Berlin in
1995. Michael Berg watches an U-Bahn pass
by—then flashing back to a tram in 1958 Neustadt. A 15-year-old Michael (David
Kross) gets off because he feels sick and wanders the streets, pausing in
the entryway of a nearby apartment building where he vomits. Hanna Schmitz (Kate
Winslet), a tram conductor, comes in and helps him return
home.
Michael, diagnosed with scarlet
fever, rests at home for the next three months. After he recovers, he
visits Hanna with flowers to thank her. The 36-year-old Hanna seduces him and
they begin an affair. They spend much of their time together having sex in her
apartment after she has had Michael read to her from literary works he is
studying. After a bicycling trip, Hanna learns she is being promoted to a
clerical job at the tram company. She abruptly moves without telling Michael.
In 1966 Michael is at Heidelberg University law school. As part of a
seminar, the students observe a trial (similar to the Frankfurt Auschwitz Trials) of several
women accused of letting 300 Jewish women die in a burning church when they
were SS guards on the death march following the 1944
evacuation of a concentration camp near Krakow. Michael is
stunned that Hanna is one of the defendants.
In the trial the key evidence is the testimony of Ilana
Mather (Alexandra Maria Lara), author of a memoir of
how she and her mother (Lena Olin), who also testifies, survived. She describes
how Hanna had women from the camp read to her in the evenings.
Hanna, unlike her co-defendants, admits that Auschwitz was
an extermination camp and that the ten women
she chose during each month's Selektion were gassed. She denies
authorship of a report on the church fire, despite pressure from the other
defendants, but then admits it rather than complying with a demand to provide a
handwriting sample.
Michael realizes Hanna's secret: she is illiterate and has
concealed it her whole life. The other guards who claim she wrote the report
are lying to place responsibility on Hanna. Michael informs the professor that
he has information favourable to one of the defendants but is not sure what to
do since the defendant herself chose not to disclose the information. Michael
arranges a visit with Hanna in prison, but once there he leaves without seeing
her.
Hanna receives a life sentence for her admitted leadership
role in the church deaths while the other defendants are sentenced to four
years and three months each. Michael (Ralph
Fiennes) meanwhile marries, has a daughter, and divorces. Retrieving his
books from the time of the affair with Hanna, he begins reading them into a
tape recorder. He sends the cassette tapes and a recorder to Hanna. Eventually,
she begins to check the books out from the prison library and teaches herself
to read and write by following along with Michael's tapes. She starts writing
back to Michael in brief, childlike notes, asking him to write to her. As time
goes on, the letters reflect her gradually improving literacy.
Michael does not write back or visit but continues simply
sending tapes, and in 1988 a prison official (Linda
Bassett) telephones him to seek his help with Hanna's transition into
society after her upcoming early release due to good behavior. He finds a place
for her to live and a job and finally visits Hanna a week before her release.
In their meeting, Michael remains somewhat distant and confronts her about what
she has learned from her past, to which she replies "It doesn't matter
what I feel. It doesn't matter what I think. The dead are still dead.",
seemingly disappointing him. Michael arrives at the prison on the date of
Hanna's release with flowers only to discover that Hanna hanged herself. She
has left a tea tin with cash in it with a note asking Michael to give the cash
and money in a bank account to Ilana. He discovers that she killed herself
after reading Ilana's memoir of her horrifying experience in the concentration
camp.
Michael travels to New York City where he meets Ilana (now Lena Olin)
and confesses his relationship with Hanna. He tells her about the suicide note
and Hanna's illiteracy. Ilana tells Michael there is nothing to be learned from
the camps and refuses the money. Michael suggests that she donate the money to
an organization that combats adult illiteracy, preferably a Jewish one. She
wants him to take care of this instead. Ilana keeps the tea tin since it is
similar to one stolen from her in Auschwitz.
Michael drives Julia, his daughter, to Hanna's grave and
tells her their story.
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