Teheran Tabu

A film by Ali Soozandeh.

Animation pro­ves a cun­ning tech­ni­cal choice in TEHRAN TABOO, a first fea­ture writ­ten and direc­ted by Ali Soozandeh. Like Marjane Satrapi’s 2007 PERSEPOLIS, it offers just enough distance to explo­re the high­ly char­ged the­me of sexu­al and per­so­nal free­dom in Iran wit­hout sala­cious­ness. Women are the main vic­tims here, whe­ther mar­ried, divorced or sin­gle, and their lives are depic­ted as pure tragedy.
Far from the usu­al vic­ti­mi­zed street­wal­ker, the pro­sti­tu­te Pari in the first epi­so­de embo­dies the truth that no repres­si­ve sys­tem can com­ple­te­ly quell the human spi­rit. There’s some­thing that recalls Anna Magnani’s eart­hi­ness and gre­at heart in Elmira Rafizadeh’s many-hued per­for­mance. Pari’s back­story is a fai­led mar­ria­ge to a drug addict who is now in pri­son. When she tri­es to get a judge in the Islamic Revolutionary Court to sign her divorce papers, he bar­ters his signa­tu­re for a con­cu­bi­ne arran­ge­ment. She moves into an apart­ment he owns with litt­le Elias, which is not such a bad deal. (Deborah Young)

Deutschland/ Österreich 2017, 96 Min., far­si OmU
Regie & Buch: Ali Soozandeh
Kamera: Martin Gschlacht
Schnitt: Frank Geiger,Andrea Mertens
Darsteller: Elmira Rafizadeh, Zar Amir Ebrahimi, Arash Marandi, Negar Nasseri, Bilal Yasar, Morteza Tavakoli, Alireza Bayram, Klaus Ofczarek

Animals – Stadt Land Tier

A film by Greg Zglinski. Starts 16.11. at the fsk. In ger­man and french with ger­man subtitles

Nick and Anna are off to Switzerland for six months. Nick wants to coll­ect recipes of local cui­sine, and Anna final­ly hopes to wri­te a new book. The time away might be good for their rela­ti­onship too, for Anna knows about Nick’s affair with their neigh­bour Andrea, who threw hers­elf out the win­dow. Mischa will be taking care of the fish and the phi­lo­den­dron in their Viennese apart­ment while they’re gone. On the dri­ve to Switzerland, they col­l­i­de with a sheep.
As the nar­ra­ti­ve pro­gres­ses, the more it under­mi­nes cer­tain­ties and sows doubts. At what point did the plot actual­ly begin? Are the cha­rac­ters real­ly them­sel­ves, or mere­ly fig­ments of someone else’s ima­gi­na­ti­on? First the time­frames beco­me con­fu­sed, befo­re spa­ti­al boun­da­ries are also sus­pen­ded. Disconcerting par­al­lels emer­ge bet­ween the Vienna apart­ment and the Swiss cha­let. And doesn’t the ice cream sel­ler in the neigh­bou­ring town look just like Mischa? Is Anna’s jea­lou­sy unfoun­ded, or should she lis­ten to the advice of the tal­king cat? Is Mischa actual­ly Andrea? Will every ques­ti­on be ans­we­red by the end? Wait and see, for the mind games that Tiere allows to play out bet­ween Vienna and the Swiss Alps are most sophisticated.

OT: Tiere
Schweiz / Österreich / Polen 2017, 95 Min., Farbe,  deutsch und frz mit dt. Ut.
Regie: Greg Zglinski

Buch: Jörg Kalt, Greg Zglinski
Kamera: Piotr Jaxa
Schnitt: Karina Ressler

mit:
Birgit Minichmayr (Anna)
Philipp Hochmair (Nick)
Mona Petri (Mischa/Andrea/Eisverkäuferin)
Mehdi Nebbou (Tarek)
Michael Ostrowski (Harald)

Animals – Stadt Land Tier – Trailer 1 – Deutsch

Untitled

A film by Michael Glawogger and Monika Willi. In ger­man and eng­lish with ger­man subtitles

