MIFF ‘06 film review: Tough Enough

Posted by The Editor on Friday 11 August 2006, 9:40 am
Categories: Arts, Film, MIFF '06  

Film rating: 4.5/5
Walkouts: 1/5
Pretentious clapping at credits: 3/5
BPM sighting: Yes

From its opening shot, Detlev Buck’s Tough Enough is as uncompromising as its title suggests, another example of the emerging power of new German filmmaking.

Fifteen-year-old Michael Polischka gets a rude awakening when his mother breaks up with her rich doctor boyfriend. With little money of her own, she’s forced to move them into a dumpy apartment in a rough ethnic neighbourhood, far from the posh suburbs in which they had grown accustomed to living. Beatings and extortion make public high school miserable for Michael. Life at home isn’t much better.

A chance meeting with urbane crime lord Hamal and his henchman, Barut, turns Michael’s life around. They take him under their wing, in part because his honest face makes him the perfect guy for drug deliveries to local dealers. But when a big delivery goes astray, Polischka is obliged to provide Hamal with some new proof of his loyalty… and this time the test won’t just involve money.

A gritty and compelling tale of youth in the council flats of modern Berlin. Young dude wants to do good but falls in with The Wrong Crowd, leading to one of the most tense and emotional film conclusions possible. Ed didn’t breathe for four minutes.

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