Rheingold Review: Promising Start, Forgettable Finish

Akin's Missed Opportunity

Fatih Akin’s latest film, Rhinegold, tells the fascinating true story of German rapper Xatar, born Giwar Hajabi. Hailing from Iranian Kurdistan, Hajabi endured immense hardships from a young age after his family was forced to flee political turmoil. As a refugee, Hajabi bounced between Iraq, France, and Germany, struggling to find stability in his youth. Facing discrimination and financial troubles, he drifted towards crime, dealing drugs, and getting embroiled in Amsterdam’s criminal underworld.

Just when it seems his future is sealed, Hajabi discovers a passion for music. Enrolling in a prestigious conservatory, he nurtures his musical talents yet stays tangled with gangsters. A botched gold heist lands Hajabi in a Syrian prison, where unspeakable torture awaits. Remarkably, this is where Hajabi’s career truly begins, as he starts recording rap songs, honing his lyrical skills. Upon release, Hajabi emerges, reborn as Xatar, rapidly rising to fame throughout Germany.

Under Akin’s skilled direction, Rhinegold brings Hajabi’s story to thrilling life. Flashing between periods, it traces his harrowing path from destitute refugee to successful businessman. While imperfect, the film greatly honors Hajabi’s perseverance against all odds. Both entertaining and moving, Rhinegold proves some individuals truly can transform their destiny through determination and talent.

A Troubled Journey of Immigration, Crime, and Redemption

The film tells Giwar Hajabi’s incredible true story in a nonlinear narrative structure, flashing between different periods in his life.

Born in 1979 in Iranian Kurdistan amidst political upheaval, Giwar endures a difficult childhood defined by displacement and turmoil. After his family is imprisoned in Iraq, they seek refuge in Paris and eventually in Bonn, Germany. However, discrimination and poverty remain constant struggles.

In Bonn, Giwar’s gifted musician father deserts the family, leaving them in financial ruin. A rebellious Giwar turns to petty crime as a teenager, selling pirated pornos and marijuana to help make ends meet. He develops a passion for rap, and his skill at the piano shows promise. Yet Giwar struggles to escape his past.

Giwar’s troubles escalated after moving to Amsterdam. He joins a criminal syndicate, working as a club bouncer and enforcer. Giwar falls deeper into the criminal underworld, trafficking drugs. A botched cocaine deal puts him in debt, leading Giwar to organize a gold heist of impressive dental fillings. However, the heist ends disastrously.

On the run, Giwar is captured in Syria and brutally tortured in prison. He’s been interrogated for the stolen gold’s location. The film vividly depicts Giwar’s unspeakable torment during this harrowing ordeal.

Returning to Germany, Giwar serves eight years behind bars. There, he at last finds salvation through rap music, using smuggled gadgets to record his first album. Reinvented as Xatar, his acclaimed songs made him a chart-topping sensation upon release.

Rheingold spans Giwar’s incredible rise from destitute refugee to eminent recording artist and businessman, though his tumultuous journey remains marked by violence and crisis throughout volatile periods of immigration, crime, and self-discovery.

Director’s Shining Moments and Missed Opportunities

Rheingold’s intense early scenes are where Fatih Akin’s direction truly excels. He crafts moments that linger long in the mind, such as Hajabi’s harrowing birth amidst violence and that chilling concert massacre. Through visual storytelling, Akin immerses us in the turbulence of those times without the need for excessive dialogue. Occasional flourishes like emphatic slow motion or a montage pacing heighten impact.

Rheingold Review

However, as the film progresses, its visuals become polished yet less distinctive. The generic look suits gritty crime tales but feels out of place for this uplifting biopic. Early on, Akin grabs us with intimate scenes brimming with cultural authenticity and raw emotional force. Young Hajabi encountering rap music buzzes with a lively spark of creative spirit. But later, criminal antics feel detached and clichéd compared to the personal trials that molded the protagonist.

While Akin’s skilled technique remains, these gangster scenes lack the resonant qualities that imbue those early passages with resonance. We’ve witnessed such gritty crimes before, but Hajabi’s biopic offered potential for deeper insight. The middling visuals reflect how this section drags despite character efforts. It’s a missed chance when Akin flashed such a flair for evoking struggles across divides in works like Head-On and The Edge of Heaven.

Powerful Lead, but Lost Opportunities with Supporting Characters

Emilio Sakraya commands the screen as the older Giwar Hajabi. Through his intense gaze and physical presence, he makes this flawed criminal into a riveting lead. Even in his darkest moments, Sakraya ensures you remain invested in Giwar’s journey. The child actors are also standouts, particularly Baselius Göze, who conveys young Giwar’s trauma with heartbreaking subtlety.

Surrounding characters receive less nuanced treatment. Giwar’s love interest in Shirin exists solely to sigh over his actions without rationale. One longs to understand her perspective beyond programmed confusion. Giwar’s family likewise feels more like plot devices than people. Despite Rasal’s resilience, her interior life and desires remain unexplored.

By focusing so intensely on Giwar’s criminal exploits, the film overlooks key relationships shaping his development. We see his pains yet learn little of his passions, like his talent for music, hinted at but never probed in depth. Giwar emerges as more of a stock gangster figure than a multi-dimensional person. His humanity gets lost amid gritty crime scenes that prioritize shock over insight.

