The Interpreter (2018 film)

The Interpreter (Slovak: Tlmočník) is a 2018 Slovak drama film directed by Martin Šulík. It was selected as the Slovak entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 91st Academy Awards, but it was not nominated.[2]

The Interpreter
Film poster
Directed byMartin Šulík
Produced byRudolf Biermann
Martin Šulík
Bruno Wagner
Written byMarek Lescák
Martin Šulík
StarringJiří Menzel
Peter Simonischek
Music byVladimír Godár
CinematographyMartin Štrba
Edited byOlga Kaufmanová
Distributed byGarfield Film
Release date
  • 23 February 2018 (2018-02-23) (Berlin)
  • 1 March 2018 (2018-03-01) (Slovakia)
Running time
113 minutes
CountrySlovakia
Czech Republic
Austria
LanguageSlovak
Budget$110,433[1]

Plot

In Vienna, retiree Georg meets an interpreter named Ali. The two men embark on a journey across Slovakia, encountering wartime survivors who will hopefully lead them to the Nazi officer that killed Ali's parents.[3][4]

A retired Slovak interpreter, Ali Ungár, reads the memoirs of an Austrian officer, and comes to believe he may have killed his parents during World War II. He travels to Vienna to visit him, taking with him a gun. The door of his flat is opened by Georg Graubner, who says that his father killed a lot of people during the war but is now himself dead. He asks if Ali is Jewish, and Ali asks if that matters. Reluctant to leave with no resolution, Ali asks to use the toilet and have a drink of water, and finally denounces Georg as a Nazi swine. As he leaves the building he pushes the biography through the letterbox and scratches a swastika on the outside.

Intrigued by the book, Georg aks Ali to meet him, and when they do this he suggests they tour the places mentioned in the book to research his father's history. Ali agrees, on condition he is paid €100 a day and has his own room to sleep in.

They tour Slovakia, equipped with old photographs showing Georg's father. Their first port of call is Banská Bystrica, where Georg's car is broken into and all his papers and money stolen. Ali has to pay the hotel bill and for Georg's drinks, and resigns from the job. However Georg persuades him to stay on. The men develop a kind of friendship. It transpires that Ali survived the war because his parents gave him away and had him baptised.

They visit a farm, where Ali discovers that it was not German but Slovak Nazis who killed his family. He collapses and Georg takes him to hospital, where his daughter comes to look after him. Georg then drives back to Vienna, where it is revealed that his own father is not dead, but is a bed-ridden invalid. Georg props him up in bed, shows him video testimonies of victims of the German occupation, and then leaves a gun by his side.

Cast

gollark: I think I read that the ESP32's I²S hardware could do something vaguely PWM-like up to 80MHz.
gollark: I don't know *that* much. It just seems like it might require a lot of routing table entries on every node to work.
gollark: Based on skimming the disaster radio routing protocol bit, it doesn't really have any defenses against malicious devices fiddling with routing, and may scale poorly (not sure exactly how the routing tables work).
gollark: Not the hardwarey/RF stuff, more like how you can efficiently do routing (even in the face of possibly malicious devices connected) and whatnot.
gollark: Right now mesh networking is still quite early in its life and I don't think many of the problems have been worked out entirely yet.

See also

References

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