one of the most beautiful, poignant, beautiful and masterfully orchestrated and cinematographed (if that’s a word) scenes in film history
I was born in 1990 in what is now called the former USSR. I remember how in the middle of the 90-s, when I was about to go to school, my older sister "trained" me to present myself to grown-ups (I skipped kindergarten, so I had no idea, how to behave in an institution). The routine was - to state your name, age, and then I had to say, that I live on the Lenin Street, building 5, apartment number 21. I had no idea, who Lenin was. Growing up I started to learn it by myself (in school in the 90-s it was already irrelevant to know commy history). We as a family went through a very difficult time in the 90-s, our life was on the edge of poverty. As adolescent I developed strong interest for Germany - music, philosophy, science, all that fascinated me. Then in university I started to learn German language and German history. It stroke me how similar was the experience of East Germans and Russians after the collapse of commy block - from being a good comrade you quickly find yourself being no one, the state, that was supposed to help everyone, lost interest in its own citizens, it stopped paying salary, the pensions just evaporated, suddenly everybody had to fight for one selves and not treat each other as comrades. The thing is - neither East Germans, nor Russian had time during these years to have a look at each others problems, with were quite similar. Watching this film - is almost reliving your own history from the perspective of east Germans. And yeah, I rewatch it almost once a year and it's never failed to bring me to tears, not only during this scene, but throughout the movie. And outstanding plot with so many overlapping themes, almost like a greek tragedy, but a bit postmodern. And yeah, to make it clear - I'm not longing for soviet times, I'm just saying, that those time were such a huge watershed, that even a story of one family resonates huge in the context of history in the making. The film deserves all the accolades
Legendary scene from a great movie. As Lenin disappears once and for all (?) by the beams of the descending Sun on the West, AND the soundtrack...makes me feel hot, frozen, makes me cry and laugh at the same time!!!
A beautiful scene. I love this movie. I was too young to experience East Germany, but I took German from 7th grade through getting a degree in German language and culture. My professors who lived and traveled extensively in divided Germany had a certain sympathy for Ostalgie, but didn't forget that you payed for the simplicity of your lifestyle with your freedom. The Stasi was a real nightmare and even the people who remember certain things fondly would not wish to be back there.
This is a great scene. Very well done. The idea is stolen from "La Dolce Vita" but it doesn't matter at all. In this film the idea is placed in pure feeling and is, by far, much deeper than in the Fellini's version. I love it.
I've never lived under the regime of communism, but this scene somehow bought me back to the nostalgic feelings of the 80s, when the world was in chaos of cold war. Now that communism in Germany is long gone, the legacy of the life under it still remains a great memory of the people who lived then. This is one of the best cinemas in my mind.
Questa è una delle scene + belle del cinema mondiale. Musica perfetta...immagini emozionanti, logica del film geniale e fantastica, film da oscar per quanto mi riguarda!!
Arguably my favorite scene from one of my favorite movies. I got a lot of German history as part of my German degree and it was interesting to see how "ostalgie" influences modern German culture - a lot of East German products have been resurrected in recent years for those who miss them. I think I would be able to sympathize a lot more with the longing for a "simpler life" displayed in this film if the East German government hadn't been so dictatorial and abusive.
It seems to me that no one knows how to make such sad films as the Germans. Although I have only watched a couple of German films, they are the only ones that really impressed me
My initial thought was before this scene, when the baby was playing at the window, I thought it was going to jump out after the blimp and cause the mother to have another heart attack, but that didn't happen, which was good because that would have been absolutely tragic. On that note, FANTASTIC FILM!
Everytime i see this scene, and the Lenin statues fly away, I just can't hold myself of not crying. It was once a belief of many good will people u know...and there was nothing wrong with the idelogoy even though it was abit utopical...but ppl have the right to dream, right?
