2017-04-18

Rainer Werner Fassbinder

 

Screening List
Love is Colder than Death

Fear Eats the Soul

Fontane Effi Briest

Chinese Roulette

World on a Wire 

Veronika Voss

 

 

 



 Love is Colder than Death

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Directed by: Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Written by:Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Starring: Ulli Lommel, Hanna Schygulla, Ursula Strät, Liz Söllner, Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Genres: Comedy | Crime |Romance

Fassbinder\'s first feature-length film, Love is Colder than Death is a story in which a small-time pimp Franz, after being released from the prison, is enticed by a gangster to commit crimes again. In the film, Straw and Huilite’s influence is obvious: the layout of tables and chairs, lighting, and the characters’ movements all exhibit a minimalist style. The film was invited to compete in the Berlin International Film Festival and was nominated for the Golden Bear Award.

 



Fear Eats the Soul
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Directed by: Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Written by: Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Starring: Brigitte Mira, El Hedi ben Salem, Barbara Valentin, Irm Hermann
Genres: Drama | Romance

 

This film was shot in two weeks, ranking among Fassbinder\'s quickest. Originally shot as a practice of his techniques in film production ahead of the shooting of Martha and Fontane Effi Briest, the film brought great impacts on Fassbinder\'s career as a great and influential work. It won the FIPRESCI Prize and Prize of the Ecumenical Jury at Cannes in 1974. Different from Fassbinder’ most works, Ali: Fear Eats the Soul was brief and easy to understand.



Fontane Effi Briest 
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Directed by: Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Written by: Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Starring: Hanna Schygulla, Wolfgang Schenck, Ulli Lommel
Genres: Drama 

 

The film is a period piece adapted from German writer Theodor Fontane\'s classic novel. It is a dramatic story narrated from the writer’s angle, therefore a number of asides and subtitles are added. Reflections of mirrors recur for times in a specific setting, demonstrating alienation between people.



Chinese Roulette

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Directed by: Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Written by: Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Starring: Margit Carstensen, Alexander Allerson, Andrea Schober
Genres: Drama | Thriller

 

In a closed space, a couple have different things on mind, and the home teacher has an evil in her heart. Everyone is pretending. The seemingly innocent and weak daughter proposes a game which has forced everyone to let out the ugliest demon inside. Interestingly, Fassbinder calls Nietzsche’s Sun into the dark little game. In the end, he reveals the source of all the chaos in Roulette. It is inside me.



World on a Wire

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Directed by: Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Written by: Daniel F. Galouye, Fritz Müller-Scherz | Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Starring: Klaus Löwitsch, Mascha Rabben,Barbara Valentin 
Genres: Sci-Fi | Crime

 

An adaptation of the lengthy sci-fi novel Simulacron-3 by Daniel F. Galouye, it was made as a two-part production for television. Later reproduced as a Hollywood film The Thirteenth Floor, it also inspired the production of The Matrix.  Due to copyright problems, World on a Wire was shown only once on TV and seldom seen in cinemas. It has been shown twice in New York and Paris over the past 15 years. You should not miss it at this SIFF.



Veronika Voss
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Directed by: Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Written by: Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Pea Fröhlich, Peter Märthesheimer
Starring: Rosel Zech, Hilmar Thate, Cornelia Froboess
Genres: Drama

 

The film depicts the twilight years of the title character Veronika Voss, a faded Nazi starlet, and her terrible end. It is one of the BRD Trilogy, of which other two films are The Marriage of Maria Braun and Lola. The film won the Golden Bear at the 32nd Berlin International Film Festival in 1982, the same year when Rainer Werner Fassbinder passed away.
 

 Jean-Pierre Melville

screening list

Le cercle rouge

Léon Morin, prêtre

Un flic

Bob le flambeur

Le doulos

 

Le cercle rouge

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Director: Jean-Pierre Melville

Writer: Jean-Pierre Melville

Stars: Alain Delon/Bourvil/Gian Maria Volontè/Yves Montand/Paul Crauchet

 

The film is a masterpiece, known as of “the pure perfection and classic”. The storyline is set around a jewelry heist schemed by a thief who just did his jail time, an inmate who escaped from prison and a police officer who got fired. The most classic scene is the 30-minute-long robbery where images worked seamlessly with the music, but words were redundant. Melville’s personal style was fully fledged. “When men, even unknowingly, are to meet one day, whatever may befall each, whatever the diverging paths, on the said day, they will inevitably come together in the red circle.” He said. 

 

Léon Morin, prêtre

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Director: Jean-Pierre Melville

Writer: Jean-Pierre Melville

Stars: Jean-Paul Belmondo/Emmanuelle Riva/ Irène Tunc/ Nicole Mirel

 

Léon Morin, Prêtre is the biggest box office hit of Melville’s movies. Adapted from Prix Goncourt-winning novel, the film is about the philosophic reflection at the backdrop of World War II. Unlike his previous minimalist movies, Léon Morin, Prêtre appears to be full of dialogues. However, every line is substantial in the seemingly large amount of dialogues, which is another to be minimalist.  

 

Un flic

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Director: Jean-Pierre Melville

Writer: Jean-Pierre Melville

Stars: Alain Delon/Richard Crenna/Catherine Deneuve/ Riccardo Cucciolla

 

Un Flic was Melville’s the last film, which is also starred by Alain Delon. This time, he is a good man: Commissaire Edouard Coleman, which is different from the previous ones. His good friend is the very principal of a bank robbery who he is to be after. At the same time, both of them love the same woman, Cathy. Once A Thief, a well-known movie to Chinese audience, was a tribute to Un Flic, according to the movie director of Once A Thief, John Woo Yu-Sen. 


Bob le flambeur

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Director: Jean-Pierre Melville

Writer: Auguste Le Breton/Jean-Pierre Melville

Stars: Roger Duchesne/Isabelle Corey/ Daniel Cauchy/ Jean-Pierre Melville

 

Bob le Flambeur was filmed in 1956. It wasn\'t until 1955 when Melville started making his first gangster movie Fever Heat. Bob le Flambeur had already shown Melville’s personal artistic style. With Jazz music goes, the whole film is calm, absurd and fast-paced with a hue of black humor. The story is very simple: Bob, a gambler, and his friends planned to rob a casino. After having done all the preparations, Bob missed the planned time due to gambling, and then caught by the police because his gang friends told on him, which is the end of the story. Interestingly, the female character in this film is like a red thread in the darkness, quitely intertwining with the dark storyline and leading everything to a dead end.


Le doulos

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Director: Jean-Pierre Melville

Writer: Auguste Le Breton/Jean-Pierre Melville

Stars: Jean-Paul Belmondo/Serge Reggiani/Jean Desailly/René Lefèvre

 

Adapted from the novel Le Doulos published in 1946, the film tells a story about Maurice, a thief. One day, his friend Silien came over with some essential tools for the theft he was planning. Together with Silien came the police as well. The plot keeps turning and twisting until the very end when the mystery was finally unraveled. 

This is an underestimated film, hardly mentioned by the public. When Léon Morin, Prêtre became such a hit in 1961, Melville had more money to make films that really spoke for him. This was when Le Doulos came into being. In this movie, Melville perfectly blended American and French filmmaking styles and made it into his own dark style.