Hell (2011 film)
2011 film / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Hell is a 2011 German-Swiss post-apocalyptic film directed by Tim Fehlbaum in his directorial debut.[1][2] The German-language screenplay was written by Fehlbaum, Oliver Kahl and Thomas Woebke. The experienced director Roland Emmerich, known for films such as Independence Day and 2012, acted as executive producer, with Gabriele Walther and Wöbke acting as producers.
Hell | |
---|---|
Directed by | Tim Fehlbaum |
Written by | Tim Fehlbaum Oliver Kahl Thomas Woebke |
Produced by | Roland Emmerich Gabriele Walther Thomas Wöbke |
Starring | Hannah Herzsprung |
Cinematography | Markus Förderer Tim Fehlbaum |
Edited by | Andreas Menn |
Music by | Lorenz Dangel |
Production companies | Caligari Film und Fernsehproduktions GmbH Vega Film AG SevenPictures Film |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures (Germany) |
Release date |
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Running time | 89 minutes |
Countries | Germany Switzerland |
Language | German |
The film is about a young woman named Marie (Hannah Herzsprung), her boyfriend Phillip (Lars Eidinger) and her younger sister Leonie (Lisa Vicari) who are driving through the blighted wasteland of Germany after a climate crisis has destroyed society. Parched by thirst, the trio scavenge for water, gas and supplies. The trio are joined by a male survivor, Tom (Stipe Erceg), who they encounter in the ruins. Later, after the group is ambushed by carjackers who abduct Leonie and take the vehicle, all of the group end up being captured by a farming family who hold survivors in the farm's former slaughterhouse to use them as a source of food.