We will rise again from the ashes! Even a thousand years of past Spectre of Marx will still be relevant and eventuslly we will be victorious! 15 years had passed since you watched this movie and it is nearly the twofold of the time since the fall of GDR. I know that the situation can be seen hopeless as we are entering a time of crises again like in the history. But let me quote a sentence from Atatürk “There are no hopeless situations, there are hopeless people, and I never gave up my hope!”. I will dedicate my entire life to make this happen, I know it seems very hard. But I know that every communist is thinking like me and this makes me stronger! “We are demanding that sun for ourselves. We are going to conquer it to change everything!”.
Daan Willemsen The statue of Lenin was destroyed because he was atheist? Because he said the true about religion? Some thing like religion is political opium for people... If not why in Ukraine their bloody angel is there in center of city? Because if you follow to bible an angel is assassin who are killing innocent children. This things now in Ukraine, Georgia, Russia. Is it dictatorship, totalitarianism of religions?
+HGalo Mertud erm, it's because East Germans cease to exist and communism government in its area being changed to incorporate and unified Germany maybe?
Wasita Bagus Capitalistic West are destroys ideologically alien elements Like "Need to distroy all reminders, to clear human memory from enemy ideology that can bring dangers for system" Capitalism and only it no need to know nothing more, only Capitalism is bring good for you other is danger for you must to distroy it Good bleez Capitalism Say more Capitalism is true god!
@chankljp That's the thing about nostalgia, it ignores all the things that are negative and instead focuses on the positive side, however few they are.
@Yora21 Ich hab's leider nie im Kino gesehen, nur noch ein Video irgendwo herumliegen...aber selbst auf 'nem TV-Bildschirm ist es super beeindruckend, und, ja, verstörend.
I remember as a little kid the year 1990. Me and my parents drove for half an hour in our Trabant to eat at this place called "McDonalds". I had a happy meal and a coke. Still remeber, since it was the first time I ever ate something so peculiar.
Actually, the movie gives a great stab also on consumism, bringing the idea of a simpler life, and the unnecessariness of the Western products (Christianne sees no difference whatsoever in the products, Alex changing only the pack). It's also unnecessary to bring back Eastern products, it's just another kind of weird fetiche (just like Che t-shirts).
please upload the whole movie! bitte setzen die ganze film am internet! (oder so) Zet alsjeblieft de hele film hier op de site!! wil hem heel graag helemaal zien!
its a reference to La Dolce Vita. in the first scene they are flying Jesus over the city of Rome and flirting with sunbathing women on the rooftops. but I did really see a truck driving down karl marx allee (berlin) in 2004 with the heads of lenin and marx on it.
Obviously, I know very well what I'm talking about. I've lived there for 6 years and still am...sort of living there, just across the border from the mainland.
And what have YOU understood? The poster above has actually travelled and witnessed everything in the times when the country was still divided. What sort of "understanding" are you referring to?
@itsareligionofpeace The funny thing is the East Germans had almost as many different shops as the USA does. Costco , Walmart , Home Depot , Macys , JC Penny , Target , Best Buy. I think thats the lot.
Lenin flying past, reaching out one last time, is simultaniously one of the funniest and saddest things I've ever seen...
È la scena iniziale de “La dolce vita” di Federico Fellini (1960) . C’era Gesù Cristo
It's been a long time. But here it goes anyways. There's nothing funny about it. It's sad. It represents the end of everything that woman fought for in other to overcome and forget the rash reality of her past. It's drama. Poetry at best.
*best things we’ve ever seen…
@@fabioferreirasantos5451 she wanted to flee to west Germany with her husband but couldn't. so she had to live a lie, now she's relieved.
This scene never fails to bring me to tears. Without a doubt one of the best moments in the history of cinema.
Totally agree with you!
So very true. It hits me so much with just the first two bars of the music I have to ration when I see or hear it, or else I'm a puddle of tears.
yo the future 10 years later is not great
@@russiasvechenaya58 Yup. If you're going back could tell past me she's a girl? That'd be cool of you, save me a bunch of figuring out.
We watched this in a "German Film Studies" class and it quickly became one of my favorite films of all time.
