Review: DAS EXPERIMENT

An archive review from The Gingold Files.
The Experiment (2010) Directed by Paul Scheuring Shown: Adrien Brody

Editor's Note: This was originally published for FANGORIA on September 27, 2002, and we're proud to share it as part of The Gingold Files.


Das Experiment has one of the most painful-to-watch moments in recent cinemaโ€”a bloody bit thatโ€™s nonetheless not quite violent, but rather violence being deferred. More I wonโ€™t reveal, but it made the hardcore horror fan I saw the film with actually look away (and was strong enough for him to refer to this later as a bad thing).

Despite its occasional gory moments toward the end, however, Das Experiment is more concerned with psychological unease. Director Oliver Hirschbiegel, adapting the novel Black Box by Mario Giordano (who scripted with Christoph Darnstรคdt and Don Bohlinger), has fashioned a tense, claustrophobic study of what happens when people are handed the license to give in to their worst impulses. The idea that men locked into a faux prison would eventually give in to violence is not necessarily a surprising one, but in Hirschbiegelโ€™s hands the devolution comes to seem inevitable rather than predictable.

He even gets away with one of the overseers of this psychological project insisting, in an early scene, that violence will not be tolerated without it seeming like a ridiculous or obvious bit of foreshadowing. None of the test subjects who have volunteered appear as if theyโ€™re going to violate that rule, at least at first. The filmโ€™s protagonist, cab driver Tarek (Moritz Bleibtreu), is simply in it for the money, and for another reason: A journalist fallen on hard times, he convinces an editor that the situation will make for an excellent story, and even has a tiny camera wired into his glasses. He gets one heck of a story, all rightโ€ฆ

Half of the men are assigned to be โ€œprisoners,โ€ and the other half as โ€œguards,โ€ and it isnโ€™t long before the latter group begin to let their power over the former get to their heads. What makes the movie work is its attention to character, a number of personality switches that are both dramatic and plausible and Hirschbiegelโ€™s fine use of space, lighting and camera placement to accentuate the oppressiveness of the situation. One waits in anticipation to see how bad things will get, and by the end they become very bad indeed, yet Hirschbiegel resists any temptation to take the violence over the top.

The one element heโ€™s not as successful with involves Dora (Maren Eggert), a young woman Tarek literally runs into the night before he is to begin the experiment, and who eventually becomes suspicious about its circumstances and tries to save Tarek from it. (Itโ€™s only a coincidence that this is Bleibtreuโ€™s second recent film, after his career-boosting turn in Run Lola Run, that features a woman desperately racing to save his character from a dangerous situation.) Dora never quite shakes the impression that sheโ€™s a plot device, though itโ€™s a measure of Hirschbiegelโ€™s control over the tension that when she ends up in the middle of the experiment herself, itโ€™s never certain that sheโ€™ll survive the experience.

Bleibtreu aside, Hirschbiegel aimed to cast actors who were largely unknown in Germany to make the scenario more credible for the audience, and certainly that will be the case for U.S. viewers. Bleibtreu serves as a strong anchor for the story and all of his fellow guinea pigs are believable, with Christian Berkel, as Tarekโ€™s cellmate with an agenda of his own, and Justus von Dohnร nyi, as the โ€œguardโ€ who undergoes the most extreme personality change, standing out in particular. And while the German setting gives the filmโ€™s themes of conformity and violence extra resonance, one neednโ€™t make any metaphorical connections to appreciate the movieโ€™s power. Das Experimentโ€™s situation may be specific, but the emotions it both exploits and elicits are universal.