Margarete Steiff (TV Movie 2005) Poster

(2005 TV Movie)

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6/10
Don't yawn... this is a TV biography, but...
przgzr5 February 2008
You don't expect too much when you put an American TV movie in DVD. You expect even less when it's a German TV movie on the DVD. In fact, you can hardly be disappointed: it can be as bad as you expected, or you can sleep it over before you become disappointed.

Or, sometimes, if you are very lucky, you can be pleasantly surprised and find a watchable movie.

"Margarete Steiff" is even more than that. It is almost a good movie. And, in fact, while you watch it you'll find parts that are a good movie indeed, so good that you'll forget it was made by and for German television.

However, values of the movie are in the same time its flaws. This is a biography and, as a TV movie, it could have been made as a boring education program. (Why are biography movies usually so boring compared to an ordinary documentary program on National Geographic or Discovery channel dealing with the same topic?) But instead of teaching us and giving informations, from the day of birth and names of parents to the graveyard where the person rests in peace, authors chose a different approach. They focused on three important periods of main character's life and gave us a drama in three acts, separated by one or more decades. Yet, the way they are presented is rather diversified – almost as if they were made by different directors.

The second part is the longest and the best, and therefore we can conclude that there was not enough time to develop the plot in first and last chapter, so they are a bit poor. And, as it was a TV movie, it would maybe be better if it was made as a mini-serial with each of these chapters being a one 45 or 50 minutes episode.

The first chapter, or act, is a childhood story. Actress playing Margarete couldn't make us believe she is a 10 year old child (similar to Judy Garland playing Dorothy), and the script didn't help her either. Some today 10 years can talk and act like her, but that isn't convincing for the particular place and time. Many relations between characters that are important for next parts of the story are marked, but briefly, in laconic way; especially I miss depth in Margarete's relation to priest and church as community, knowing more about Margarete's uncle and his relation to her parents, and most of all development of Margarete – teacher relation: he is one of the most interesting characters in the movie, and compared to usual 19th century teachers we can see a man who is uncommonly able and willing to abandon usual methods when a special child appears.

And last chapter is the weakest one. Though it should be a conclusion, the one that is supposed to encircle the story, but though we meet most of the same characters, we don't care for them any more because they don't seem to be more than talking furniture. But this time, unlike act 1, this is not due to compression of the plot: though it is a hard and dramatic moment in Margarete's life we don't find it to be as important as moments in first two chapters. Maybe the time gap between act 2 and 3 is too big, we lost too big part of her (and others') life, and the writers didn't manage to make us include in the story once again. (If it was a new episode of a serial, it wouldn't matter that much...) The very ending is the worst thing in the movie. It could end at any point in her life equally, this moment doesn't seem to be any special climax in the movie or in her life. We in fact understood the main character's feelings and motivations only while she was a child – the more the years pass, the more we know what is happening to her, and less what she is inside. So this sudden end leaves us rather empty. She made one victory in her career? It seems she made many of them, and we don't get an answer why is this (or is it all) the most important of them. Or if she is satisfied at all, if this professional success compensated her disabilities and loss of personal life. Was she so much ahead of her time that she didn't care for lack of most important things in her generation women's life – husband and children? If this was a usually boring biography we wouldn't ask, but after the second chapter we were free to expect more.

This is not "Francesca e Nunziata" as I thought it might be when the movie was announced. But there are still reasons to watch the movie... especially for you who were so interested and patient enough to read my whole comment.
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9/10
A hopeful and inspiring true story
jerry44443 January 2007
Margarete was born physically-challenged. Yet that did not deter her from making the most out of her life. With the support of her brother, Fritz who always stood by her side, she overcame all odds that life threw at her. From her childhood days, she was full of optimism and faith.

Her strength and creativity made it possible to achieve things that were otherwise impossible in those days of mid-18th century. Her achievements and determination proved her skeptics wrong, as a woman and a person who was physically-challenged. The meeting with the possible man of her life brought more changes to her and those around her.

