Germany in the Night
A Film History

March 5 to April 8, 2010
To propose a different history of German cinema is by necessity experimental. The revisionist attempt at hand treats existing traditions as a kind of quarry and abandons
any hope of proposing a rounded whole. Germany at Night, on the one hand, challenges the German film canon which (in spite of several important rediscoveries), has become even more
sedentary during the last decade. On the other hand, the fragile, ambiguous images of history that appear in many films of
the retrospective may also serve as a modest antidote to the myth-making prevalent in German television and cinema today.
Critical memory vs. somnambulant conformity; unfettered gestures of cinematic thoughtfulness and presence vs. the self-assured
know-it-all position towards history as embodied by German blockbusters such as Downfall or The Baader Meinhof Complex.
German cinema: a nocturne, a passage through gray areas and various states that were all Germany - the Weimar Republic, the
Third Reich, the Federal Republic of Germany , the GDR. A cozy feeling of home cannot take hold, rather there
is a sense of alienation or an increasingly obsessive longing. The tangled threads brought together in this program may perhaps
join up in the ever-present anxiety and failure of reconciliation also felt by Heinrich Heine, exiled in Paris: Should I think of Germany at night / it puts all thought of sleep to flight.
Established masters such as Fritz Lang or F.W. Murnau, and icons of the New German Cinema such as Fassbinder, Kluge, Herzog and Schroeter have
as much vested in this restlessness as those flickering figures that each succeeding generation discovers anew, and often
returns to oblivion: Phil Jutzi, Frank Wysbar, Peter Pewas or Roland Klick. Those who returned from exile after the war -
Peter Lorre, John Brahm or Robert Siodmak - as well as the foreigners who worked in Germany during the seventies and eighties, such asSohrab Shahid Saless or elimir ilnik. Those, whose radical view of Germany came from the outside (such
as Jean-Marie Straub and Danièle Huillet) and those like Herbert Achternbusch, who cast an insiders stare
until their homeland would take notice. The unredeemed families (Veit and Thomas Harlan) and those who counter them - through
a belated late remake (Christoph Schlingensiefs paraphrase of Opfergang) or through self-reflexive parallel action (Robert Kramers Unser Nazi, commissioned by Thomas Harlan as a mirror-film to his own Wundkanal). And in-between: outsider films made by well-known directors, such as Helmut Käutners Schwarzer Kies (1961) which drew the collective hatred of film critics at the time, and whose moment only arrived 40 years later.
In an analogue to Romuald Karmakars oeuvre, the program devotes as much space to documentary and essay films as to narrative
cinema. Two key films from East and West Germany about the reality of genocide will be presented, films with a canonical
reputation but hardly seen: Eberhard Fechners Der Prozess (1975-84) and Walter Heynowski and Gerhard Scheumanns Der lachende Mann (1966). Germany at Night unearths small treasures of left-wing Weimar film culture (by Albrecht Viktor Blum and Ella Bergmann-Michel) and brings to
light works which were actively suppressed at the time of their completion, such as Thomas Heises Volkpolizei (1985) or elimir ilniks Öffentliche Hinrichtung(1979) by Klaus Volkenborn, Johann Feindt and Karl Siebig. This film examines two parallel German lives: that of a Nazi general
who continued in his job during the democratic era and a communist bricklayer who could hardly make ends meet after the war.
Both had fought in the Spanish Civil War, but their stories cant be merged; the audience gazes into a wound that will
not heal. (1974). The program also pays tribute to another key document: Unversöhnliche Erinnerungen
Some of the works selected are direct references to Romuald Karmakar: Peter Lorres Der Verlorene and Fassbinders Händler der vier Jahreszeiten are among his favorite films; Siodmaks Nachts, wenn der Teufel kam and Utopia by Sohrab Shahid Saless were studied by Karmakar and his creative team during preparation for Der Totmacher and Ramses. In other cases the relationships are more speculative: nothing in Karmakars work indicates an interest in Georg Büchner,
yet watching his films, the poor soldier Woyzeck might appear as a distant relative. Groups and couples of films - such as
the two selected Woyzeck films - structure the selection, and sometimes the associations reveal an entire network. The volcano at the end of Achternbuschs
Das letze Loch leads perhaps to Hölderlins Tod des Empedokles as adapted by Straub/Huillet; Hölderlin and Straub, in turn, might lead to Christian Geissler, one of the great forgotten
figures of German literature, and to his teleplay Wilhelmsburger Freitag, directed by Egon Monk in 1964: one day in the life of a couple, with a radical ending - a strange mirror of Karmakars
Die Nacht singt ihre Lieder.
This program is designed in a fragmentary manner - no monuments shall be erected. It is more about process, dialogue, questions than any definitive answers. It intends to evoke the rich culture that German cinema represented once upon a time - including all the personalities that did not quite fit in (or fit too well). A few shards of this culture are gathered here.
Programme:
- Berlin - Alexanderplatz (1931)
- Bübchen (1968)
- Das letzte Loch (1981)
- Der lachende Mann - Bekenntnisse eines Mörders (1966)
- Der Prozess (1975-84)
- Der Tod des Empedokles oder Wenn dann der Erde Grün von neuem euch erglänzt (1987)
- Der Verlorene (1951)
- Der verzauberte Tag (1944)
- Die goldene Pest (1954)
- Die Patriotin (1979)
- Eine Stunde (1941)
- Fährmann Maria (1936)
- Händler der vier Jahreszeiten (1972)
- Im Schatten der Weltstadt (1930)
- M - Eine Stadt sucht einen Mörder (1931)
- Machorka-Muff (1963)
- Mein Papi (1981/95)
- Mutters Maske (1988)
- Mysterien eines Frisiersalons (1923)
- Nachts, wenn der Teufel kam (1957)
- Nosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens (1922)
- Notre Nazi / Unser Nazi (1984)
- Öffentliche Hinrichtung (1974)
- Opfergang (1944)
- Palermo oder Wolfsburg (1980)
- Porträt einer Bewährung (1965)
- Schlachtfelder (1985)
- Schwarzer Kies (1961)
- Unversöhnliche Erinnerungen (1979)
- Utopia (1983)
- Volkspolizei (1985/2001)
- Wahlkampf 1932 (1932/33)
- Wilhelmsburger Freitag (1964)
- Woyzeck (1979)
- Wozzeck (1947)
- Wundkanal (1984)
- Zwischen 3 und 7 Uhr morgens (1965)

