Jung Und Frei Hot! Here

Felix Maria Bühler’s Jung und Frei (transl. Young and Free ) wants to be a raw, unfiltered snapshot of post-adolescent drift in contemporary Germany. The film follows David (Luis Vorbach), a 19-year-old from a small Swabian town, who spends his days without ambition, bouncing between casual sex, party drugs, and aimless nights with his equally lost best friend, Nils (Aaron Altaras). When a surprise pregnancy forces a flicker of responsibility, David must decide whether true freedom means running away or growing up.

The film’s greatest strength is its authenticity. Bühler, a former editor for Berlin underground collectives, shoots with a handheld, almost documentary-like immediacy. The dialogue is uncomfortably real—mumbled, fragmented, full of non-sequiturs. There’s no moralizing. The party scenes aren’t glamorous; they’re sweaty, boring, and repetitive, exactly as real teenage ennui feels. Luis Vorbach carries the film with a quiet, vacant charisma that perfectly captures a generation too overwhelmed to be properly rebellious. jung und frei

Jung und Frei mistakes aimlessness for depth. For long stretches, nothing happens—not as a stylistic choice, but as a vacuum. The characters are so thinly written that their crises never land with emotional weight. The plot’s central conflict (the pregnancy) appears late and is resolved with a contrived convenience that undercuts the film’s gritty realism. Side characters, especially the girls, feel like props for the boys’ self-discovery. Felix Maria Bühler’s Jung und Frei (transl