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Max Details

2002 Certificate 15
  • Rated:
  • 60
  • from 2517 members

MAX, directed by Oscar-nominated screenwriter Menno Meyjes, stars John Cusack as the title character, Max Rothman, a German-Jewish man who lost his right arm while fighting for his country during World War One. Although Rothman is no longer able to pursue his dream of becoming an artist, he channels his love of art into a .. Read more

Starring John Cusack, Noah Taylor, Molly Parker, Leelee Sobieski
Director Menno Meyjes
Genres Drama

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Max

MAX, directed by Oscar-nominated screenwriter Menno Meyjes, stars John Cusack as the title character, Max Rothman, a German-Jewish man who lost his right arm while fighting for his country during World War One. Although Rothman is no longer able to pursue his dream of becoming an artist, he channels his love of art into a successful gallery that shows the work of many European modernist painters, including George Grosz (portrayed by Kevin McKidd). At one of his gallery openings, Rothman meets an artist and fellow WWI soldier, an intense young man named Adolf Hitler (Noah Taylor). Largely out of a veteran's bond, Rothman agrees to buy some of Hitler's work and encourages the frustrated painter to channel his emotions onto the canvas. However, angered and disillusioned by Germany's impoverished state, Hitler also begins flirting with politics and public speaking. As Rothman comes closer to selling his work, Hitler's interests take a turn--a turn that will change the course of world history.
Stirring up controversy even before its release, MAX largely avoids the pitfalls often associated with taking on major historical figures. Although the film is about Hitler, as the title implies, it focuses more on the intriguing and complex character of Max Rothman, who is excellently portrayed by Cusack. In spite of his lost arm and his country's decline, Rothman tries to remain optimistic and finds solace in his appreciation of art. Meanwhile, Hitler's artistic output is largely unimaginative, and Taylor's performance as the future dictator and mass murderer is far from flattering or sympathetic. A smart and unusual film that handles its delicate subject matter well, MAX is a engaging look at the lives of two men just before they are irrevocably altered.

Starring John Cusack, Noah Taylor, Molly Parker, Leelee Sobieski
Director Menno Meyjes
Studio PATHE DISTRIBUTION
Run time DVD: 1 hr 41 mins
Certificate Certificate 15
Genres Drama
Language DVD: English
Hearing-impaired English
Released DVD: 01 Mar 2004
Production year: 2002
Format DVD
  • Critics' reviews (2) of Max

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  • 2 stars out of 5

    Of all the 20th-century dictators, none has been more demonised than Adolf Hitler. Which is why, for all its flaws, writer/director Menno Meyjes's feature debut is a brave and — at least thematically — fascinating work. Controversially focusing on Hitler the man as opposed to the monster, Meyjes offers a fictional account of the early events that set a demobbed soldier and frustrated artist on the road to genocide. It's almost like a dark fable, as fellow First World War veteran and Jewish art dealer Max Rothman (John Cusack), befriends the obnoxious young Adolf (Noah Taylor) and tries to persuade him to put as much passion into his painting as he does into his embryonic hate politics. While the drama is well shot and Taylor gives a striking performance, the film is ultimately too contrived and simplistic to take seriously. Suggesting that Hitler's future reign of terror was merely revenge for his artistic failure is hard to swallow, while the stereotyping of philanderer Cusack and his bourgeois Jewish family is questionable given how events in Germany eventually unfolded.

    • Radio Times
  • Munich, 1918: a destitute, bigoted soldier and a wealthy Jewish art dealer strike up an uneasy acquaintance rooted in... read more on Time Out

    • Time Out
  • Most helpful member's review of Max

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  • 30 out of 32 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 4 stars

    Fascinating drama

    This is a genuinely interesting drama focusing on the fictional but highly plausible relationship between the young Adolf Hitler and Cusack's Jewish art dealer. It highlights the problems of post-First World War Germany and shows exactly the evolutionary stage that took the country on to further warmongering and genocide. Cusack is superb, filling the screen with a warmth and star quality that contrasts well with Taylor's vicious and disturbed Hitler. The background detail and design of the film is also excellent, and there are moments of suprising visual poetry here. Occasional humour also leavens the bleakness of the subject matter, which will always be relevant, especially given current times.

      • Melon from East Sussex
  • Most recent members' review of Max

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  • 1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

    Rated - 2 stars

    More a mediation on the nature of Art and its? place in the real world, than a straight forward movie. It puts forward a hypothetical story whereby Hitler could have become a artist rather than move into politics. It?s an interesting idea and both John Cusack and Noah Taylor, who plays the young Hitler, are very convincing. As a whole, though, the film itself is rather dull.

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Rating breakdown

2,517 Member ratings
  • 100
89
  • 90
145
  • 80
297
  • 70
398
  • 60
535
  • 50
367
  • 40
280
  • 30
197
  • 20
138
  • 10
71

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    • MAX, directed by Oscar-nominated screenwriter Menno Meyjes, stars John Cusack as the title character, Max Rothman, a German-Jewish man who lost his right arm while fighting for his country during ...