![]() ![]() ![]() With the look of a startled fawn she slides elegantly between German and French. On the plus side there’s Vicky Krieps, who was so ineffable in the film Phantom Thread, as Simone Strasser, a wartime translator from Alsace caught on the horns of a dilemma. The USP of Das Boot 2.0 is that the underwater drama has to budge up to make room for landlubberly intrigue involving the resistance. Several still are, and in the first episode at least one of the two instances of female nudity – a landlady giving herself a body wash – felt exploitative. What it means in practice is that not all the female characters are prostitutes with two lines of dialogue, as they mostly were in the film. This sounds like a far-fetched category error. So this new version is hailing itself as a U-boat drama for the #MeToo generation. Pity poor old Rainer Bock, back in costume having played an almost identical Nazi apparatchik in BBC One’s SS-GB.Īnother tour of duty for the Das Boot franchise could be said to lack the merit of urgency. You have to feel for a generation of German actors who, after Downfall, thought they’d moulted the uniform of the SS and the Gestapo. Hoffmann’s particular nemesis is his immediate underling, First Watch Officer Tennstedt (August Wittgenstein), a prig with quivering nostrils who looks as if he last smiled in 1933. ![]() Some of those attitudes prevail in the new ship commanded by rookie captain Hoffmann (Rick Okon) as they burrow out into the Atlantic, but national politics play second fiddle to the simmering tensions among men cooped up in a metal tube with only one khazi. It sidestepped the issue of war guilt by ensuring the brave and hardened crew were no fans of Hitler. That thought has not occurred to the producers of Das Boot (Sky Atlantic), who have exhumed the world of German submariners explored in Wolfgang Petersen’s acclaimed 1981 film, later fattened up as a television drama, and turned it into a sequel.ĭas Boot was German cinema’s first major portrait of the war effort. When someone at BBC News at Six accidentally spliced footage of Spitfires onto a recent story about Prime Minister Theresa May going to Brussels, it occurred to me that a moratorium on the Second World War is overdue. ![]()
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