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🌶 Certified Scorching2024 • Drama / Comedy • 182m

Dying

79

CINESCORE

SCORCHING

44 critic reviews

80%

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Mother Lissy, father Gerd, son Tom and daughter Ellen: the members of the Lunies family are estranged. But confronted with death, they finally meet each other again.

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Top Cast

Lars Eidinger
Lars Eidinger
Tom Lunies
Corinna Harfouch
Corinna Harfouch
Lissy Lunies
Lilith Stangenberg
Lilith Stangenberg
Ellen Lunies
Ronald Zehrfeld
Ronald Zehrfeld
Sebastian Vogel
Robert Gwisdek
Robert Gwisdek
Bernard
Hans-Uwe Bauer
Hans-Uwe Bauer
Gerd Lunies
Anna Bederke
Anna Bederke
Liv
Saskia Rosendahl
Saskia Rosendahl
Ronja
Nico Holonics
Nico Holonics
Moritz
Catherine Stoyan
Catherine Stoyan
Susanne
Tatja Seibt
Tatja Seibt
Esther
Helmut Zhuber
Helmut Zhuber
Dr. Kienzle
Jens Weisser
Jens Weisser
Mortician
Kailas Mahadevan
Kailas Mahadevan
Doctor
Alina Hidić
Alina Hidić
Dental Assistant #1
Karmela Shako
Karmela Shako
Nursing Home Nurse #1
Director: Matthias GlasnerProducer: Matthias GlasnerProducer: Jan KrügerWriter: Matthias GlasnerProducer: Ulf Israel

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Reviews

CinemaSerf
2025-08-29
70%

This features a collection of stories featuring the members of the “Lunies” family. Father “Gerdi” (Hans-Uwe Bauer) is suffering the near terminal effects of Parkinson’s and lives with his wife “Lissy” (Corinna Harfouch) who isn’t really faring all that much better. Their son “Tom” (Lars Eidinger) is a composer working in an emotionally charged environment with his lifelong friend and composer “Bernard” (Robert Gwisdek) who has recently completed a piece called “Dying”; whilst his sister “Ellen” (Lilith Stangenberg) lives a life as a dental assistant peppered with a great deal of booze and some random sex, increasingly with her married colleague “Sebastian” (Ronald Vogel). The family are fairly disjointed, and when the father dies we see how they reconcile with home truths abounding, the failings of electric cars made pretty clear and the virtues of forest funerals advertised too! There is a considerable degree of energy from both siblings here. Eidinger’s side of the coin involves a torrid relationship with his mother and delivers one of the most entertainingly frank conversations you’re ever likely to see, all while he is caught up in a love triangle with his ex-girlfriend and her newborn baby and the baby’s father whom she would rather he was than “Moritz” (Nico Holonics). “Ellen”, well she’s a bit of a firebrand and let’s also say that if you are at all squeamish about dentists, drills, masks and… well, just suffice to say that there are some scenes that really did make me very grateful I was the only person at this screening! You wouldn’t want to take her to a concert neither! There is lots of humour here, but it’s not comedy nor is it laugh out loud. It’s much more scenario and character-based and the strong performances cleverly interweave the strands towards the ending in a fashion that guarantees that an happy ending is the last thing we can expect. It is a long film, but it is structured in a way that keeps it engaging, touching, at times quite sad and at times realistically poignant as family life is put under a microscope. We are also treated to quite an orchestral treat at the end, too, as this maelstrom of human emotions moves on to new chapters.

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Details

Status
Released
Origin
DE
Languages
English, Latvian, German
Studios
ARTE, Port au Prince Films, Schwarzweiss Filmproduktion, Senator Film, ZDF
Box Office
$1,789,850

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