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Brick Review

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Brick Review: When the Walls Are Within

Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi by Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi
1 year ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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The film opens not with a slow burn but with a slammed door, both literal and metaphorical. Tim, a workaholic games programmer, and Olivia, an architect, are a couple suspended in the quiet animation of a relationship eroded by unspoken grief. She has just purchased a camper van, a tangible symbol of the new life she desperately wants to begin. He has refused, retreating into the familiar comfort of his work. They awaken the next morning to an impossible reality.

Their apartment, a space of shared history and current tension, has become a tomb. Every door and window is fused shut by a seamless, black brick monolith that has materialized overnight. It is an impenetrable, uneven, and vaguely magnetic barrier. With this startling event, the modern world is severed; electricity, water, and digital connections vanish, leaving only the raw immediacy of their confinement.

The irony is brutal. Olivia sought an escape from their life, and what they received was absolute, terrifying enclosure. What unfolds is a high-concept psychological thriller where the physical prison is merely a symptom of an emotional one, a terrifying scenario built directly upon the fault lines of a breaking human connection.

The Geometry of Sorrow

The true subject of this film is not the wall, but the hollowed-out space between two people. The external barrier is a blunt, unsubtle manifestation of the emotional fortification Tim has erected to insulate himself from a past sorrow. The impossible physics of their situation—an unbreachable prison appearing from nowhere—forces a confrontation with the very issues he has steadfastly refused to face.

The performances give this potent metaphor its lifeblood and its painful authenticity. Matthias Schweighöfer gives Tim a brittle, withdrawn quality, the portrait of a man already entombed long before any physical bricks appeared. His grief is not explosive but implosive, a quiet retreat into himself.

As Olivia, Ruby O. Fee is his necessary counterweight, pushing against his inertia not just with a will to survive, but with a desperate energy for healing and reconnection. She is the active agent in their emotional conflict. The story’s most electric moments, therefore, arise not from attempts to physically break through their prison, but from the interpersonal collisions.

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A heated argument, erupting with venom and heartbreak, lands with devastating realness. In that scene, the metaphorical wall between them becomes audible and violent, puncturing the sci-fi premise with a moment of raw, authentic human pain.

A Society of Captives

The narrative ingeniously avoids the potential for stagnation by shattering its own confines. A sledgehammer to an interior wall—a profane act in a civilized apartment building—opens the story up, revealing that Tim and Olivia are not alone. Their building is a vertical prison populated by a small, fractured society of fellow captives, each reacting to the crisis in their own way.

The ensemble introduces a new volatility. We meet Marvin, a chaotic fountain of conspiracy theories about a “twisted escape room” or a “Matrix-like multiverse,” whose doltish energy provides a strange comic relief even as it heightens the tension. His partner, Ana, is his calming anchor. Then there is the unnervingly serene ex-policeman, Yuri, a man who radiates a quiet, restrained menace reminiscent of a classic cinematic villain.

His presence shifts the threat from the unknown outside to the known inside. The group is rounded out by an elderly man, Oswalt, and his granddaughter Lea, who represent a different kind of vulnerability. The dynamic shifts from a two-person drama to a tense study of group mechanics under extreme duress.

Survival is no longer just about escape; it is about managing suspicion and fragile alliances. The production design sharpens these character distinctions, with each apartment serving as a map of its occupants’ inner lives—from the garish, purple and neon Airbnb inhabited by Marvin and Ana to the sparse, paranoid flat of another, each space adds texture to their shared world.

Blueprint of a Breakdown

As a pure thriller, the film methodically layers its mystery. New clues, such as the discovery of surveillance monitors in the landlord’s empty apartment, deepen the puzzle and keep the mechanics of the plot churning forward. Yet, the question of the wall’s origin and purpose is a narrative engine that powers a different kind of exploration.

Brick Review

The eventual explanation for the structure arrives with a certain thematic logic, fitting within the world the film has meticulously built. However, it does not quite possess the same impact as the human drama it contains; the resolution feels less potent than the journey to get there. It prioritizes its central metaphor over a shocking or viscerally satisfying twist. This is because the director’s intent seems clear: the wall is a physical manifestation of depression.

The escape, when it comes, is not merely a feat of engineering but an act of maturation, a breaking out from a psychological cage. The film’s lasting force comes from this choice—its use of a genre framework to stage a stark examination of grief. The nature of the wall is far less significant than the story of two people being forced to demolish their own internal barriers to find one another again.

Brick is a German mystery-horror thriller. In the film, a couple, Tim and Olivia, wake up to find their apartment building has been enclosed by a mysterious brick wall overnight. They must then team up with their neighbors to find a way to escape. The movie is scheduled to be released on Netflix on July 10, 2025.

Full Credits

Director: Philip Koch

Writers: Philip Koch

Producers and Executive Producers: Quirin Berg, Katrin Goetter, Philip Koch, Benjamin Munz

Cast: Matthias Schweighöfer, Ruby O. Fee, Frederick Lau, Murathan Muslu, Josef Berousek, Salber Lee Williams, Alexander Beyer, Axel Werner, Sira-Anna Faal

Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Alexander Fischerkoesen

Editors: Hans Horn

Composer: Anna Drubich

The Review

Brick

7 Score

Brick uses its high-concept thriller premise as a powerful, if blunt, tool to explore a deeply human story of grief and emotional disconnection. While the mechanics of its central mystery may not fully satisfy those seeking a clever puzzle-box, the film succeeds as a stark and affecting psychological drama. It is anchored by strong lead performances that convincingly portray how the most impenetrable walls are the ones we build inside ourselves. The commitment to its central metaphor gives the film a weight that lingers longer than the specifics of its plot.

PROS

  • A potent and clear central metaphor for grief and depression.
  • Grounded and emotionally authentic lead performances.
  • Intelligent production design that enhances characterization.
  • Effectively prioritizes its human drama within a thriller framework.

CONS

  • The resolution of the external mystery is less compelling than the emotional conflict.
  • The thriller elements can feel secondary and functional.
  • Supporting characters border on being archetypes for the central drama.

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: Alexander BeyerAxel WernerBrick (2025)DramaFeaturedFrederick LauLeonine StudiosMatthias SchweighöferMurathan MusluMysteryNetflixNocturna ProductionsPhilip KochRuby O. FeeSalber Lee WilliamsSci-FiSira-Anna FaalThrillerWiedemann & Berg
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