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Twin Sisters (film)

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Twin Sisters

Film poster
Directed by Ben Sombogaart
Written by Tessa de Loo
Marieke van der Pol
Distributed by Miramax Films
Release date(s) May 6, 2005 (US)
Country Netherlands
Language Dutch, German

Twin Sisters is the English-language title of De Tweeling, a 2002 Dutch film, directed by Ben Sombogaart, based on the novel The Twins by Tessa de Loo, with a screenplay by Dutch actress and writer Marieke van der Pol.

The film tells the story of twin German sisters separated at a young age. After the death of their parents, they are "divided" between quarreling distant relatives, one being raised in the Netherlands and the other in Germany. As well as a national difference, they also undergo a sharp class differentiation. One is raised by a rather affluent, middle-class intellectual family in Amsterdam, and the other by a poor Catholic peasant family in a backward area, where in the 1930's the Nazi Party seems to offer your young people the only chance of social mobility.

During their teens the two girls seek to keep in contact, despite numerous and mounting obstacles. But the cataclysmic events of World War II and the Holocaust sweep them in opposite directions. One becomes involved in the Dutch resistance and the hiding of endangered Jews, and falls in love with one of them - who is eventually caught by the Nazis and sent to his death. The other one falls in love and marries a young Wehrmacht soldier who is eventually assigned to the Waffen SS and is killed by an American shell in the last days of the war - and though not involved in any war crime, shares in the post-war opprobrium of the SS. In the aftermath of the war the two sisters - both scarred by the war and grieving for their respective lovers - have an explosive meeting, ending with the Dutch one vehemently disowning her "Nazi" sister (who, in fact, had little sympathy with Nazi ideology).

Decades later, at their old age, they meet again accidentally at a spa and become reconciled.

The two girls/women are each played by three different actors, from the Netherlands and Germany respectively.

In Israel, some critics objected to the film as "creating a moral eqaution beteen the killers and their victims". Still, it was shown successfully for several months in cinemas all over Israel.


Miramax Films had also acquired the United States distribution rights to Twin Sisters and the film was given a limited US theatrical release in 2005.

The film was a 76th Academy Awards nominee for Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film of 2003.

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