This film seeks to crea­te an image of the world that can only be made if you don’t fol­low a topic, try to judge or pur­sue a par­ti­cu­lar aim. It’s about allo­wing ones­elf to drift along, pro­pel­led by not­hing except your own curio­si­ty and intui­ti­on.’ These are the words of Michael Glawogger, who­se ear­lier films had often been about glo­bal explo­ita­ti­on. In 2014 the direc­tor died during his aim­less jour­ney through the Balkans, Italy, North and West Africa after con­trac­ting mala­ria just five months ear­lier. Two years after his death, his edi­tor Monika Willi took on the task of com­ple­ting his film. Combining hard cuts with a gent­ler, quie­ter style of editing she has shaped from Glawogger’s foo­ta­ge a fasci­na­ting, visual­ly stun­ning docu­ment accom­pa­nied by a strong but unob­tru­si­ve mix­tu­re of ori­gi­nal and com­po­sed sounds. Untitled is a rest­less film about move­ment and tra­vel­ling, about the unknown and the other. Above all howe­ver – and this is what turns the magic of the images and the act of obser­ving into a tru­ly exci­ting expe­ri­ence – this is a film about the poet­ry of the arbi­tra­ry. A trip across the world in order to obser­ve, lis­ten and expe­ri­ence. A jour­ney that is raw, cou­ra­ge­ous and honest.

 

Österreich / Deutschland 2017, engl. dt. OmU, 107 Min .
Regie: Michael Glawogger, Monika Willi
Kamera: Attila Boa
Schnitt: Monika Willi

UNTITLED – Offizieller Trailer

Casting

A film by Nicolas Wackerbarth. Q&A on 2.11. with Nicolas Wackerbarth .

For her first tele­vi­si­on film – a remake of Fassbinder’s Die bit­te­ren Tränen der Petra von Kant – direc­tor Vera wants the per­fect cast. But the first day of shoo­ting is fast approa­ching and the num­e­rous cas­ting ses­si­ons have yet to find a sui­ta­ble actress to play the lea­ding role. Although the pro­du­cer and crew are get­ting ever more exas­pe­ra­ted with Vera, Gerwin is hap­py about the extra work, as he ear­ns his money as an audi­tion rea­der, deli­ve­ring the lines of dia­lo­gue to the star­ry can­di­da­tes at the various cas­tings. When the male lead sud­den­ly has to back out, Gerwin thinks that this might just be his chance.
Director Nicolas Wackerbarth cap­tures the com­plex essence of Fassbinder’s film and simul­ta­neous­ly crea­tes a pro­found work of his own. Casting takes an unflin­ching look at the mur­ky depths of human rela­ti­onships dri­ven by power, pas­si­on and despe­ra­ti­on. Yet Wackerbarth also brings bit­ter truths to light about power rela­ti­ons and depen­den­ci­es in the German tele­vi­si­on indus­try almost in pas­sing. Casting is both intel­li­gent and enter­tai­ning, mark­ed by exci­ting tur­ning points, humour and the breath­ta­king acting per­for­man­ces by a tru­ly vir­tuo­so ensemble.

 

D 2017, 91 Min. 
Regie: Nicolas Wackerbarth 
Kamera: Jürgen Carle 
Schnitt: Saskia Metten 
Mit: Andreas Lust, Judith Engel, Ursina Lardi, Corinna Kirchhoff, Andrea Sawatzki, Milena Dreissig, Nicole Marischka, Stephan Grossmann, Marie-Lou Sellem

Casting (Offizieller Trailer)

Die Welt sehen

A film by Muriel and Delphine Coulin. In frensh with ger­man subtitles.

At the end of their tour of duty in Afghanistan, two young military
women, Aurore and Marine, are given three days of »decom­pres­si­on
lea­ve« with their unit at a five-star resort in cyprus. Here, among tourists,
they are trai­ned to lea­ve their vio­lent memo­ries behind. But it’s not that
easy to for­get the war.

»What do you see when you go to war? Nothing. First of all, becau­se the
moments of inac­tion at the camp are num­e­rous. Secondly, becau­se when
the fight­ing actual­ly hap­pens you don’t see a thing – you fight for your life.
Finally becau­se ever­yo­ne sees what hap­pen­ed from their own perspective,
which is a par­ti­al view of rea­li­ty. During the decom­pres­si­on peri­od, Aurore
and Marine par­ti­ci­pa­te in debrie­fing ses­si­ons that are going to make them
think dif­fer­ent­ly about what they saw. The psy­cho­lo­gists use vir­tu­al reality
video tools to recrea­te images in real time that cor­re­spond to the soldiers’
nar­ra­ti­ve. The goal is for the sol­diers to distance them­sel­ves from their
pain­ful memo­ries through words and images. (…) It is impos­si­ble – and
per­haps not real­ly desi­ra­ble – to for­get war, the­se wars, whe­ther we have
par­ti­ci­pa­ted from near or afar. We are remin­ded of this every day. The
Stopover addres­ses this issue: How can we mana­ge to live despi­te having
expe­ri­en­ced such a vio­lent episode?«
Delphine and Muriel Coulin

