Germany

  • Helmut Weiss – Die Feuerzangenbowle (1944)

    1941-1950ClassicsCultGermanyHelmut WeissThird Reich Cinema

    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/c/c0/Feuerzangenbowle-movie.jpg

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    Die Feuerzangenbowle (The Fire-Tongs Bowl or The Punch Bowl) is a 1944 movie, directed by Helmut Weiss and is based on the book of the same name. It follows the book closely as author Spoerl also wrote the script for the movie. Both tell the story of a famous writer going undercover as a pupil at a small town secondary school after his friends tell him that he missed out on the best part of growing up by being educated at home. The story in the book takes place during the Weimar Republic in Germany. The movie was produced and released in Germany during the last years of World War II and has been called a “masterpiece of timeless, cheerful escapism.”[1] The movie stars Heinz Rühmann in the role of the student Hans Pfeiffer, which is remarkable as Rühmann was already 42 years old at that time.

    From wikipediaRead More »

  • Georg Tressler – Sukkubus – den Teufel im Leib (1989)

    1981-1990ExploitationGeorg TresslerGermanyHorror

    Sometime during the 19th century in Switzerland: After a delirious night of drinking, three herdsmen who are all alone in the alps with their kettle, create a female doll from cloth and a strangely formed wooden root. When their creation comes to life in form of an evil and beautiful female demon, they have to fear for their lives…Read More »

  • Jürgen Reble – Passion (1990)

    1981-1990ExperimentalGermanyJürgen Reble
    Passion (1990)
    Passion (1990)

    Quote:
    PASSION is a film dairy in which daily events are related to archaic and evolutionary images. The chemical decomposition of the film emulsion blurs the borders between the microcosmic world of the embryo and macrocosmic elements. It leads to an alchemical quest for filmic expression based on the exploration of film’s physical material qualities. Sound segments and melody fragments combined with rhythmical pulsating, droning and hissing of natural events create a dramatic tension between image, sound and chemistry.
    PASSION is a personal film-journey in which Reble accompanies his unborn child in a filmdiary, following the seasons until his birth. Reble’s unfamiliar chemistry generates slowly pulsating structures and colors. Micro- and macroscopic imagery build a near-abstract, hypnotic landscape – an intimate perception of creation.
    (Re:Voir Video)Read More »

  • Gerhard Benedikt Friedl – Hat Wolff von Amerongen Konkursdelikte begangen? aka Did Wolff von Amerongen Commit Bankruptcy Offenses? (2004)

    2001-2010DocumentaryExperimentalGerhard Benedikt FriedlGermany

    http://img638.imageshack.us/img638/7133/yzkjg00z.jpg

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    Quote:
    The most remarkable discovery in recent German-language cinema: Gerhard Friedl’s first feature is a hypnotic visual puzzle at the interface of documentary, essay film and pulp fiction. On the soundtrack: an unflinchingly ‘objective’ account of the labyrinthine genealogies, criminal involvements and afflictions of Germany’s economic leaders in the 20th century. On the screen: pans and tracking shots through European financial centres, production sites and landscapes. The sheer depth and crispness of these images is a treat in itself; a transformation into cinégénie of what artists like Candida Höfer or Jeff Wall have done by means of still photography. At times, image and sound are aligned, at others they just miss each other. They invariably suggest correlations. Paranoia? Irony? Can the prosaic, criminal state of affairs of a modern economy be depicted at all? Pierre Rissient, the French film historian, puts the film where it belongs: “Fritz Lang would have loved it!”Read More »

  • Ingo Niermann & Erick Niedling – The Future of Art (2011)

    2011-2020ArthouseDocumentaryGermanyIngo Niermann and Erick Niedling

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    A film that came with a book in the same name, The Future of Art; A manual.
    The film contains documentary and interviews on acclaimed artists about the direction of art towards the future.

    with:

    Marina Abramovic
    Thomas Bayrle
    Olaf Breuning
    Genesis and lady Jaye Breyer P-Orridge
    Olafur Elaisson
    Harald Falckenberg
    Boris Groys
    Damien Hirst
    Gregor Jansen
    Terence Koh
    Gabriel Von Loebell
    Marcos Lutyens
    Philomene Magers
    Antje Majewski
    Hans Ulrich Obrist
    Thomas Olbricht
    Friedrich Petzel
    Tobias Rehberger
    Hans Georg Wagner
    Read More »

  • Baran bo Odar – Das letzte Schweigen aka The Silence (2010)

    2001-2010Baran bo OdarDramaGermany

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    13-year-old Sinikka vanishes on a hot summer night. Her bicycle is found in the exact place
    where a girl was killed 23 years ago. The dramatic present forces those involved in the
    original case to face their past.Read More »

  • Sohrab Shahid Saless – Empfänger unbekannt AKA Addressee Unknown (1983)

    1981-1990DramaGermanySohrab Shahid Saless

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    “A husband and wife have separated and while in that semi-marital state, the wife begins an affair with a Turkish architect. In the meantime, the once revolutionary-minded husband now prefers his more comfortable lifestyle in his villa with his children and he is the one who writes letters to his wife seeking a reconciliation, but she herself is thrown into a turmoil because choosing between her estranged husband and the Turkish architect is very difficult, if not impossible. —allmovie guide”Read More »

  • Sohrab Shahid Saless – Ordnung AKA Order (1980)

    Drama1971-1980GermanySohrab Shahid Saless

    Quote:
    This off-beat psychological drama by Sohrab Shahid Saless dissects German post-war society with a cutting edge. Herbert (Heinz Lieven) is a solid, middle-class engineer who one day quits his job and ensconces himself at home (preferably in the bathroom), refusing to say very much to anyone. His wife (Dorothea Moritz) is all the more upset at his behavior because on Sunday mornings he goes out into the street and yells at the top of his lungs for everyone to “get up.” Eventually, the hard-working wife who is also earning their support convinces Herbert to go to a clinic for treatment. But is it a clinic he needs? Or is Herbert rebelling against a society that is too ordered, too sterile, too buried in the monotony of routine?Read More »

  • Werner Nekes & Dore O. – Beuys (1981)

    1981-1990ExperimentalGermanyVideo ArtWerner NekesWerner Nekes and Dore O.

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    Beuys 1981
    11 min.
    Format 16 mm colour

    The term ‘visual arts’ that is prevailing in modernity is really a symptom for the reduction of perceptional categories within the human creativity as a whole. An anthropological conception of art – and I have proved for instance in sculptural theory that you hear a sculpture before you see it, that consequently the auditive element is not just an equal part, but a constituent of the perception of plastic art – confronts you with the task of exploring the conception of creativity in all directions, of spreading it out and substantiating it anthropologically. So for instance, the human creativity potential as a whole doesn’t only comprise the recognition criteria in thought, but it also comprises the sensational categories in the middle of the soul, that is, the moving element, and it positively comprises the will potential in human will. It is this interpretation of human creativity potential, beginning with the triple position, the connections of will, sense, and thought categories, which will get you to the more differentiated position of considering the perception, too, and thus the connection of human senses, discovering that for example seeing, the visual sense, the auditory sense, the static sense, the architectonic sense, the haptic sense, can be thought forward into the sense of feeling, the sense of will, the sense of thinking, and many other still to be developed senses.Read More »

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