Perhaps
if they had added English subtitles to this film
and kept its original soundtrack
I would have liked it a lot more. But they didn't
they dubbed English over the existing film and did a horrible job of it!
There is a reason why the practice of overdubbing has been abandoned! The results typically destroy a film (remember all those Japanese Monster films of the 70's) and that is the case here. More so there seems to be a big problem with the translation or even the script
I kept thinking did he really say that???
I understand that the film is a "tiny budget" Swiss film from 1981
but film making is an art
and this film fails artistically on many levels. It just seemed so amateur.
I also get that this was a courageous undertaking by the Director and Producer that angered many Swiss people. They challenge the notion
the remembrance
of Swiss neutrality
showing that it was quite different than what we see at the end of The Sound of Music. More so they illustrate the fact that Switzerland
albeit neutral
was in fact subservient to the Germans.
This is a film that can generate conversation
thus I give it a couple of extra stars
but as a film goes it stinks! 6/10
The Boat Is Full
1981 [GERMAN]
Action / Drama / War
Plot summary
During World War II, Switzerland severely limited refugees: "Our boat is full." A train from Germany halts briefly in an isolated corner of Switzerland. Six people jump off seeking asylum: four Jews, a French child, and a German soldier. They seek temporary refuge with a couple who run a village inn. They pose as a family: the deserter as husband, Judith as his wife, an old man from Vienna as her father, his granddaughter and the French lad, whom they beg to keep silent, as their children. Judith's teenage brother poses as a soldier. The fabrication unravels through chance and the local constable's exact investigation. Whom will the Swiss allow to stay? Who gets deported?
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
February 27, 2021 at 02:01 AM
Director
Top cast
Tech specs
720p.BLU 1080p.BLUMovie Reviews
Great concept horrible translation
Tragic but powerful and deeply moving
When the von Trapp family make it over the border to Switzerland, their ordeal is over and all is well (or so "Sound of Music" implies). Not so with the six forlorn refugees of "The Boat is Full." Having reached Switzerland after a perilous escape from Nazi Germany, their ordeal has just begun. They end up in a small village where an innkeeper couple take them in and try their best to provide food, clothing, shelter, and protection from the authorities.
The movie examines the attitudes of the Swiss towards refugees who were escaping Germany and seeking safety in their country. It provides a good insight not only into the official policies regarding which refugees were allowed to stay and which were forced to be repatriated, but also the attitudes of the common people. Some were openly hateful, most were indifferent and callous, many genuinely compassionate and kind.
The overall arc of the story is less important with this movie than the individual scenes and episodes that take place. Each conveys a particular pathos and engraves itself in one's memory with indelible force. The acting is almost totally transparent: you feel these are real people going through real events. The refugees' blank, despondent expressions, the gradual transformation of the innkeeper husband from suspicion to tolerance to outright kindness, the harsh authoritarian attitudes of the policeman, these all contribute to the film's effect.
It's a stark film to watch: there is no score, the colors are heavily muted and drab, and there are few points of comfort or cheer. One is left with a profoundly ambivalent view of the Swiss and Switzerland, which apparently was known as the "lifeboat" of central Europe (hence the irony in the title). The film is basically examining where the line could/should have been drawn between compassion and the need to maintain Swiss neutrality and protect its own borders and feed its people.