Feature Film Award winner:
Dortmund|Cologne International Women’s Film Festival 2017

Voir du pays
Frankreich 2016, 102 Min., frz. OmU
Kamera: Jean-Louis Vialard, Benoît Dervaux
Schnitt: Laurence Briaud
Darsteller*innen:
Soko, Ariane Labed, Ginger Romàn, Karim Leklou, Andreas
Konstantinou

Trailer „Die Welt sehen” OmU from Peripher Filmverleih on Vimeo.

Verleih mit Unterstützung des:

 

 

The Square

A film by Ruben Östlund. In swe­dish with ger­man subtitles.

The Square is a 2017 Swedish sati­ri­cal dra­ma film direc­ted by Ruben Östlund and star­ring Claes Bang, Elisabeth Moss, Dominic West, and Terry Notary. The film is about publi­ci­ty sur­roun­ding an art instal­la­ti­on, and was part­ly inspi­red by an instal­la­ti­on Östlund and pro­du­cer Kalle Boman had made. It was shot in Gothenburg, Stockholm and Berlin.

The film was ente­red into the 2017 Cannes Film Festival, whe­re it recei­ved posi­ti­ve reviews and won the Palme d’Or. It was sub­se­quent­ly sel­ec­ted for the 2017 Toronto International Film Festival.

In the after­math of the aboli­ti­on of the Monarchy of Sweden, the Stockholm Palace has been con­ver­ted into an art muse­um. Christian is a cura­tor at the muse­um, who finds his pro­gres­si­ve world view shaken when his mobi­le pho­ne is sto­len. While mana­ging a space set to show a new instal­la­ti­on pie­ce, he finds a public rela­ti­ons com­pa­ny to pro­mo­te the instal­la­ti­on, crea­ting a gre­at deal of cha­os. (wiki­pe­dia)

Schweden 2017, schw. OmU, 142 Min.
Regie & Buch: Ruben Östlund
Darsteller: Claes Bang, Elisabeth Moss, Dominic West, Terry Notary, Christopher Laesso, Jan Lindwall

Streetscapes

There are streets, paths, high­ways, alleys, dirt tracks and pro­me­na­des… And the­re are cour­ses of lives, thirst­lands, cross­roads and dead ends…

German thea­tri­cal release date: October 12th, 2017 - English or German with English subtitles

Film dis­cus­sions with Heinz Emigholz & Arno Brandlhuber on October 15th (14:30)
and with Heinz Emigholz & guests on October 22nd (15:00) at fsk-Kino Berlin!

  • fsk-Kino Berlin: October 14, 15, 21, 22, 28, 29

Everyone Experiences Space Differently”

An Interview with Heinz Emigholz at the Akademie der Künste by Christoph Terhechte

With the four-part “Streetscapes” series show­ing at this year’s Forum, direc­tor Heinz Emigholz and Forum head Christoph Terhechte met at the Akademie der Künste at Hanseatenweg, one of the key scree­ning venues for Forum and Forum Expanded. They spo­ke about framing and editing in archi­tec­tu­re films, the Akademie buil­ding and the neces­si­ty of rese­arch trips. (Source: arsenal-berlin.de)

In STREETSCAPES [DIALOGUE], you stage a con­ver­sa­ti­on with psy­cho­ana­lyst Zohar Rubinstein befo­re the back­drop of buil­dings by Eladio Dieste and various others, with American actor John Erdman in the role of the film­ma­ker and Argentinian direc­tor Jonathan Perel in the role of the psy­cho­ana­lyst. Was the con­ver­sa­ti­on always inten­ded to form some sort of script?