Yeah i hear you, we watched this in my german foreign language study and i fell in love with the movie and this scene and music especially.
I'm so glad to 👂🏼hear that 👥others were also 🤝🏻introduced to this wonderful 📽film in a similar way, and that you guys 🙏🏼appreciated💛 it just as 📊much as I did.
As a sort of 'free🎊day' at the very 🔚end of my senior year in high🏫school, my 🇩🇪German 👩🏼🏫teacher 📀showed us this 📽movie. It pretty much went ⤵️over my 👥classmates'/peers' heads and they all🚶🏻♂️left🚶🏼♀️the🚶🏽♂️room without a ✌🏼second 💭thought - except of our 🎓graduation 🗞ceremony in a few 📇days. I, however, 🧠mentally 🤔lingered on what I had just 👀seen. Even despite the fact that I ❔missed most of the 💬dialogue because Frau👩🏼🏫Carter insisted we 👀watch it 🚫without 🆒️subtitles (thus 🤜🏻forcing us to recall, exercise, and utilize our very limited 📚knowledge of 🇩🇪German - 😄haha), I still could tell that I had witnessed something very ❗interesting, 📘historically ✔relevant, 🎭emotionally ⚛complex, and simply impactful in general.
Over ☀️summer 🕶vacation that year, I 💳bought the 📽movie on 📀DVD and 👀watched it again, only this time with the 💬subtitles. Mind you, I had understood the overall gist of the 📽movie the ☝🏼first time 👀watching it, but this time actually hearing/understanding🆗️ all the 💬dialogue truly put it into perspective📐 for me - and I ❤loved it even more. I 👂🏼listened to the 💿soundtrack periodically since then and even 🤝🏻introduced the 📽movie to a few of my new 🏫college 👫🏼friends over the next couple 📅years.
Two 📅years later while 🤝🏻visiting a few of my 👍🏻favorite high🏫school teachers during early ☀️summer 🕶break (including Frau👩🏼🏫Carter), I told her how much I truly 🤲🏻cherished this rather 👌🏼stellar 📽movie and how 🙏🏼thankful I was that she 📀showed it to us. Needless to say, this made her very 😊happy and she was 👐🏼delighted that her efforts of 🤝🏻sharing some 👌🏼quality 🇩🇪cultural 🧠awareness had 🚫not been done in 🤦🏼♀️vain.
To this 📆day, I still regard 👋🏻 *Goodbye, Lenin!* ⭐ as one of my personally favorite 📽movies and embrace the fact that some of its 😥poignantly important 🎬scenes stick in my mind so vividly, 💪🏼strongly, and ❣meaningfully.
Are there any more films you could recommend from this class
Damn 1 decade ago
love the way Lenin gives her the "looking deep into your soul" look
That's really strange: even I born in 1989 in another post USSR country for many years I felt some warm feelings to DDR and then I saw the "Goodbye, Lenin"... For me it was visualisation of the country about I heard so much from parent etc. Movie is amazing, very well filmed, with great soundtrack and also it has the "feeling".
One of the best plays on the political movies history, the dropped furnitures, the political and religious symbols, the advertising showing the transition from one car to another; is the transition from one kind of life to another kind, all the environment that sourrounds that woman who wakes up to that new world; and the powerfull and merciesless image of Lenin flying and leaving towards the skyes, is a fierce beating to the mind, is a fierce wipe to history. Thanks for sharing!!!. I love this kind pf moments on movies.
This scene makes me burst into tears because it depicts how far Alex tries to protect his mother.
This is a true memorable scene in cinema history. it is one of the scenes that burns into your mind, makes tears come to my eyes every time i see it.
Exactly the same for me
Poor Lenin, he just wanted to seize the means of production
This truly is the most famous scene from Goodbye, Lenin! I really get goos bumps from the vid with the music! beautiful, thanks for posting it.
I love this movie "Goodbye Lenin" very, very romantic. I visit East Germany the DDR for one day in East Berlin in 1985 with some of my friends in the USA military. The East Berliners the "Ossies" were very nice - sure they weren't as rich as their West German counterparts but they were ... well good people. God bless them then and now.
