Kalinka

2016 [FRENCH]

Action / Biography / Crime / Drama

23
IMDb Rating 7.1/10 10 3633 3.6K

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Plot summary

In 1982, André Bamberski learns about the death of his 14 year-old daughter, Kalinka, while she was on vacation with her mother and stepfather in Germany. Convinced that Kalinka’s death was not an accident, Bamberski begins to investigate. A botched autopsy report raises his suspicions and leads him to accuse Kalinka’s stepfather, Dr Dieter Krombach, as the murderer. Unable to indict Krombach in Germany, Bamberski attempts to take the trial to France, where he will dedicate his life to Kalinka’s justice and the imprisonment of Krombach.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
August 18, 2019 at 11:10 AM

Director

Top cast

Daniel Auteuil as André Bamberski
Sebastian Koch as Dieter Krombach
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
702.34 MB
1280*534
French 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 27 min
Seeds ...
1.46 GB
1920*800
French 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 27 min
Seeds 4

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Bad-Good-Great 8 / 10

The German legal system is Kinda weird in this movie

This is not a bad movie, but the 27 years legal battle is just too weird and ridiculous. The Germans already admitted their former Nazi Germany did murdered 6 millions Jews, why their legal system would have protected a common practice family doctor even the evidences were so intact? Just because it was a French father of the murdered daughter accusing a German doctor? Then when this sex predator was sued by other girls raped by the same doctor, why the German court exonerated him again? I just couldn't comprehend why this German doctor got so much power to influence the German court. He was not a political person, so why the German legal system protected him? This kinda injustice could only happen in one Party or one strong man controlled authoritarian countries, or the democracy and the legal system were both corrupted, so it could be manipulated by the people in power. The living example: The thoroughly corrupted government in Taiwan. The majority Party controlled judges, prosecutors....They can rewrote Constitution and common laws to suit themselves. They could let a dirty former president and his dirty family out of prison. And I thought such ridiculous case could only happen in Taiwan, but this movie which claimed to be based on a true story simply proved how naive I am. I just couldn't imagine the German legal system is so biased, ridiculous and so corrupted exactly like that of Taiwan.

Reviewed by / 10

Reviewed by adrianovasconcelos 8 / 10

Auteuil shines in well-directed but flawed film based on true story

In AU NOM DE MA FILLE, Director Vincent Garenq pulls off a convincing work despite obviously limited funding resources, observable through minimal period recreation, done mostly through the use of cars.

The human element, man vs justice system, draws your interest from the outset, when you wonder why André Bamberski (superbly portrayed by Daniel Auteuil) is being arrested. A flashback of close on 30 years follows, with some parts more interesting than others, starting off in Morocco and meandering through France, Germany and Austria.

Almost constantly on screen, Auteuil delivers an immensely credible performance. He is not a good looking man, married to a beautiful woman, played by Marie-Josée Croze, who falls for the charms of a German medical doctor (Sebastian Koch, in a short but penetrating display of deception, mendacity, neighborly evil).

Sadly, Croze's part is thankless: no character development, never any explanation as to why she never questioned Dr. Krombach's decision to administer drugs and injections to her teenage daughter, clearly causing her demise - even after she had separated from the evil doctor. Other than aging convincingly, I found nothing to remember about Croze's performance.

Albeit in the background most of her on-screen time, I liked Christelle Cornil's role as girlfriend Cécile. Facially, she is not as eye-catching as Croze, but she looks like someone who enjoys life and loves with honesty. She has a most elegant figure and lovely legs, too. She stays loyal to Bamberski for many years, even though he lives almost entirely to see justice done by his murdered and raped daughter. Inevitably, Cécile runs out of patience and leaves him, and that is when a side of Bamberski emerges that suggests his justice-seeking quest may conceal a vindictive streak too: he will not have children with her. He has wasted her love and her time without any apparent remorse.

That obsession over his daughter's case clearly carries selfishness, too - not of a materialistic nature, but of the type that fails to heed the advice of his lawyer, of his father, the growing distance from his son who is fed up with his father's difficult relation with his mother, and of friends that see him losing his marbles... and a good woman to boot, whom he bafflingly refuses to have a child with.

Still, that complex vindictive facet helps explain why he contracts a trio to beat up Krombach and so see some justice done that the justice systems of Germany and France - acting in collusion to dismiss the case - keep turning a Kafkaesque blind eye to. The effects of that indifference at the top of the legal system are clear: it destroys lives and relationships as surely as the murder of an innocent teenager. And it forces one to take justice into one's hands, which the very same legal system is much quicker to act on and punish.

I liked the way Bamberski found a way to circumvent such legal callousness by getting Interpol involved, resulting in the application of the European Arrest Warrant (EAW) when Krombach illegally resumes his medical practice in Austria, which in time (much, much later) permitted his extradition.

Convincing script and dialogue, competent cinematography despite jarring narrative breaks in which the screen turns black, what stayed with me was Daniel Auteuil's superior performance, with Koch the shifty nemesis who steals his wife and his daughter's life.

Despite its flaws, AU NOM DE MA FILLE is thought-provoking and involving from beginning to end.

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