No. That only emer­ged over the cour­se of the five-day con­ver­sa­ti­on, which is what’s unu­su­al about the film: it’s during the con­ver­sa­ti­on its­elf that the direc­tor comes up with the idea of making the film we see. It’s the­re that a tem­po­ral inver­si­on takes place. The film depicts a pro­cess that’s actual­ly impos­si­ble to depict. But I asked Zohar before­hand if the­re was any reason why I couldn’t record our con­ver­sa­ti­on, as I was worried I might for­get some­thing. That obvious­ly goes against stan­dard psy­cho­ana­ly­ti­cal prac­ti­ce. As it was clear to him that we weren’t doing any sort of clas­si­cal psy­cho­ana­ly­sis, but rather an inter­ven­ti­on or “mara­thon”, as he cal­led it, he was fine with it.


2+2=22 [THE ALPHABET] by Heinz Emigholz

The con­ver­sa­ti­on bet­ween the two of you also revol­ves around the idea of crea­ti­ve blocks and the strength nee­ded to bring a work to com­ple­te. What made you want to get four films off the ground at the same time?

The four films were actual­ly made over the cour­se of three years. I shot 2+2=22 [THE ALPHABET] in October 2013 alre­a­dy, but then I didn’t know whe­re to go with it and put it asi­de. Talking to Zohar sud­den­ly pro­vi­ded me with the solu­ti­on as to how the films could be made to fit tog­e­ther. The dia­lo­gue with the psy­cho­ana­lyst is obvious­ly the key to the other films. I edi­ted the dia­lo­gue down to the parts that focus on film­ma­king. I ori­gi­nal­ly had 260 pages, of which 60 remain­ed at the end. The basic struc­tu­re is an ana­ly­sis of film­ma­king that then its­elf beco­mes a film. My archi­tec­tu­re films were often cri­ti­cis­ed for not inclu­ding any sort of text, for show­ing spaces but not explai­ning any­thing. This is what now takes place in the third film. In STREETSCAPES [DIALOGUE], the film­ma­ker recounts what makes sen­se to him when making films. In this sen­se, the­se four films each offer expl­ana­ti­ons for one another.

You’ve brought your archi­tec­tu­re films tog­e­ther under the title of “Photography and bey­ond”. Why pho­to­gra­phy and not cinematography?

I do the framing and while I’m pre­pa­ring the image, Till Beckmann takes care of the tech­ni­cal side of things so that an opti­mal image is crea­ted. I see framing as a pho­to­gra­phic act: set­ting out the frame in full awa­re­ness of what you’re still going to film or what you’ve alre­a­dy film­ed. That’s a cine­ma­to­gra­phic decis­i­on, but at the same time, I think that each indi­vi­du­al image has to be com­po­sed in such con­cen­tra­ted fashion that it can stand for its­elf, rather than just fil­ling in a gap or being included for editing pur­po­ses. That’s the same com­po­si­tio­nal effort also found in pho­to­gra­phy. Yet the ele­ment of time plays a part here too. Duration and editing are always an inter­ven­ti­on into how time is con­s­truc­ted, almost like in sci­ence fiction.

The approach to framing used in your archi­tec­tu­re films has deve­lo­ped into a sort of trade­mark of yours. Architectural pho­to­gra­phy is usual­ly much more con­ser­va­ti­ve than your way of gras­ping spaces photographically.

That came about on the one hand from my fea­tures. “Die Wiese der Sachen” and “Der zyni­sche Körper” were alre­a­dy to a lar­ge ext­ent devo­ted to archi­tec­tu­re, the only dif­fe­rence being that the­re were still actors wan­de­ring around and say­ing stuff. But I wan­ted to get away from such fore­ground-back­ground rela­ti­onships, as I felt that the so-cal­led back­ground was just as important as the fore­ground. When I left out the actors, I could, of cour­se, devo­te mys­elf far more to spaces. All spaces have a par­ti­cu­lar lan­guage and you have a par­ti­cu­lar sen­se of them. You approach such spaces, which also takes place via the sound­track, of cour­se, and place your body within each one, as it were. The pho­to­graph emer­ges from how I react to this space. I lucki­ly don’t have the same pro­blem as archi­tec­tu­re pho­to­gra­phy, wher­eby ever­y­thing has to be encap­su­la­ted within three images. I have enti­re sequen­ces and can thus put much more com­pli­ca­ted spaces back tog­e­ther. You call it a trade­mark, but such films actual­ly never exis­ted befo­re. The first of them were shown at the Forum in 2001. I shot them in the 1990s and thought that it was a cru­cial idea, yet also a simp­le one, to enter buil­dings and show how the rooms unfold within them. I thought that the­re must alre­a­dy be thou­sands of films like this, but the­re weren’t. I don’t want to use that dumb expres­si­on “uni­que sel­ling point”, but what you refer to as trade­mark just deve­lo­ped from the logic I app­ly to space. Everyone expe­ri­en­ces space differently.

