"Wkett Food & Wivie Mot3otzille looks otymokok cotoki-vy Pc Awtevicot's besf vket.k, che-es o-P 2004, {-key jtsi- fake a 3.9tvkdev- oti- Revot Bell o.P Gyotvii-y Bow - Molly Abraham, Detroit News 112/04 Arts 8a Life At The Movies In The Bunker NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH Monday-Saturday The Fevre: Accented with the flavors of the (aribbean and the Mediterranean. Entrées range from steaks and creamy pasta to grilled scallops and fresh fish. Atmosphere: Comfortable but Sophisticated - Cory handsome bar 340 N. Main, Downtown Milford - 1118-684-4123 Sylvia Rector Feb., 2005 "Volare Ristorante puts Wixom on the map for Italian food." Molly Abraham Jan., 2005 AUTHENTIC ITALIAN FARE...CREATED FRESH EVERYDAY EXTENSIVE WINE CELLAR RISTORANTE Mon-Fri • Lunch & Dinner I Sat & Sun • Dinner Only 49115 Pontiac Trail between Beck Rd. & Wixom Rd. • 248-960-7771 "Blue Gingerfe- attires the best of Malaysia, Vietnam Japan." Danny Raskin, November 26, 2004 BLUE GINGER Vietnamese Japanese I Malaysian Try our authentic Bubble Tea (our specialty) Lo\v-Carb I Low-Calorie Fresh Shrimp Roll S5.95 I Lunch Entree includes Miso Soup $5.95 I 2 Sushi-Roll Special (California & Cucumber Rolls) 3/17 2005 52 Tues-Thurs 11-10 Fri-Sat 11-11 Sun 12-9 6635 Orchard Lake Rd. in Old Orchard Mall) 248.737.7918 Best Foreign Language Film nominee reflects Hitler's 12 years in power through his last 12 days. ANDREW SARRIS Featurewell.com 0 liver Hirschbiegel's Downfall ("Der Untergani) dramatizes the last days of Adolf Hitler in his Berlin bunker as the Russian Army surrounded the city in 1945. The screenplay, by Bernd Eichinger, is based on the book Inside Hitler's Bunker by Joachim Fest and also on the memoir Until the Final Hour by Traudl Junge and Melissa Muller. The same basic story has been told on the screen several times before, first in G.W. Pabst's Der Letzte Akt ("The Last Act"), in which Albin Skoda played Hitler and Oskar Werner supplied the audience with a politically acceptable point-of-view character in the form of a morally stricken, guilt-ridden German officer who seems to have been the only anti- Nazi in the bunker. There are no such dissidents in the current film, as indeed there wouldn't have been in Hitler's real-life bunker, which was packed with Nazi true believers (even down to the cooks and the servants). A more strikingly similar screen predecessor to Downfall was Blind Spot: Hitler's Secretary (2002), in which German documentarians Andre Heller and Othmar Schmiderer sim- ply recorded the recollections of 81- year-old Traudl Junge, who served as Hitler's private secretary from 1942 until his death in 1945. In this remarkable exercise in oral history, Ms. Junge's stunningly graphic words created their own mise-en-scene as Hider and his entire entourage were extracted from the entrails of history to receive a final rite of passage before a richly deserved oblivion. Indeed, if you've seen Blind Spot fairly recently, as I have, the early scenes of Downfall may seem eerily familiar, so vivid were the elderly Junge's verbal descriptions. Some may question why there should be another film about Hitler at all. The 60th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, and with it the inevitable memory of the 6 million Jews who were exterminated by the Nazis, hap- pened to coincide with the opening of Downfall At the same time, a member of the British royal family, no less, chose to prance about in a Nazi costume fes- tooned with swastikas and, after the resultant uproar, apologized profusely — which is not to say that even more maliciously motivated swastikas are not being scrawled all over the world, even as we condemn the hapless prince. From the various testimonies of the cast and crew of Downfall (the film was Germany's Oscar nominee for Best Foreign Language Film but lost out to Spain's The Sea Inside), the project was not so much a labor of love as one of duty to a shameful por- tion of German history that must be faced by a new generation of Germans. Hence, except for the Swiss-born Bruno Ganz, who plays Hitler, almost all of the other real-life characters are played by prominent German per- formers, many of who felt it was their duty as actors to find the human beings lurking inside the genocidal Nazi monsters they played. Ulrich Matthes, who played Hitler's