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Undine

2020 | 90m | German

(257 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

Undine is a historian and tour guide at the Berlin City Museum specializing in urban development, while Christoph is an industrial diver. Linked by a love of the water, the two form an intense bond, which can only do so much to help Undine overcome the considerable baggage of her former affair.
Release Date: Jul 01, 2020
Director: Christian Petzold
Writer: Christian Petzold
Genres: Fantasy, Drama, Romance
Keywords berlin, germany, diving, female protagonist, break-up, love affair, urban development, based on fairy tale
Production Companies ARTE France Cinéma, Schramm Film, Les Films du Losange, ARTE, ZDF
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Sep 24, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Sep 24, 2025
Trailers and Extras

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Full Credits

Name Character
Paula Beer Undine
Franz Rogowski Christoph
Maryam Zaree Monika
Jacob Matschenz Johannes
Anne Ratte-Polle Anna
Rafael Stachowiak Jochen
Julia Franz Richter Nora
Gloria de Oliveira Antonia
José Barros Miguel
Enno Trebs Server
Christoph Zrenner Usher
Stefan Walz Police Officer
Bita Steinjan Woman in Museum
Name Job
Dominik Schleier Sound Designer
Christian Petzold Screenplay, Director
Merlin Ortner Production Design
Bettina Böhler Sound Designer, Thanks, Editor
Eva Fischer Assistant Decorator
Scharka Cechova Makeup Artist
Ires Jung Assistant Director
Caroline von Senden Commissioning Editor
Christoph Dehmel-Osterloh Gaffer
Olivier Père Commissioning Editor
Dorissa Berninger Production Manager
Hanse Warns Foley Mixer
Thomas Korda Steadicam Operator
Matthias Biber Steadicam Operator
Paloma Schnitzer Visual Effects Editor
Tim Leydecker 3D Artist
Nils Strnad Property Master
Markus Schweiger Key Grip
Stephanie Moldrings Property Master
Patrick Tauscher Digital Compositor
Gilberto Arpioni Visual Effects Supervisor
Hans Fromm Camera Operator, Director of Photography
Alexander Bohr Commissioning Editor
Franziska Röder Makeup Artist
Benjamin Hörbe Sound Designer
Simone Bär Casting
Alice Rathert Visual Effects Producer
Fabian Weigmann ADR Recordist
Christian Bahr Visual Effects
Tom Hecker Set Decoration
Andreas Mücke-Niesytka Sound Mixer
Marco Krüger Sound Assistant
Adam Inglis Colorist
Florian Trautmann First Assistant Camera
Micki Fröhlich Title Designer
Rayk Hemmerling Digital Compositor
Martin Steyer Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Rémi Burah Commissioning Editor
Andreas Schreitmüller Commissioning Editor
Katharina Ost Costume Design
Kuen-Il Song Foley Editor
Matthias Ruppelt Unit Manager
Jean-Michel Boublil Visual Effects Supervisor
Anton Kaiser Unit Production Manager
Gustave Shaimi Publicist
Carsten Richter Foley Artist
Kordula Marisa Hildebrandt Travel Coordinator
Jonas Dornbach Thanks
Christian Schulz Still Photographer
Fred Donoghue Visual Effects Coordinator
Name Title
Michael Weber Producer
Florian Koerner von Gustorf Producer
Margaret Ménégoz Co-Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 22 32 14
2024 5 23 34 15
2024 6 20 36 10
2024 7 23 54 12
2024 8 17 25 11
2024 9 10 17 7
2024 10 17 36 8
2024 11 15 28 8
2024 12 13 28 7
2025 1 13 26 9
2025 2 9 14 3
2025 3 5 13 1
2025 4 1 2 1
2025 5 1 3 1
2025 6 1 1 1
2025 7 1 1 0
2025 8 1 2 0
2025 9 2 2 1

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

Paula Beer is "Undine", holding down a rather mundane job lecturing on the historical urban development of Berlin. She is also suffering the final throes of her relationship with "Johannes" (Jacob Matschenz) whom she still loves. As with the original Paracelcus myth (upon which this is based), she m ... ust avenge herself on anyone who betrays her - and we gradually begin to understand that there is much more to her than meets the eye. An heavy rain shower is instrumental in introducing her to "Christoph" (Franz Rogowski) and she finds another love but when she disappears into a lake, he must search... It really does help if you have some familiarity with the story of the eponymous water nymph - otherwise much of this will seem disjointed. The use of the sunken boat in the lake, and strong efforts from Beer and Rogowski give this a depth to it; the characterisations develop slowly but definitely. True, Christian Petzold does take his time, and what is effectively quite a short story can seem a little overly padded now and again, but the imagery under the water and the subtly of the story are well carried by all. It made better sense to me second time round, and is well worth 90 minutes. If you do enjoy it, try the 1916 version - that is shorter and just as beautiful to watch.

Apr 04, 2022