If I may equa­te you with the prot­ago­nist of STREETSCAPES [DIALOGUE], which is, of cour­se, a fic­tion film, then you descri­be yours­elf as a nomad equal­ly capa­ble of being in Berlin or in a hotel room in Montevideo to which you have no real con­nec­tion. Yet archi­tec­tu­re pre­sup­po­ses the very oppo­si­te of this. Whether public archi­tec­tu­re like the Akademie der Künste whe­re we are right now or resi­den­ti­al archi­tec­tu­re: buil­dings are immo­va­ble, they seek to crea­te a home.

I some­ti­mes fan­ta­sise about what would it be like if I actual­ly lived in the house I’m film­ing. Sometimes it’s a hor­ri­ble thought. Architecture takes on so many dif­fe­rent tasks. Let’s take Bickels’ kib­butz archi­tec­tu­re, for exam­p­le: I would have loved to live in such a con­text. But this con­text hard­ly exists any more or hasn’t yet re-emer­ged. What I find inte­res­t­ing about all the many archi­tec­tures I now have in my head is that I can lie down and say to mys­elf: now I can remem­ber exact­ly how it was being in one place or ano­ther. It’s like taking a holi­day in your own mind – thanks to the brain’s odd capa­ci­ty to con­ju­re up spaces anew. There’s some­thing soot­hing about that. But I’m inte­res­ted in a wide ran­ge of dif­fe­rent con­s­truc­tions, par­ti­cu­lar­ly in rela­ti­onship to film, and not the one dream house built for me. And I’m equal­ly inte­res­ted in all the myri­ad tasks lin­ked to con­s­truc­tion: social housing, cul­tu­ral buil­dings, bridges, engi­nee­ring struc­tures. I’m inte­res­ted in bridges but I wouldn’t like to live under one.

Do you some­ti­mes dream of architecture?

Yes, very much so, that’s what my next pro­ject is about. It’s about the grammar of dreams, about jum­ping back and forth in time or inver­ting it, about the rup­tures in how you expe­ri­ence a dream and the impos­si­bi­li­ty of it ever being repea­ted. And archi­tec­tu­re has always play­ed a big part in my dreams, also con­s­truc­tions of a threa­tening natu­re. I also explo­red that in the dis­cus­sion with Zohar Rubinstein.


STREETSCAPES [DIALOGUE] von Heinz Emigholz

How do you choo­se the archi­tects who­se buil­dings you then dedi­ca­te your films to? I remem­ber our mee­ting one time in Buenos Aires, whe­re the Bafici fes­ti­val was taking place in a for­mer mar­ket hall who­se con­cre­te archi­tec­tu­re fasci­na­ted you.

I’d never heard of archi­tect Viktor Sulčič befo­re. After I saw the buil­ding, I went to the city archi­ve and loo­ked up ever­y­thing he’d built in Buenos Aires. Then I went to see it all. That’s how it hap­pens. I don’t fol­low any sort of text­book entit­led “The Most Important Architecture in the World” or such like. I love com­pli­ca­ted spaces and some archi­tects are capa­ble of buil­ding them and others aren’t. I’m not ena­mo­u­red of faça­de artists, but rather buil­ding that is con­s­truc­ti­ve. I used to have a list of favou­ri­tes, which I work­ed my way through, but then the­re were always new names being added to the list, like Bickels or Sulčič, who I hadn’t heard of befo­re. I also look at pho­to­graphs, of cour­se, befo­re I head out on a rese­arch trip and I often don’t reco­g­ni­se the buil­dings from the pic­tures taken of them, as they’re so hea­vi­ly dis­tor­ted by pho­to­gra­phic inter­ven­ti­ons such as wide-ang­le len­ses that I have a total­ly dif­fe­rent fee­ling of space when I’m actual­ly the­re. That’s exact­ly my the­me: you have to be the­re to be able to reco­g­ni­se it. I’ve been going on the­se trips for deca­des now, they’ve been extre­me­ly important to me. You go the­re with a small team, there’s no pres­su­re and you have time to pro­per­ly enga­ge. That was a gre­at peri­od for me. There was so much lying fallow. I’m sick and tired of the self-righ­teous­ness of the modern archi­tec­tu­ral canon becau­se the­re are so many dis­co­veries wai­ting to be made that are sim­ply not unco­ver­ed. There are too few peo­p­le enga­ging with the subject.

