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German Film Festival: 5 films to watch

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German Film Festival: 5 films to watch
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If you only see five films at the 2012 German Film Festival, Shane Danielsen suggests you make it these.

This year’s German Film Festival is nothing if not exhaustive: with 36 fiction and documentary features drawn from the past two years of production, it’s hard to know where to start. But scattered among them are some gems – we list five below:

1.       SLEEPING SICKNESS (Ulrich Köhler, 2011)

After premiering to mostly glowing reviews at last year’s Berlin Film Festival, the future looked bright for this mysterious, haunting film, the third from ‘Berlin School’ auteur Köhler, following his 2002 debut Bungalow and the odd, fairytale-like Windows on Monday (2006). But instead, to the surprise of many, it became one of the year’s also-ran’s, playing a mere handful of other festivals and generally failing to find commercial distribution – even in France, the country which co-produced it. Admittedly, it doesn’t make matters easy for itself: meditatively paced, enigmatic in its parceling out of information, and boasting a structural conceit that throws unwary viewers for a loop (of which no more need be said here), it’s by no means an easy film to love. But for viewers prepared to go along with it, it’s a gripping and profoundly unsettling journey into the heart of darkness – and the most acute and unsparing vision of Europe’s troubled colonial legacy in Africa since Claire Denis’ great White Material. To my mind, it’s the must-see feature of the festival.

2.      THREE (Tom Tykwer, 2010)

Since his international breakthrough in 1998 with Run Lola Run – arguably one of the key works of postwar German cinema – Tykwer has struggled to match that film’s success. Heaven (2002), his adaptation of an unproduced Krzysztof Kieslowski screenplay, starring Cate Blanchett, was an interesting experiment but lacked the master’s magic; Perfume (2006) was the model of a Euro-pudding, all clashing accents and tacky set-pieces; and his 2009 espionage drama The International a poor imitation of a B-grade American thriller. After those large-scale misfires, Tykwer returned to a German subject – and a smaller budget –­ with Three, an unsparing look at a bisexual ménage à trois in modern-day Berlin. The dirty-mac brigade might be disappointed, however: while forthright in its sexuality, and occasionally explicit, it’s not really much of a turn-on – being concerned more with the tangle of emotions than of limbs. But as his strongest movie in over a decade, it bodes well for his forthcoming adaptation of David Mitchell bestseller Cloud Atlas, which he’s currently co-directing in Berlin with the Warchowskis (the Matrix trilogy).

3.      GERHARD RICHTER PAINTING (Corrina Belz, 2011)

Increasingly recognised as the greatest living painter, and a product of the same school (the Kunstakadamie Düsseldorf) which gave us Sigmar Polke and Anselm Kiefer, Richter’s fame has grown considerably over the last decade, via extensive retrospective exhibitions at MoMA, the Centre Pompidou and the Tate Modern – as has his desire to avoid the media spotlight. Now 80, and perhaps more aware of his legacy, he consented in late 2010 to allow filmmaker Corrina Belz to observe and film him in his studio, at work on various canvases, a process she records dutifully and well. The viewer is very much a spectator to the process of creation, and accordingly, those hoping for personal revelations might be disappointed – the film is expressly NOT called ‘Gerhard Richter Talking’, though there are excerpts from a few archival interviews: mostly (and wisely) the work is left to speak for itself. But as a study of a great artist at work, it’s probably the finest filmed record since Henri-Georges Clouzot made The Mystery of Picasso back in 1955.

4.      STOPPED ON TRACK (Andreas Dresen, 2011)

Over the past decade-and-a-half, Dresen has crafted a body of work which documents, with extraordinary care and precision, the daily lives of ordinary Germans from around the country. Shooting in an unadorned, semi-documentary manner, feeling no need for flashy camerawork or ornate production design, he’s constantly emphasised the importance of naturalism to achieve emotional truth in a manner which occasionally recalls Britain’s Ken Loach – even as his films have tackled ‘difficult’ subjects: 2008’s Cloud Nine, for instance, focused on an affair between septuagenarians, complete with some startlingly frank sex scenes. Never salacious or shocking, it proved a perceptive and moving treatment of a subject most filmmakers would never seek to address. This film (which premiered, like that one, at Cannes, where it won the Prix du Un Certain Regard), sees a perfectly ordinary 40-year-old postal worker attempting to live out the remainder of his life, after being diagnosed with a terminal brain tumour. The result is remarkably honest, compassionate and moving, the work of a meticulous craftsman, constantly beguiled by life’s messiness and wonder.

5.      SUMMER IN ORANGE (Marcus H. Rosenmüller, 2011)

The words ‘German comedy’ do not, as a rule, inspire much in the way of confidence, as even many Germans would agree. (“We are just not a funny people,” sighed Wim Wenders once, when I interviewed him.) But this film, one of the bigger German box-office hits from last summer, represents one of the more palatable attempts at crossover success. Like most blockbuster Euro-comedies (think: the 2008 French smash ‘Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis’), it’s a tale of rural culture-clash – in this case, a conservative Bavarian community whose routines are upset by the arrival of a bunch of Orange People (yes, it’s set in 1980), intent on starting a commune dedicated to free love, meditation and FKK-style nudity . . . all seen through the perspective of Lili, a 13-year-old schoolgirl who finds herself torn between the old ways and the new, much to the amusement of her classmates. The cast is uniformly strong, the laughs not infrequent, and its final shot – an unlikely image of reconciliation – little short of perfect.