While Akin ensures Giwar’s struggles resonate, his success in receiving less examination proves a missed chance. The complex man emerging from trauma warrants deeper understanding than a stream of heists and fights allows. By not balancing criminal activities with personal reflections, the film leaves Giwar two-dimensional, and his redeeming qualities are merely suggested instead of truly illuminated. Sakraya hints at greater depth within Giwar that greater care with supporting characters and themes of identity could have brought to the fore. As it is, Giwar remains a man defined by his past over the potential of his future.

Cultural Identity and the Power of Music

Fatih Akin’s film shines a light on universal immigrant struggles through Giwar’s story. Fleeing war and persecution, his family finds little refuge, battling a disconnect from their Kurdish roots in Germany. When Giwar’s father abandons the family, he feels this disconnect most deeply, left adrift in a hostile environment without his roots.

It’s this disconnect that seemingly pushes Giwar towards crime. Yet Akin also shows how music provides a lifeline. Despite embracing hip-hop, Giwar retains a passion for classical music from his father, memorably depicted in their opera outing. Even as Giwar descends into criminality, music remains, from his piano classes to producing tracks in Amsterdam. Akin underscores how music lets immigrants retain cultural identity despite struggles, serving as Giwar’s ultimate salvation.

In prison, unable to find purpose in the outside world, Giwar rediscovers music, using a smuggled speaker to record under his ‘Xatar’ persona. The incorporation of real hip-hop songs into the soundtrack brings Xatar’s music vividly to life. We see how his rhymes connect with a disaffected audience, much like the record producer glimpsed in Giwar’s youth fueled his dreams.

The film doesn’t shy away from Xatar’s controversies. Through his art, we glimpse the social issues driving young Germans to identify with his criminal image. By humanizing such a figure, Akin sparks discussion around the societal factors that created him, like the disenfranchisement still facing immigrants today. At its heart, this is a film celebrating how cultural figures can reclaim their voices and find redemption through the universal language of music.

Cultural Crossroads and Cinematic Inspirations

With Rheingold, Fatih Akin once again shines a light on the immigrant experience in Germany. Like earlier works exploring Turkish identity such as Gegen die Wand and Auf der anderen Seite, this film traffics in interconnected themes of displacement, familial bonds, and finding meaning through art in the face of hardship.

Stylistically, traces of Guy Ritchie shine through in the gritty portrait of Giwar’s teenage years and brushes with crime. Elsewhere, Scorsese’s kinetic gangster tales clearly left their mark on the Amsterdam-set criminal exploits. These influences lend energy, though they also risk painting Giwar as too familiar a character amid pulpy Crimeworld antics.

Comparisons to music biopics inevitably come to mind, with Giwar’s journey echoing films about artists who overcame adversity through their music. But where films honoring Tupac or Dexter are captivated by exploring their subjects’ artistic passions, Rheingold sacrifices these insights for an overlong criminal subplot.

As with The Golden Glove, Akin’s script falls short of the intensely human portraits found in earlier works. Giwar remains something of a shadowy figure, with fleeting hints that he’s more than a ‘gangster rapper’ but no real probing of his inner life. This underscores how, despite ambitious roots, the film ultimately struggles to transcend well-worn genre tropes in a way Akin’s best succeeds.

While imparting Giwar’s unbelievable true tale, Rheingold reveals its greatest missed opportunities lie in more deeply penetrating its complex protagonist’s cultural crossroads and the redemptive power of art.

Unexpected Routes to Redemption

Giwar Hajabi’s life story contained all the makings of a gripping biopic—from harrowing origins as a Kurdish refugee to notoriety in the criminal underground. For a while, Rheingold delivers on this promise. The turbulent sequences depicting Hajabi’s childhood amid war and imprisonment root us in his experience. We feel each mile of his family’s perilous escape to find security.

Regrettably, the film loses force once shifting focus to Hajabi’s criminal exploits. Among professional crooks, he doesn’t leap off the screen as a fully-realized individual. We see his hustle but receive few insights into what drives this man. Surrounding characters remain sketchily drawn too. The mechanics of gangland plots overwhelm chances to plumb their humanity.

It’s disappointing, given Akin’s talent for in-depth portraits, as seen previously. This story cried out for deeper dives into Hajabi’s psyche and music’s importance. Instead, familiar crime tropes dilute the biopic’s power. He reduces a riveting figure to living out well-worn arcs of rising and falling from grace.

In the end, Rheingold presents a life too extraordinary to be contained by a formula. While it shines a light on Hajabi’s astounding transformation, this film fell short of capturing what truly shaped its subject. Akin’s vision has yielded finer works, but Hajabi’s saga reminds us that there are always uncracked shells holding unexpected routes to redemption.

The Review

Rheingold

6 Score

While Fatih Akin's direction shows flashes of brilliance, as a whole, Rheingold fails to do justice to its remarkable true story. By not delving deeper into Hajabi's character, it dilutes the impact of his incredible journey from a war-torn refugee to a renowned artist. The film squanders too much time on pedestrian gangland plots at the expense of psychology and themes. Ultimately, Rheingold feels like a missed opportunity to explore an epic life in all its complexity.

PROS

  • Compelling true story basis with Giwar Hajabi's rags-to-riches ascent
  • Impactful opening scenes depict the protagonist's backstory and escape from Iran/Iraq
  • Strong performance from Emilio Sakraya in the lead role

CONS

  • The second act bogs down in repetitive gangster cliches and loses narrative focus
  • Flimsy character development extends beyond the protagonist
  • Fails to adequately explore Hajabi's relationship with music
  • Direction is largely generic and formulaic

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 6
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