Love this movie.
Yes they were very nice because they hadn’t yet internalised the values of US capitalist societies.
This has always been one of my favorite scenes in cinema and I think it was, when filmed, remains, today, and will be, forever, one of the most beautiful, poignant, beautiful and masterfully orchestrated and cinematographed (if that’s a word) scenes in film history
Die Szene könnte ich mir sooft ansehen, wirklich gut gemacht, auch noch mit der Musikuntermalung
I was born in 1990 in what is now called the former USSR. I remember how in the middle of the 90-s, when I was about to go to school, my older sister "trained" me to present myself to grown-ups (I skipped kindergarten, so I had no idea, how to behave in an institution). The routine was - to state your name, age, and then I had to say, that I live on the Lenin Street, building 5, apartment number 21. I had no idea, who Lenin was. Growing up I started to learn it by myself (in school in the 90-s it was already irrelevant to know commy history). We as a family went through a very difficult time in the 90-s, our life was on the edge of poverty. As adolescent I developed strong interest for Germany - music, philosophy, science, all that fascinated me. Then in university I started to learn German language and German history. It stroke me how similar was the experience of East Germans and Russians after the collapse of commy block - from being a good comrade you quickly find yourself being no one, the state, that was supposed to help everyone, lost interest in its own citizens, it stopped paying salary, the pensions just evaporated, suddenly everybody had to fight for one selves and not treat each other as comrades. The thing is - neither East Germans, nor Russian had time during these years to have a look at each others problems, with were quite similar. Watching this film - is almost reliving your own history from the perspective of east Germans. And yeah, I rewatch it almost once a year and it's never failed to bring me to tears, not only during this scene, but throughout the movie. And outstanding plot with so many overlapping themes, almost like a greek tragedy, but a bit postmodern. And yeah, to make it clear - I'm not longing for soviet times, I'm just saying, that those time were such a huge watershed, that even a story of one family resonates huge in the context of history in the making. The film deserves all the accolades
Such a wonderful film!
I am still having goosebumps.
This makes me feel more emotional than it probably should.
it's the music in this movie
Oh, my dear god! Such a good scene, such a good scrip, such a good song, such a good actuation! SUCH A GOOD FUCKIN' MOVIE!!
Legendary scene from a great movie. As Lenin disappears once and for all (?) by the beams of the descending Sun on the West, AND the soundtrack...makes me feel hot, frozen, makes me cry and laugh at the same time!!!
There are few german movies I like, but I think this is one of the best scenes ever made.
My favourite part of this scene was when Christiane said "Goodbye, Lenin" and the Lenin statue looked at the camera and winked.
"change the world. My final message. Goodbye"
“Grange the world. My final message. Goodbye”
I am same age like Daniel Brühl, born in east Germany. I am still getting gooseflesh everytime I watch this scene...
caspa7 i Miss honecker
A beautiful scene. I love this movie. I was too young to experience East Germany, but I took German from 7th grade through getting a degree in German language and culture. My professors who lived and traveled extensively in divided Germany had a certain sympathy for Ostalgie, but didn't forget that you payed for the simplicity of your lifestyle with your freedom. The Stasi was a real nightmare and even the people who remember certain things fondly would not wish to be back there.
the music, the light , i love it.
This is a great scene. Very well done. The idea is stolen from "La Dolce Vita" but it doesn't matter at all. In this film the idea is placed in pure feeling and is, by far, much deeper than in the Fellini's version. I love it.
Do it! I have watched it several times and I can't seem to get tired of it.
I've never lived under the regime of communism, but this scene somehow bought me back to the nostalgic feelings of the 80s, when the world was in chaos of cold war. Now that communism in Germany is long gone, the legacy of the life under it still remains a great memory of the people who lived then. This is one of the best cinemas in my mind.
Questa è una delle scene + belle del cinema mondiale. Musica perfetta...immagini emozionanti, logica del film geniale e fantastica, film da oscar per quanto mi riguarda!!
