Status

Released

original language

English

Budget

$ 25000000

Revenue

$ 12165702

Top Billed Cast

Jonas Dassler

Dietrich Bonhoeffer

Phileas Heyblom

Young Dietrich Bonhoeffer

August Diehl

Martin Niemoller

David Jonsson

Frank Fisher

Moritz Bleibtreu

Karl Bonhoeffer

Nadine Heidenreich

Paula Bonhoeffer

Clarke Peters

Reverend Powell Sr.

Flula Borg

Hans Dohnanyi

Lisa Hofer

Sabine Bonhoeffer

Arthur Riordan

Publican

Luise Landau

Young Sabine Bonhoeffer

William Robinson

Eberhard Bethge

James Flynn

Dr. Rascher

Greg Kolpakchi

Officer Ansel Knoblauch

Simon Licht

Herman Punder

Mark Wingett

Payne Best

Evan Hart

Vassily Kokorin

Vincent Franklin

Bishop Bell

Patrick Mölleken

Walter Bonhoeffer

Felix von Bredow

Rudolf-Christoph Von Gersdorff

John Akanmu

Louis Armstrong / Satchmo

Tim Hudson

Winston Churchill

Caroline Berry

Clementine Churchill

Marc Bessant

Hitler

John Keogh

Professor Fosdick

Muiris Crowley

Hoble (Lead Officer)

Katharina Heyer

Else Niemoller

Robert Besta

Rudolf Bamler

Christopher Reinhardt

Dr. Reinhard Krause

Jade Matthew

Christel Bonhoeffer

Charlotte Martz

Young Christel Bonhoeffer

Leonard Treyde

Klaus Bonhoeffer

Victoria Grueber

Susanne Bonhoeffer

Mattis Feldman

Jan Niemoller

Tomer Barash

Moses Kiefer

Mark Huberman

Samuel

Arne Gottschling

Another Prisoner

Toussaint Colombani

Swiss Guard 1

Matthijs van de Sande Bakhuyzen

Swiss Guard 2

James Craze

Bus Driver

Andy Kellegher

Gestapo At The Buchenwalde

Charles De Meester

Prisoner 2

Kurt Erickson

Church Goer 1

Dagmar Döring

Church Goer 2

Andreas Berger

Grim Gestapo #1

Tobias Schäfer

Gestapo Officer Of The Youth

Jörg Westphal

Gestapo At The Gallows

Jordan McGuinness

SS Officer 1

Antoine Van Lierde

Rector

Rachel Lally

Wife

Johannes Heinrichs

Grabbing Man

Milton Welsh

Ludwig Müller

Roman Schomburg

Ulrich Wagner

Joseph Palmer

Man in Sedan

Derek Carroll

Gestapo

Marcus Lamb

Colonel Tresckow

Alex O’Brien

Officer (uncredited)

Mary T Lynch

Woman (uncredited)

Scott William Winters

Innkeeper

Mark de Carreau

Londoner

Sorcha Real

Congregant

Ciara Dan McGinnis

Berlin Passenger

Johannes Schreiber

Fahrer

Ingo Brosch

Gerhard Jacobi

Jean Schatz

SS Unteroffizier

Jean-Michel Vovk

Prisoner #1

Lewis Goody

Prisoner 3

Ruben Francq

Another Prisoner

Richard Wells

Another Bishop

Dada Ashi

Mattie Powell

David Coffey Weakley

Jasper Montgomery Passenger

Lili Baldari

Girl in Tea Room

Morgan Cooke

Executioner

Sion Alun Davies

Sebastian

Gabriel Marie S. Debaty

Political Prisoner

Nyla DeGrate

Student

Mathieu Michel F. Devuyst

Political Prisoner

Damien Donnelly

Church Attendee

Aaran Donoghue

Gestapo Officer

Nathan Edo

Third Student

Pat Egan

Officer Franz Kohler

David Faniel

Political Prisoner

John Flanders

Bishop #4

Eliana Getachew

Another Student

Eliana Getachew

Another Student

Fabien Guilliams

Political Prisoner

Guillame Alban V. Jousten

Political Prisoner

Dashiell James Komarnicki

Henry Maddox

Remy Grace Komarnicki

Anne Maddox

Andrew McCarthy

Prisoner

Caolan McClafferty

Prisoner

Lincoln McLain

Street Kid #2

Suzann McLean

Another Churchgoer

Daire McMahon

Gestapo

Des Meade

Scrivener

Daithi Michael

Gestapo Officer

Jacky Nercessian

Pastor

Hugh O'Shea

Brit

Ava Rose Paul

Ava

Moritz Ross

Other Gestapo

Flynn Segura

Street Kid #1

Harry Stone-Brown

Grim Gestapo #2

Charlie Stuart

Bishop #3

Heather Zicko

Veronica Maddox

Martin Zonderman

Prisoner Buchenwald

Guy Dierckx

Gestapo Officer

Janet Grene

Berlin Passenger (uncredited)

