9/10
Eric Rohmer Style at his best.
27 November 2010
Warning: Spoilers
This film reduces the dramatic form to its most minimal state. It is exactly the opposite to 'Schindlers List'. The difference seems to be, that on one side you have the dramatic (re)construction of historical events with a clear message (bad and good are clearly divided; a hero stands up against state authority (Schindler) to save human lives etc.). 'Am Ende kommen Touristen' on the other side reflects on the problem, that 'in real life' it's much more difficult to learn something out of the past. Moralistic reflections and statements - be it in movies or in real life - about the past have turned into repetitive, self-righteous clichés, that have lost their meaning and their authenticity: What does it mean to say 'Something like that should never happen again'? What political actions (war for human rights etc.) can be justified with past experiences? Why putting up an memorial on a site, where once so many innocent people were killed, when on the other side the present has changed so fast, that the past has lost its meaning? In a way the films message is nihilistic: there is no answer to the question of how the past relates to the present. There can be no lesson drawn from the past - rather the world has become too complex to be fully understood. (And the science of history on the other hand has to solve the problem of relating the past to the present; of persuading the reader that the past is somehow still relevant to the present).

Though the film seems rather nihilistic in its political meaning it gives a rich insight in the often painful and desperate efforts of human beings, who try to deal with those problems of the modern world and who try to find explanations of some kind. And after all the film gives hope in so far as in the end the protagonist returns to the memorial center: therefore he is not just escaping from a hyper-complex world, but tries to face it even though he hasn't found any definitive answers and can only listen wordlessly to the standardised reflections about the past of the teacher, who talks to him in the bus.

The formal style of the film underlines this enigmatic absence of meaning very successfully: minimal use of music; a very subtle dramatization (e.g.: the story is not about life or death); an open end - all this reminds of the sophisticated style of Eric Rohmer. Certainly one of the best German films of the decade...
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