Thanks for putting it ever so neatly!! Exactly my thoughts. I couldn't have said it better myself!
@Zeobit Oh my, I never noticed that he's not just going into the sunset, but it also means he's going into the west! That's brilliant. ^^
Arguably my favorite scene from one of my favorite movies. I got a lot of German history as part of my German degree and it was interesting to see how "ostalgie" influences modern German culture - a lot of East German products have been resurrected in recent years for those who miss them. I think I would be able to sympathize a lot more with the longing for a "simpler life" displayed in this film if the East German government hadn't been so dictatorial and abusive.
Psychoactive it wasnt
It was abusive. Stasi even monitored the personal life of their own citizens.
Far-left regimes can't be not abusive because they can't survive in environment with political competition
This movie is a masterpiece scene by scene.
Es una escena magistral. Se me ponen los pelos de punta cada vez que la veo.
It's my favourit scene ! The music is great ! Perfect movie !
one of my favourite films
It seems to me that no one knows how to make such sad films as the Germans. Although I have only watched a couple of German films, they are the only ones that really impressed me
This scene got me panicked
Lenin, you are ab aeterno to all human kind and nobody can ignore that.
Thanks again, itsareligionofpeace. You just have said everything for me :-)
I think she realized the truth in this scene. And in the end of the movie when she watches fireworks, she knows what son tried to do.
My initial thought was before this scene, when the baby was playing at the window, I thought it was going to jump out after the blimp and cause the mother to have another heart attack, but that didn't happen, which was good because that would have been absolutely tragic. On that note, FANTASTIC FILM!
Il registra dimostra di essere un genio con questa scena.
It would be hard for everyone to wake up from a coma and realise that everything is way different from the past.
born on the second October... thank you mr Gorbatschof
Everytime i see this scene, and the Lenin statues fly away, I just can't hold myself of not crying.
It was once a belief of many good will people u know...and there was nothing wrong with the idelogoy even though it was abit utopical...but ppl have the right to dream, right?
There is still nothing wrong in it. Socialism is the logical end of history, rest is barbarism.
We will rise again from the ashes! Even a thousand years of past Spectre of Marx will still be relevant and eventuslly we will be victorious! 15 years had passed since you watched this movie and it is nearly the twofold of the time since the fall of GDR. I know that the situation can be seen hopeless as we are entering a time of crises again like in the history. But let me quote a sentence from Atatürk “There are no hopeless situations, there are hopeless people, and I never gave up my hope!”. I will dedicate my entire life to make this happen, I know it seems very hard. But I know that every communist is thinking like me and this makes me stronger! “We are demanding that sun for ourselves. We are going to conquer it to change everything!”.
wow! te actor the starred n tarantinos inglorious !
Yes, that's Daniel Bruhl.
this scene gives me goosebums !
Lenin can fly!
HGalo Mertud Buddy, i'm atheist too. Calm down, please...
Daan Willemsen The statue of Lenin was destroyed because he was atheist? Because he said the true about religion? Some thing like religion is political opium for people... If not why in Ukraine their bloody angel is there in center of city? Because if you follow to bible an angel is assassin who are killing innocent children. This things now in Ukraine, Georgia, Russia. Is it dictatorship, totalitarianism of religions?
Buddy, I'm an atheist, not a communist. But I have respect for people with a religion.
+HGalo Mertud erm, it's because East Germans cease to exist and communism government in its area being changed to incorporate and unified Germany maybe?
Wasita Bagus Capitalistic West are destroys ideologically alien elements Like "Need to distroy all reminders, to clear human memory from enemy ideology that can bring dangers for system" Capitalism and only it no need to know nothing more, only Capitalism is bring good for you other is danger for you must to distroy it Good bleez Capitalism Say more Capitalism is true god!
@chankljp That's the thing about nostalgia, it ignores all the things that are negative and instead focuses on the positive side, however few they are.
