They´ve got Knut
A tale of love and other forgotten ideals of the early 80s
Love and politics were inseparable in the 80s, especially in West Germany, where friends, lovers and families would chant antiimperialist slogans in endless protest marches. Politics, however, is the last thing on the minds of Ingo and Nadia on this winter weekend in 1983. They´ve come to Nadia´s mountain cabin to discuss - or dissolve - their relationship. But before Ingo can begin to pour out his soul, a rowdy band of holidaymakers suddenly bursts in upon them - all politically active friends of Nadia´s brother Knut. Ingo is vexed, but worse is yet to come: Knut has apparently been arrested. As the group debates whether it is politically correct to have fun under such circumstances, Ingo finds himself drifting away from Nadia. Little by little, he is sucked into a community where people´s hearts and minds are like strangers without a common language …
In this tale of love and other forgotten ideals of the 80s, director Stefan Krohmer takes a searing look at the clash between politics and pleasure, confrontation and conformism. Yet even in this time of peace marches, protest songs, and endless moralizing discussions, it all comes down to love and relationships - or the theory about it.