Four years ago, Forum Expanded took place at the St. Agnes Church in Kreuzberg, which was built by Berlin archi­tect Werner Düttmann. For three years now, we’ve also been back in the Akademie der Künste in Tiergarten, which Düttmann desi­gned down to the very last detail. What fee­ling does this place evo­ke in you?

I’ve known the Akademie sin­ce the 1960s, when I came to Berlin for the first time. It was always a place that was extra­or­di­na­ri­ly stran­ge and attrac­ti­ve for me, both in its pro­por­ti­ons and in the way it con­nects exhi­bi­ti­ons spaces with rooms to sit down in and hold dis­cus­sions. And then there’s the ama­zing cine­ma audi­to­ri­um. I think it was 1974 that I had my first films at the Forum, I wasn’t the­re mys­elf that year, but rather in the US. When I came back, the Forum still used to take place in the sum­mer and was based here, which was ama­zing. In 2012, it was also the loca­ti­on for our Think:Film con­fe­rence with over 300 par­ti­ci­pan­ts and we noti­ced in the pro­cess how well the buil­ding is divi­ded up into rooms which you can with­draw to, rooms whe­re you can hold dis­cus­sions in smal­ler groups, and then there’s the lar­ge forum and so on. And then of cour­se there’s the fact that the buil­ding is loca­ted in the midd­le of this park. It’s stran­ge that the buil­ding hasn’t just retai­ned its ori­gi­nal charm, but has actual­ly beco­me more char­ming over the years. Right now there’s so much talk about con­s­truc­ting buil­dings that are com­mu­ni­ca­ti­ve. There was just a com­pe­ti­ti­on announ­ced about the 20th cen­tu­ry gal­lery and then you hear that axes were estab­lished that run through the buil­ding, with a com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on point loca­ted at its cent­re. Those are such oddly abs­tract ide­as. Yet all that has alre­a­dy been rea­li­sed in this buil­ding, the­re was no need to invo­ke any grand-sca­le axis phi­lo­so­phy. I also like the building’s form, the stran­ge rec­tan­gu­lar block, the quad­ran­gles and also the audi­to­ri­um with the stage you can per­form on from two dif­fe­rent sides. The buil­ding still exerts the same fasci­na­ti­on it did near­ly 60 years ago now.

In your film BICKELS [SOCIALISM], you place a grea­ter focus on how the loca­ti­ons are used than in your other archi­tec­tu­re films. I could feel your sen­se of melan­cho­ly about some­thing being built for a pur­po­se that no lon­ger exists.

I came across Bickels by acci­dent becau­se I found how the light is con­s­truc­ted in his muse­um in Ein Harod so unbe­lie­va­ble and was remin­ded that Renzo Piano adopted the same con­s­truc­tion as Bickels for his muse­um buil­ding in Houston, Texas. Bickels was a very edu­ca­ted man, his libra­ry is part of the muse­um in Ein Harod. But his main inte­rest was the spe­cial requi­re­ments of kib­but­zim and cul­tu­ral buil­dings. Yet he was also con­cer­ned with how buil­dings rela­te to one ano­ther, public squa­res, the many thea­tres that now often lie emp­ty sin­ce tele­vi­si­on has asser­ted its aut­ho­ri­ty. That inte­res­ted me more and more: how is the social moment situa­ted within the kib­butz? Culture is extre­me­ly important in the kib­butz move­ment. Bickels show­ed con­sidera­ble inven­ti­on in con­ti­nu­al­ly working on new solu­ti­ons that were then rea­li­sed in a par­ti­cu­lar kib­butz. It’s also inte­res­t­ing that he work­ed with the who­le coll­ec­ti­ve on this. It wasn’t about the star archi­tect tur­ning up and just buil­ding some­thing, but rather ever­y­thing was dis­cus­sed very pre­cis­e­ly: what do we need, what can we afford, what dimen­si­ons should the buil­ding have and what sta­tus does it have within our com­mu­ni­ty? That’s a uto­pian form of con­s­truc­tion. It’s the oppo­si­te of stan­dard con­s­truc­tion, whe­re often not­hing more is crea­ted than a sculp­tu­re for the archi­tect. I des­pi­se it when the sculp­tu­ral is para­ded in such a way. That’s why the who­le pro­ject is cal­led “Streetscapes”, it’s about being out on the street and see­ing what cat­ches your eye. No indi­vi­du­al buil­dings are picked out and pre­sen­ted as masterpieces.


