The Berlin Bride Review

A one-armed aesthete (Henry Akina) finds the mannequin's right arm. He replaces his own missing limb with it, only to find the new arm has a sentient and impulsive life of its own.

Reviews on platforms like YouTube have given it an 8/10, praising its melancholic vibe and immersive 1980s Berlin setting.

(2019) is a surreal, near-silent fantasy horror film directed by Michael Bartlett. Inspired by the dark writings of Edgar Allan Poe and E.T.A. Hoffmann, it is a dreamlike exploration of loneliness and unrequited sexuality set in a nostalgic, pre-wall Berlin. Plot Summary The Berlin Bride

A man named Trashman (Miklos Königer) finds the torso and legs. He takes them home, dresses them, and begins treating the mannequin as his newlywed bride.

The film follows two reclusive men who separately discover abandoned parts of a department store mannequin in a city park. A one-armed aesthete (Henry Akina) finds the mannequin's

The film is currently available for streaming on Digital and has been featured on Tubi. The Berlin Bride | Film Threat

Lo-fi, grain-heavy aesthetic compared to David Lynch’s Eraserhead (2019) is a surreal, near-silent fantasy horror film

Critics from Movie-Blogger.com highlight its "mini-universe" where regular narrative structures are abandoned for a psychological horror experience.