@muchtoocrazy When you watch it one the big screen, the scene is just incredible.
one of the best movies I've seen!!
i love daniel bruhl, he is sooo cute, specially in this film :)
@Yora21 Ich hab's leider nie im Kino gesehen, nur noch ein Video irgendwo herumliegen...aber selbst auf 'nem TV-Bildschirm ist es super beeindruckend, und, ja, verstörend.
I remember as a little kid the year 1990. Me and my parents drove for half an hour in our Trabant to eat at this place called "McDonalds". I had a happy meal and a coke. Still remeber, since it was the first time I ever ate something so peculiar.
It's all about the music, really
I can't watch this movie without tears in my eyes, I know it sounds silly.
Para mi, la mejor escena en todas las películas que vi
Waking to a whole new world is either exciting or scary, like this for example.
Actually, the movie gives a great stab also on consumism, bringing the idea of a simpler life, and the unnecessariness of the Western products (Christianne sees no difference whatsoever in the products, Alex changing only the pack). It's also unnecessary to bring back Eastern products, it's just another kind of weird fetiche (just like Che t-shirts).
thank you!
Que buena escena, resume en gran parte la pelicula,y el tema de Yann Tiersen es genial, soy fan de el.
Visiting this scene after Robert E. Lee was taken down in Richmond, Virginia LOL.
really great film and music too!
please upload the whole movie!
bitte setzen die ganze film am internet! (oder so)
Zet alsjeblieft de hele film hier op de site!! wil hem heel graag helemaal zien!
its a reference to La Dolce Vita. in the first scene they are flying Jesus over the city of Rome and flirting with sunbathing women on the rooftops.
but I did really see a truck driving down karl marx allee (berlin) in 2004 with the heads of lenin and marx on it.
so sad
This is a beautiful movie!
The climax of that scene would be worthless without Fellini's "La Dolce Vita"
its the best movie scene ever. goosebumps.
I cried on that scene...
She's a really good actress
Name of the Musique please ?
Does anyone know the name of the song at this part of the movie?
Wonderful surreal moment; the whole of this film seemed to be about illusion having its own truth. Great film!
anyone know/could link me to the music to this, i know its yan tiersen but what is this bit called :)
can anyone name that piece of music?
thanks.
Obviously, I know very well what I'm talking about. I've lived there for 6 years and still am...sort of living there, just across the border from the mainland.
Eine tolle Film!!!
I Khan Ein toller Film*
The Helicopter is Soviet Mi-8
What's actually happened here?
Well, mum ...
Lenin is fleeing to West Germany
This video is older than you tube it self
Ich finde diesen film so traurig♡♡aber auch cool, und schön♥♥♥♥¿♡♡♥♥♡♥♥♡♥♥♡♥♥♡♡♥♥♡♥♥♥♡♡♡♥♥♡♡♥♥♡♥♥♥♡♥♥♡♡♥♥♡♥♥♡♡♡♡♥♥♡♡♥♥♡♥♡♡
Warum traurig?
ГДР, социализм,ностальгия!!!
East Germany, socialism, nostalgia
Der Helikopter ist der sowjetische Mi-8 Helikopter!
And may you never return.
I simply adore this movie!
film stupendo!!!!
Sound?
I really loved this movie
ohhh, i love this film.
Una obra de arte del cine mundial, excelente
And what have YOU understood? The poster above has actually travelled and witnessed everything in the times when the country was still divided. What sort of "understanding" are you referring to?
@itsareligionofpeace The funny thing is the East Germans had almost as many different shops as the USA does. Costco , Walmart , Home Depot , Macys , JC Penny , Target , Best Buy.
I think thats the lot.
same here my friend, same!
人民有信仰,祖国有力量,民族有希望。
what is the title of the track playing in this scene?
@plexusranger What are u talking about?
Goodbye sweet dream.
Welcome freedom
Freedom to become unemployed and homeless
@@themeerofkats8908 unemployment is good for Capitalism afterall
what song is playing? :)
@nevertrusasmurf It's called the same: Goodbye Lenin! by Yann Tiersen