Good start, but then it gets ruined
Blending excellent reporting and strong storytelling, this is a disturbing film truly stranger than fiction
View MoreExcellent characters with emotional depth. My wife, daughter and granddaughter all enjoyed it...and me, too! Very good movie! You won't be disappointed.
View MoreThis movie feels like it was made purely to piss off people who want good shows
View MoreAs a Trabi owner I love this film simply because I can relate to the adventure of driving one - there is never a dull day when you drive a Trabant! This car is destined to be a classic and so is this film - a real 1980's style (although made in 1991) road trip and just goes to show that not everything from the former DDR has be resigned to a sad and ungracious end! But the best part is that it's all true! I have even had to shake the car (the scene on the beach) - try and guess for what reason! Enjoy - at the end of the day it's about a family - and that includes their Trabi! Car lovers as well as Cold War historians will enjoy the film from a documentary angle - others simply because it's funny!
View MoreThis film was a great success in Germany in the year 1990. That was the time when the Berlin Wall and the iron curtain just fell down. Director Peter Timm was right on the tracks and could fast present this movie -with popular, mostly TV-Actors of East and West Germany. It features a East-German Family, enjoying the new freedom and following on J.F.W Goethes steps to their first holiday in Italy. An odyssey with a lot of lame jokes and not very impressive actors - like the most successful german comedies.
View MoreGo Trabi Go is a fantastic film, and I recommend the splendid subtitled version for all German students. Georgie the car is my hero and if there was a Trabi motorbike I'd get one. The movie is very funny (as it's a comedy) yet also has some sad tear-jerking . A delight all the same.
View More"Go Trabi Go" is a movie that consists of two elements: It is the story of a travel, but also a comedy. The Italian landscapes and sights are shown in beautiful pictures when the trip of the Struuz' passes camping sites, nudist beaches (a new experience for the people from GDR), lakes and finally Rome. Their guidebook is a diary from Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (Mr. Struuz is German teacher), their car a Trabant. This typical Ossi-car is one of the funny elements. The owner of the car is the father, he loves his car (which he calls "Schorsch") and this leads to many funny moments. The main comical sources are the archetypes. All the wessi's clishés towards the ossis and vice versa are put together and packed into figures, situational humor and funny dialogues. The film has many highlights, when the society of German revue artists and comedians appear in the film (e.g. Diether Krebs telling the shocked Udo Struuz 109 jokes about Trabants). I enjoyed viewing the film and I think not only people with knowledge about the wessis and the ossis will do so, too. All in all a wonderful story about a family getting away from the ex-GDR to see how the world out there really is...
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