BICKELS [SOCIALISM] von Heinz Emigholz

The epi­lo­gue of the fourth film DIESTE [URUGUAY] shows the works that this Uruguayan archi­tect rea­li­sed at the end of his life in Spain. They come across like a mockery of his buil­dings in Uruguay.

They’re smal­ler ver­si­ons of the churches we saw in Uruguay, but in Spain they don’t work. They’re per­haps more pho­to­ge­nic becau­se they’re smal­ler and more com­pact, but all that we heard from the peo­p­le using them in Spain is that they’re use­l­ess. They’re too hot in sum­mer and too cold in win­ter and the con­gre­ga­ti­on prays in the cel­lar, becau­se ups­tairs it’s eit­her too hot or too cold. Those were his last years and he was just repea­ting hims­elf sty­li­sti­cal­ly. But when you see the Iglesia de San Pedro in Durazno, whe­re the brick hexa­gons are pla­ced within one ano­ther and then you see it in Spain with dou­ble-paned glass, smal­ler but also hea­vier, then you also reco­g­ni­se the histo­ry of an archi­tect who stay­ed true to his for­mal con­cept, even if it no lon­ger real­ly worked.


DIESTE [URUGUAY] von Heinz Emigholz

 

Die Einsiedler

A film by Ronny Trocker.  In german.

Albert grew up on a remo­te farm in South Tyrol. On the urging of his mother, who wan­ted to spa­re her son the loneli­ne­ss of moun­tain life, he left the farm a few years ago and moved into the val­ley, whe­re he works in a marb­le quar­ry. The intro­ver­ted young man does­n’t make fri­ends easi­ly and has to learn to live in urban socie­ty. When his father has a fatal acci­dent, his mother keeps it secret from her son becau­se she fears that would make him move back to the farm. But the old woman can­not mana­ge all the work on her own and, just as Albert is fin­ding his feet in the val­ley and has even fal­len in love, she tells him the truth. Albert is con­fron­ted with an exis­ten­ti­al decis­i­on for hims­elf and his mother. The film uses stun­ning pho­to­gra­phy to por­tray an archaic world in which humans and natu­re co-exist clo­se­ly together.

Österreich 2016, 100 Min.
Regie: Ronny Trocker
Kamera: Klemens Hufnagl
Schnitt: Julia Drack
mit: Andreas Lust, Ingrid Burkhard, Hannes Perkmann, Peter Mitterutzner, Oris Toth 

Happy End

A film by Michael Haneke. In french with ger­man subtitles.

A dra­ma about a fami­ly set in Calais with the European refu­gee cri­sis as the backdrop.

F, D, Österreich 2017, 110 Min., franz. OmU
Regie & Buch: Michael Haneke
Kamera: Christian Berger
Schnitt: Monika Willi
mit: Isabelle Huppert, Toby Jones, Jean-Louis Trintignant, Mathieu Kassovitz, Franz Rogowski, Laura Verlinden, Fantine Harduin, Loubna Abidar

Die Nile Hilton Affäre

A film by Tarik Saleh. In ara­bic with ger­man subtitles

Set against the back­drop of the Egyptian Revolution, the thril­ler fea­tures a poli­ce offi­cer who inves­ti­ga­tes the mur­der of a woman. What initi­al­ly seems to be a kil­ling of a pro­sti­tu­te turns into a more com­pli­ca­ted case invol­ving the very eli­te of Egypt.

 

The Nile Hilton Incident
Schweden, Dänemark, Deutschland, 2017, 110 Min., arab. OmU

Regie & Drehbuch: Tarik Saleh
Kamera: Pierre Aïm
Schnitt: Theis Schmidt

Darsteller: Fares Fares, Mari Malek, Yaser Maher, Hania Amar, Ahmed Seleem, Slimane Dazi, Hichem Yacoubi, Mohamed Yousry, Ger Duany. Yasser Ali Maher.

DIE NILE HILTON AFFÄRE | Trailer Filmclips [HD]

im Kino mit deut­schen Untertiteln