Ian Dillon

Church Attendee/Airplane Passenger (uncredited)

Thomas O’Halloran

Nazi Officer (uncredited)

Dean Panter

Clergyman

Ollie Ryan

Priest (uncredited)

Kenneth Barry

Church Attendee (uncredited)

Similar Movies

Movie Reviews

A review by Brent_Marchant

Written by Brent_Marchant on 2024-12-01

Heroes come in many forms, and, regrettably, they often go unrecognized for their efforts, which is why movies honoring them for their accomplishments can be so vitally important, particularly in attempts at correcting the oversight of being overlooked. However, when it comes to writer-director Todd Komarnicki’s cinematic tribute to Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1906-1945) (Jonas Dassler), a little-recognized German theologian who was sharply critical of the Nazis’ treatment of Jews and imprisoned dissidents during World War II, that noble goal goes largely unfulfilled. To be perfectly honest, this film is dreadfully dull, relying on a lot of preaching and protracted conversations to carry the narrative, not exactly what I would call engaging and compelling viewing. Indeed, if Bonhoeffer was supposedly so influential in spearheading German resistance against the Third Reich and criticism of Germany’s national church for its silence toward and complicity with Adolf Hitler’s policies, his initiatives, at least as portrayed here, aren’t particularly enlightening or instructive. To make matters worse, the picture’s flashback-oriented approach alternating between Bonhoeffer’s final days and events from his past lends little to telling his story, occasionally causing pivotal developments in his life to become more muddled than enlightening. Perhaps this production’s biggest sin, however, is its alleged tampering with the facts, including events that never took place, others whose content was significantly altered and still more for which there are only vague suggestions about their validity but for which substantial proof is lacking. The result is a release where viewers might easily come away from it not knowing what to believe given its fabrications, alterations and lack of coherence. That’s even apparent in the title, whose qualities attributed to the protagonist could be considered specious, at least when it comes to his supposed role as spy and assassin. To its credit, though, there are moments when Bonhoeffer’s outspoken views are presented through powerfully delivered statements (though the same could also readily be said of the words of some of his peers), but they’re too few and far between for my tastes. In addition, Bonhoeffer’s prolific career as a writer goes largely unnoticed, reducing his 34 volumes of work to little more than a footnote and a few passing references. It’s truly sad to see a film that gets things wrong as badly as this one does, especially when it comes to recognizing the work of someone who is said to have had as much impact as he did. Unfortunately, the oversights here continue.

A review by Geronimo1967

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2025-03-12

Dietrich Bonhoeffer (Jonas Dassler) is a pacifist pastor who is furious at the acquiescence of the German church with the rise of the Naziism and the establishment of the puppet “Reichskirche”. Unlike many, though, he is prepared to use his position in the pulpit and preach to anyone who will listen of the folly of this plan. Needless to say, this doesn’t go down well and so he has to spend a lot of time out of the country whilst many of those left behind fall victim to persecution. That absence has it’s uses, though, as he hopes to galvanise opinion in both the USA and the UK - a task all the harder when his forebodings fall largely on deaf or unwilling ears. It’s when his colleagues come up with a plan to assassinate their Führer that the threads of his multi-timeline story and his life start to come together and we realise just how perilous his position is when he finally returns to his homeland. The is a true story of a man who dared to fight back in the face of overwhelming odds, indifference and fear - but sadly I just found Dassler didn’t, well, dazzle. Even at his most animated, his characterisation was underwhelming and contributory to this looking more like a high-end television movie rather than an enlightening story of courage and, to a certain extent, faith. The ensemble cast do well enough, but again there isn’t really an anchor role to give it the necessary gravitas either within the church, or amongst his allies. Even Churchill is presented as lacklustre. Bonhoeffer was a jazz lover and that does give us an excuse to indulge in the odd bit of toe-tapping, and the whole story is a savage indictment of complicity when the state gets up on it’s hind legs and mobilises the militia and the militant, but this disappointed, sorry.