Germany

  • Heinz Emigholz – Die letzte Stadt AKA The Last City (2020)

    Heinz Emigholz2011-2020DramaGermany

    An archaeologist and a weapons designer, who knew each other in a previous life as a filmmaker and a psychoanalyst, meet at an excavation site in the Negev desert and begin a conversation about love and war.Read More »

  • Dominik Graf & Johannes Sievert – Verfluchte Liebe deutscher Film (2016)

    Dominik Graf2011-2020DocumentaryGermanyJohannes Sievert

    Don’t we all feel the same longing for German films that break ranks, that are wild and sensual, that possess a true physicality? Dominik Graf’s thrillers, the articles he’s written on cinema and his new documentary all tell of this longing. What happened to this section of our film tradition, which in the 1970s and 80s brought forth a genre cinema that showed a very different Germany, one looking into the abyss?
    Even before Martin Scorsese’s Taxi Driver, there were reflections of neon signs in nocturnal streets and a dark angel who wanted to rescue a prostitute in Roland Klick’s Supermarkt (1973). Klaus Lemke and Roland Klick sit before Graf’s camera as nonchalantly as their heroes and rave about how actors who make full use of their bodies. At first, post-war Germany did not want maimed bodies sweaty with exertion, until Mario Adorf and Klaus Kinski brought back the need for the physical. Suddenly, there was space for violent, bloody and dirty stories, with the RAF’s first department store bomb reverberating through films such as Blutiger Freitag (1972). This is another way of telling German history. [Berlinale.de]Read More »

  • Dominik Graf & Johannes Sievert – Offene Wunde deutscher Film (2017)

    Johannes Sievert2011-2020DocumentaryDominik GrafGermany

    We already know just how wild, unpredictable, sensual, audacious and bursting with life German cinema can be from the film essay Verfluchte Liebe deutscher Film. Now Dominik Graf and Johannes Sievert continue their archaeological adventure tour to the margins, the underbelly, but also to the heart of German film and television, posing some valid questions along the way: why does public television no longer commission such prescient science fiction films as Smog (1973)? Why isn’t German cinema able to establish a more audacious relationship to genre? As in Carl Schenkel’s Abwärts (1984), for example, all it takes is a lift that gets stuck in an office building to make a claustrophobic psycho-thriller. Why do young directors not follow in the footsteps of the unruly Klaus Lemke, who simply shoots his films from the hip? And why do those who do get denied funding? The excerpts from these film and television marvels – such as Slavers – Die Sklavenjäger or Liebling – Ich muss dich erschießen – certainly make one want to run out and see them at once. Sadly, in many cases all that’s left of these lost treasures are the trailers or posters.[Berlinale.de]Read More »

  • Ullrich H. Kasten & Hans-Dieter Schütt – Paul Celan – Dichter ist, wer menschlich spricht (2015)

    2011-2020DocumentaryGermanyHans-Dieter SchüttUllrich H. Kasten

    A documentary film on the life and work of the great poet Paul Celan with interviews with his son, Eric Celan and his French editor, Bertrand Badiou.

    It is in Czernowitz, in Bucovina, in the current Ukraine, that Paul Antschel was born on November 23, 1920. Of Jewish culture and German language, from a region attached to Romania and then to the Soviet Union, he will be uprooted all his life. After a romantic and anarchist adolescence, he studied medicine in Tours when the Second World War broke out. Both his parents died in deportation, and he himself survived the labor camps. Read More »

  • Harun Farocki – Counter-Music [Single channel version] (2004)

    Harun Farocki2001-2010DocumentaryExperimentalGermany

    Quote:
    The city today is as rationalised and regulated as a production process. The images which today determine the day of the city are operative images, control images. Representations of traffic regulation, by car, train or metro, representations determining the height at which mobile phone network transmitters are fixed, and where the holes in the networks are. Images from thermo-cameras to discover heat loss from buildings. And digital models of the city, portrayed with fewer shapes of buildings or roofs than were used in the 19th century when planned industrial cities arose, amongst them the Lille agglomeration. Despite their boulevards, promenades, market places, arcades and churches, these cities are already machines for living and working. I too want to “remake” the city films, but with different images. Limited time and means themselves demand concentration on just a few, archetypal chapters. Fragments, or preliminary studies. (Harun Farocki)Read More »

  • Werner Klingler – Das Testament des Dr. Mabuse AKA The Terror of Doctor Mabuse (1962)

    1961-1970CrimeGermanyHorrorWerner Klingler

    Synopsis
    Evil genius Dr. Mabuse hypnotizes the director of an insane asylum in this remake of Fritz Lang’s 1933 cinematic landmark.Read More »

  • Heinz Emigholz – Casa Golly (2021)

    Heinz Emigholz2021-2030ArchitectureDocumentaryGermanyShort Film

    The films of pre-eminent documentary filmmaker Heinz Emigholz present the most important architects of the 20th century not through explanation or biography, but by using the camera to reveal the structures that define their art. From Bruce Goff’s churches to Gabriele D’Annunzio’s villas to Robert Maillart’s bridges, each exploratory and contemplative film is dedicated to the work of a single architect; taken together, the series shows us some of the most beautiful buildings of our time.Read More »

  • Heinz Emigholz – Antivilla (2021)

    Heinz Emigholz2021-2030ArchitectureDocumentaryGermanyShort Film

    I am concerned with the cinematic recreation of the immediate experience of spaces, with the most accurate possible portrait of these spaces and its details in cinema.
    Heinz EmigholzRead More »

  • Gerhard Lamprecht – Die Buddenbrooks (1923)

    1921-1930DramaGerhard LamprechtGermanySilent

    Quote:
    Four-generation story-saga dealing with the decline of a middle-class Lübeck family.
    The first adaptation of a Thomas Mann book was also Gerhard Lamprecht’s first major film.Read More »

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