GERMAN FILM FESTIVAL COVERAGE
Reviews by SBS Film Critics
Interview with festival director Arpad Sölter

 

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Watch Films Online
Films on SBS TV
Tuesday, 18th Jun
23:10
Winter In Wartime
Near the end of World War Two, 13-year-old Michiel becomes involved with the Dutch Resistance after coming to the aid of a wounded British paratrooper. But his naively defiant ways are soon met with the harsh realities of war. Winner of three Golden Calf awards at the 2009 Nederlands Film Festival, including Best Actor (Martijn Lakemeier). Directed by Martin Koolhoven and also stars Yorick van Wageningen and Jamie Campbell Bower. (From the Netherlands, in Dutch, English and German) (War) (2008) M (A,V,L)
00:00
The Three Burials Of Melquiades Estrada
When a crooked Border Patrol officer guns down his friend and buries him in an unmarked desert grave, ranch hand Pete Perkins sets out to ensure that justice is served with or without the involvement of the local police. Winner of Best Actor and Best Screenplay at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival. Directed by and stars Tommy Lee Jones. Also stars Barry Pepper, Dwight Yoakam and Melissa Leo. (From the US, in English and Spanish) (Drama) (2005) (Rpt) M (A,S,V,L) CC
Wednesday, 19th Jun
23:10
The King
Elvis, a troubled young man recently discharged from the Navy, goes to Corpus Christi, Texas, in search of the father he's never met. When his father, Pastor Paul, rejects him, Elvis sets out to seduce the pastor’s sixteen-year-old daughter, eventually making her pregnant. Directed by James Marsh and stars Gael García Bernal, William Hurt and, Laura Harring. (From the US) (Drama) (2005) (Rpt) MA (A,S,V) CC
00:00
Female Agents
In 1944, a group of French female resistance fighters are recruited by the British Secret Service to rescue a geologist who holds secrets to the impending Normandy landing. They soon find their mission must continue to Paris for the dangerous task of assassinating an SS Colonel. Celebrates the lesser-told role of girl power in the famous Normandy landing. Directed by Jean-Paul Salome and stars Sophie Marceau, Marie Gillain and Deborah Francois. (From France, in French) (Drama) (Rpt) MAV (V)
Thursday, 20th Jun
00:10
OSS 117: Lost In Rio
Oscar-winning actor Jean Dujardin stars as Hubert Bonisseur de la Bath, aka OSS 117, the French spy considered by his superiors to be the best in the business. The year is 1967 - Hubert's been sent on a mission to Rio de Janeiro, to find a former high-ranking Nazi who went into exile in South America after the war. Nominated for two César Awards in 2010. Directed by Michel Hazanavicius and also stars Louise Monot and Alex Lutz. (From France, in French) (Comedy) (2009) (Rpt) M (S,N,V,L) CC
Friday, 21st Jun
23:10
Borderline
An erotic drama about a woman facing her 30th birthday who looks back at her life growing-up with her grandmother, crazy mother and her over-indulgence with men, sex and alcohol. Winner of Best Canadian First Feature Film at the 2008 Toronto International Film Festival. Directed by Lyne Charlebois and stars Isabelle Blais, Angèle Coutu and Sylvie Drapeau. (From Canada, in French Canadian) (2008) (Rpt) MA (L,S,A,N)
23:55
Sympathy For Lady Vengeance
Beautiful Lee Guem-ja is finally out of jail after thirteen years imprisonment for the kidnap and murder of a six-year-old boy. She can now start to seek revenge on the man who was really responsible for the boy's death. But will her actions lead to the relief she seeks? Nominated for Best Asian Film at the 2006 Hong Kong Film Awards. Directed by Park Chan-wook and stars Lee Yeong-ae, Choi Min-sik and Tony Barry. (From South Korea, in Korean) (Drama) (2005) (Rpt) MAV (V,S)
Saturday, 22nd Jun
21:30
Three Dollars
David Wenham stars as Eddie, an honest, compassionate man who finds himself with a wife, a child, and only three dollars to his name. Eddie’s life is rich with the pleasures and pains of love, family, and friendship, but with only three dollars in his pocket, he is faced with a choice that could change the direction of his life forever. Winner of the 2005 AFI Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. Directed by Robert Connolly, and also stars Frances O'Connor and Sarah Wynter. (From Australia) (Drama) (2005) (Rpt) M (S,V,L) CC
21:30
Kamui
Once a powerful ninja, Kamui decides to walk away from his violent ways and seek a peaceful life. His travels bring him to a seashore village where he meets Hanbei, a fisherman who shares the former ninja's sense of honour. They become good friends, and life at the seaside seems idyllic. But one day, a band of pirates arrive - It seems that Kamui's past life is catching up to him. Directed by Yoichi Sai and stars Ken'ichi Matsuyama, Koyuki and Kaoru Kobayashi. (From Japan, in Japanese) (Action/Adventure) (2009) MAV (V)
23:40
Me And You And Everyone We Know
A poetic and penetrating observation of how people struggle to connect with one another in an isolating and contemporary world. When Richard, a newly single shoe salesman, meets the lonely artist Christine, he panics, despite being captivated by her. Winner of four awards at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival, including the Critics Week Grand Prize. Directed by and stars Miranda July. Also stars John Hawkes and Miles Thompson. (From the US) (Comedy) (2005) (Rpt) MA (A,S) CC
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