At 40, Miriam radiates serene beauty and tranquility, a confidence and self-assurance as vast as the sea close to her summer home. There are no taboos in the polished, urbane life she shares with her partner André and their 15-year-old son Nils; there is understanding and tolerance. If Nils invites his 12-year-old girlfriend Livia to spend the holidays with them, fine. But when the brazenly sensual Livia begins flirting with an older man, Bill, Miriam feels it is her responsibility to stop the questionable relationship. But as she does so, it is she herself who falls for the shy and charmingly insecure Bill. Miriam forges ahead, seducing him, seeing him secretly. But it is Livia that Bill loves, not Miriam. And suddenly the vast horizons of her life vanish in a fog of jealousy and rejection – emotions that prove to be far less controllable than she thought… —Bavaria Film International
Stefan Krohmer was born in 1971 in Balingen. He studied Theater, Film and Television in Erlangen, followed by studies in Directing at the Film Academy Baden-Wuerttemberg in Ludwigsburg. His films include: Blackfast (1992), Chubab (1994), K.O. (documentary, 1995), Macht man eigentlich anders (TV, 1998), his graduation film Barracuda Dancing (1999), End of the Season (Ende der Saison, 2001), Familienkreise (TV, 2003), They’ve Got Knut (Sie haben Knut, 2003), and Summer ’04 (Sommer ’04 an der Schlei, 2006). —german-films.de
Bohemian in a way that I couldn't connect with, so concerned with first world problems that I failed to form an interest in what was happening.
For those who like slow,thought provoking films.From the beginning,the tension among the characters was quite obvious,contrasting with the ideal vacation setting.