“Although Petzold never clearly defines the parameters, Transit leaves us on edge, especially as the phantom Paula Beer finally makes her way into the dialogue nearly an hour after the film starts. More of an accent than a character, she is the ghost haunting the romantic desires of three men, her relationship with all three left purposefully vague. Both Beer and Rogowski have a haunted, spectral look to them, their supposed intimacy more of a survival mechanism since life as they know is spinning quickly into its death throe. A return to the bleakness of Petzold’s work in the early 2000s, gone is the emotional heartbeat of his previous two films. This is a new, dubious world redefined through another wave of a rising terror which was never completely quelled in the first place.”
Disc Review:
Music Box releases Transit in 2.35 with DTS-HD Master Audio. Picture and sound quality are well-attenuated in this transfer, which includes several extra features.
Making of Transit:
This twenty-three-minute feature is a behind-the-scenes look at the making of Transit, a project inspired by Harun Farocki’s love of the source novel, the writer-director who collaborated on several titles with Petzold before his death in 2014.
The Cinema of Transit:
This six-minute segment features an interview with Christian Petzold.
Christian Petzold Q+A:
This twenty-five-minute Q+A with Petzold was moderated by Dennis Lim at the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
In Transit – Thrown Into the World:
Ben Gibson moderates this forty-one-minute conversation with Petzold and Barbara Auer, recorded at the 2018 Berlin International Film Festival.
The Refugee as a Person:
Franz Rogowski sits for this nine-minute interview discussing his work on the film.
Franz Rogowski – Shooting Star:
This brief three-minute bit is a glance at Rogowsli, listed as one of European Film Promotion’s (EFP) shooting stars in 2018.
Film Review: ★★★★/☆☆☆☆☆
Disc Review: ★★★½/☆☆☆☆☆