By Doris Toumarkine
Story
Cabbie Tarek Fahd, eager to return to a career in journalism, answers an intriguing ad seeking participants in a scientific experiment and pitches his ex-boss on a story about it. The program, set up by a professor and his assistant, involves 20 men who are confined for two weeks in a mock prison where they assume the roles of guards or prisoners. Those chosen will be paid handsomely, closely monitored and (supposedly) immune to violence since it is strictly verboten. Just prior to entering the mock prison, Tarek literally bumps into Dora (
Maren Eggert) when their cars collide and a passionate one-night stand ensues. They part so that he can carry out his assignment. At the mock-prison, Tarek, who secretly wears a minicam hidden in his glasses, is assigned to the "inmate" team, not the choicer of the two categories since "inmates" are subjected to more rules and restrictions than their "guard" adversaries. Tarek's journalistic instincts soon take over as, eager for a good story, he provokes a guard who torments another inmate for not finishing his meal. Tarek, in turn, is punished and humiliated, thus further and dangerously stoking the rivalry and inciting several guards, including their pernicious leader Berkus (
Justus von Dohnanyi ) and the dangerously aggressive Eckert (
Timo Dierkes). Things get out of hand and the violence escalates to fatal proportions until Tarek, fortified by the love of a woman, saves the day.
Acting
As he showed in
Run Lola Run,
Moritz Bleibtreu as Tarek has true star quality. He's a pleasure to watch, plus he's thoroughly believable.
Bleibtreu is no doubt helped by the strong supporting roles, including
von Dohnanyi as Berkus,
Dierkes as Eckert,
Edgar Selge as the effete Professor and
Andrea Sawatzki as skeptical assistant Dr. Grimm, who will pay a price.
Direction
Like so many books, plays and films before it,
Das Experiment, in German with English subtitles, focuses on how good intentions go disastrously astray when people are thrown together and human nature rears its ugliest head. Blessed with his fine actors, director
Oliver Hirschbiegel works from a script by Mario Giordano, Christoph Darnstadt, and Don Bohlinger, who adapted it from a book that recalls a real-life Stanford University experiment.
Hirschbiegel ably delivers some nifty visuals, meant to be the hero's point-of-view as seen through his embedded minicam. The director is a master of pacing, which helps overcome the fact that his set and story don't always persuade, and he turns his parable into an eminently watchable piece.