One thing led to another, her invention of stuffed toys have since then became an ageless passion for the young and those young-at-heart.
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9/10
Loved it!
kirsten-me10 July 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I thought this movie was very touching and showed the life and struggles of Margarete Steiff so well. I didn't know this movie existed and just happened to have the right channel selected to see it from beginning to end! To know the struggles she had to go through to even go to school and then to become a successful business women at a time when women didn't have a say is just a great example. So many give up, and Margarete even fought her own family to be able to go to school, see a doctor, and become the women she became with the help of her brother.

I do not agree with the previous review about the movie lacking in anything. I watched it in the original German so there might be a difference if you watch it in a translation.
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4/10
Steiff deserves better
Horst_In_Translation3 September 2019
Warning: Spoilers
"Margarete Steiff" is a German television movie from 2005, so this one is almost 15 years old now already and it was made for the holidays that year. The director is Xaver Schwarzenberger, one of the most prolific German(-language) filmmakers ever probably because he has a truly big body of work about which however it must be said that you will not find a great deal of high-quality projects in there. This one here is no exception. But first things first: Like most other German small-screen releases it runs for 90 minutes approximately, a bit shorter without credits. And of course it is set way in the past as the central character is a German stuffed animal toy producer that is still a household name for good quality today with her company. She is palyed by Heike makatsch who was really an A-list actress back then still and for a while actually already, which she probably isn't today anymore also for a while. But it isn't really her fault that this mvoie turned out mostly disappointing I would say. The supporting cast also includes a handful of other known names Like Knaup and von Borsody playing the parents or also Krassnitzer, Heerwagen and Löbau. At least these are the ones I know. The cast is probably still one of the better aspects, but the film feels really weak in terms of the screenplay and you can see that the two who came up with it are not exactly the most experienced script writers, still always a bit disappointing to see more than one people working on a story and actually both being not skilled enough to make note of the weaknesses and blandnesses the other induces. I will not go very much into detail, but honestly the film does feel pretty shallow. First of all apart from the recurring sewing machine, the film does not do half the justice to Steiff's groundbreaking ideas. They also barely touched her success despite being a woman, which, if executed in a skillful manner, could have been a great inclusion. The polio component was okay I would say. makatsch there as slightly on the edge of overacting, but it was still fine. But the worst were probably the dialogues. The film tries so hard to include as many elements from that time in conversations going for a desperate attempt to educate the viewer. One minor example was the Fiaker mention, really minor, there were more big-scale examples too. You will know what I mean when you hear them. I am not talking about the way the characters were speaking language-wise. Now I am not an expert on that, but it did feel appropriate I'd say. As for the story and dramatic moments overall, the film also does feel a bit fake at times how it tries to create tension. This includes mostly the main character's romantic involvement. Another example here: How they think one character left with a lot of money and did not return, but he just missed the train. Now I know there were no mobile phones back then, but still feels a bit too simple to really make an impact. Or also some moments about him being more interested in her sister than her eventually. Same for the conflict with the brother. Profession-wise, I liked the two-time inclusion of how she cannot sign with her right hand and does not want to with her left hand. That was nice, also well-acted. However, the way the company is pretty much broke and then completely out of nowhere a big investor/buyer shows up was typical low-level German television with no realism, but only intention to create a super happy ending after everything seems lost. Shame they took that path. The situation with the employees who say they stand strong with her, even if she can't pay them anymore, felt a bit forced and cringeworthy too. I mean you can do stuff like that, but you have to work your way to these scenes and moments to get away with them and there was not really any, or at least not any convincing, elaboration on the relationship between her and her workers before that. Especially if that is really completely fictitious. All in all, taking all this into account, this is a movie that takes itself far more seriously than it should or has any right to. Music, sets and costumes are fine I give them that, but they cannot make up for flaws in key departments. I give it a thumbs-down. It is too shallow as a whole despite trying so desperately to be the exact opposite. Watch something else instead.
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