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Cabaret
Cabaret happens from 1929 to 1930, which was a time when Berlin was in the middle of post World War 1 economic depression that transitioned from the core of the underground, avant-garde cultural epicenter to the beginning of the totalitarian regime of Hitler, marking the rise of the Nazi Party.
The Plot 'n' Play
A group of younger boys victimized Natalia in her family home by slaughtering her dog and leaving the body on her doorstep, illustrating the changing political atmosphere and the growth of antisemitism in Germany.
Brian even witnessed the scary strength of the Fascists while he was visiting the beer garden with a baron. As Sally sleeps in the car, two men leave her, arriving in the limousine of the baron.
The two men start drinking while a lonely voice starts singing "Tomorrow Begins To Me" slowly with much depth of feelings.
The camera aims at the almost perfect feature of the young man tracking the enhanced enthusiasm with which he is singing.
As the camera closes in on the faces of the other members of this beer garden, they start standing up and joining in.
Lastly, when almost everyone gets up on their feet, the camera aims down, revealing the armband on the young man depicting the young man that instigated the song. The static got used in the films depicting Nazi propaganda.
The baron and Brian leave to the sound of the harmony of the group climbing on the luxurious car while driving away, indicating that since the baron is rich, Sally and Brian are foreigners, and they always have the option of leaving this horrendous reality behind them.
The festivities get overseen by a grand ceremony with the determination to keep this merriment going on at whatever the cost is for the psychic having the poignant compulsiveness. After the song, Cabaret arrives at its end while you start realizing for the first time that it is not a song of happiness but of depression.
We celebrate Cabaret decades after its first release for several reasons behind it. These performances are astonishing, with a solid theme presented most decently, plus the musical numbers alone worth a lot of their price of admission.
It is never without any file and gets exploited very easily by the faith of bad actors. However, even for the sake of cultural literacy and to start viewing the classic movie musicals, Cabaret is surely well worth the time.