Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
In the end Johannes tells Elsa that Berlin has been divided in 2 by the allies and she find out what he's really been up to. This was in the summer of 1948. THREE YEARS after the end of the war and the fall of Vienna to the allies. It's sickening. The ending is very anti climactic after this reveal.
Eventually, Jojo does end up telling Elsa about the end of the war. He breaks this news to her by telling her the news of the day, that berlin has been divided into two. It's 1948. THREE YEARS after the end of the war! Elsa escapes and Johannes has the gaul to be angry with her.
When the war comes, he figures out that they’re hiding a young Jewish woman, Elsa, behind a false wall. Outraged, he barely contains himself, until a bomb disfigures him during an enemy air raid, after which he becomes interested in Elsa and, gradually, consumed by her.
Yes!! I was so shocked just how much the movie is an improvement over the book--it's usually the other way around. That was exactly my issue too. Johannes ends the novel as a creepy, manipulative, deranged psychopath who has learned absolutely nothing
31 Μαΐ 2020 · Caging Skies is the story of an ordinary man who commits an unforgiveable act in the name of love. Naturally, there’s also a movie version. The novel is framed as a confession, a sort of...
7 Νοε 2019 · The title ‘Caging Skies’ resonated with me in an abstract, metaphorical way. First, the war situation, then Johannes himself cages Elsa in for several years; and though she is never allowed to leave the house, her mind regularly wanders out of it.
His growing infatuation with Elsa and the power dynamics between them, as described by Johannes, form the bulk of Caging Skies. He becomes blind to the outside world and the earth-shattering events around him unless they impact on this all-encompassing relationship.