Germany

  • Bettina Blümner – Prinzessinnenbad AKA Pool of Princesses (2007)

    2001-2010Bettina BlümnerDocumentaryGermany

    Prinzessinnenbad
    Director: Bettina Blümner

    Seit ihrer Kindheit kennen sich die nun 15-jährigen und lebenshungrigen Mädchen Klara, Mina und Tanutscha. Seit je gehen sie auf die gleichen Partys, stehen auf die gleichen Jungs und entspannen im Prinzenbad. An der Schwelle zum Erwachsenwerden sind sie nun auf der Suche nach ihrem eigenen Weg. Auf Schule hat Klara, die gelegentlich stiehlt, keine Lust mehr; sie träumt von einer Karriere, wahlweise als Pornostar oder Tierpflegerin. Mina begeht gerade das zehnmonatige Jubiläum mit ihrem Freund, Tanutscha paukt eifrig für die spätere Selbstverwirklichung.Read More »

  • Carl Boese & Paul Wegener – Der Golem, wie er in die Welt kam AKA The Golem: How He Came Into the World (1920)

    1911-1920Carl BoeseGermanyHorrorPaul WegenerSilentWeimar Republic cinema

    In 16th-century Prague, a rabbi creates the Golem – a giant creature made of clay. Using sorcery, he brings the creature to life in order to protect the Jews of Prague from persecution.Read More »

  • Hartmut Bitomsky – Die UFA (1992)

    1991-2000DocumentaryExperimentalGermanyHartmut BitomskyThird Reich Cinema

    Quote:
    The latest film by Hartmut Bitomsky is, just like much of his early work, a original film essay about film and film history. Just as in earlier films, he makes inventive use of the potential offered by the medium video to analyse films.The history of the UFA is the story of a risky financial venture in the twenties and a propaganda instrument in the thirties. Bitomsky’s approach stands out because he involvesthis social and political context in investigating and dissecting films.Read More »

  • Hartmut Bitomsky – Der VW-Komplex aka The VW Complex (1990)

    1981-1990DocumentaryGermanyHartmut Bitomsky

    Quote:
    However a VW is put together, what comes out is always the Federal Republic of Germany.

    The VW factory is a museum of industrial technology, and at the same time it is its Utopia. The old factory buildings convey the impression of almost like being in a cathedral. In order to communicate with the crane operators high above, the workers beat on the steel griders with heavy hammers. The new buildings, however, are much lower – like in a complex of new apartments, in which you can touch the ceilings with your hands. While going around inside the buildings, you can follow the creation of an automobile and at the same time bid farewell to the industrial age.Read More »

  • Niklaus Schilling – Nachtschatten AKA Nightshade (1972)

    1971-1980ArthouseGermanyHorrorNiklaus Schilling

    This film was one of the few attempts of the “New German cinema” to produce something like a horror film. Not quite a successful attempt in my opinion since director Niklaus Schilling seems to be rather afraid of anything to do with “genre” and therefore keeps out most the atmosphere that could be achieved by exploiting Germanic mysticism as he does here. The film has an unpleasantly pretentious aura and could’ve made much more of its theme and locations.Read More »

  • Michael Kalesniko – How to Kill Your Neighbor’s Dog (2000)

    Drama1991-2000ComedyGermanyMichael Kalesniko

    Shy, chain-smoking, insomniac Peter McGowan is an L.A. playwright with a string of hits that preceded his current ten years of failed productions. His mother-in-law is sinking into senility, a stranger is meandering the neighborhood claiming to be him, neighbors have a new dog that barks all night; his wife wants to have a child, and he does not: he’s become impotent. He’s working on a new play when a single mom moves in next door with her 8-year-old daughter. His wife immediately invites the girl into the McGowan household. Will this child stir Peter’s paternal feelings? Will she also help him get his dialogue right? And what of his doppelganger and the neighbor’s dog?Read More »

  • Rainer Werner Fassbinder – Katzelmacher (1969)

    1961-1970ArthouseDramaGermanyRainer Werner Fassbinder

    Quote:
    Katzelmacher was a revelation. One of only a handful of Fassbinder films which I had not seen before, it seems among his best, and most challenging, works.

    Fassbinder’s second feature film, Katzelmacher (1969) is a tour de force of stark visual beauty and ambiguous but riveting characters. Fassbinder adapted his own original play, of the same title, which he had also starred in on stage. (The theatrical script is included in the anthology Fassbinder’s Plays.)Read More »

  • Veit Harlan – Hanna Amon (1951)

    1951-1960DramaFantasyGermanyVeit Harlan

    Hanna Amon and her brother Thomas live on an estate they’ve inherited from their parents. Local veterinarian Brunner loves Hanna from afar, and Thomas is in love with the daughter of the local mayor. Love, however, doesn’t always mean happiness, as both Hanna and Thomas are soon to find out.Read More »

  • Karl Hartl – Gold (1934)

    1931-1940DramaGermanyKarl HartlSci-FiThird Reich Cinema

    Synopsis:
    ‘Hans Albers stars as Werner Holk, an engineer who is working with Professor Achenbach on a machine that will turn lead into gold. When an “accident” occurs that costs the Professor his life, Holk swears vengeance, and determines that the mastermind behind the sabotage was Scottish millionaire John Wills, who has his own rival group working on the same machine. Wills actually hires Holk on to help make his machine a success, and while at first Holk is determined to destroy Wills’ effort from within, when Holk meets Wills’ daughter Florence he begins to second guess his mission.’
    – AlsExGalRead More »

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