FIRST COMPLETE RETROSPECTIVE IN THE UNITED STATES OF THE FILMS OF RAINER WERNER FASSBINDER
Rainer Werner Fassbinder, the genius of the New German Cinema, made forty-three remarkable film and television works between 1966 and his death in 1982 at age thirtyseven.
The full depth and scope of this astonishing career—unparalleled in postwar world cinema—will be on display for the first time in the United States beginning January 23, 1997, when The Museum of Modern Art presents Rainer Werner Fassbinder, a complete retrospective of the director's work.
Using a potent mix of impassioned melodrama and biting satire, working independently with a loyal, likeminded cast and crew, and wedding intense personal and political issues, Fassbinder produced an entirely original oeuvre that remains as imaginative and incisive today as when he was alive. Practically hurled in the face of bourgeois culture, these films include acknowledged treasures such as The Marriage of Maria Braun (1978), Lola (1981), Fox and His Friends (1974), Veronika Voss (1981), Effi Briest (1972/74), The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant (1972), Katzelmacher (1969), In a Year of 13 Moons (1978), Ali: Fear Eats the Soul (1973), and Lili Marleen (1980).
"Prolific and ever able to astonish, Fassbinder emerged as one of the major artists of the late twentieth century," says Glenn D. Lowry, Director, The Museum of Modern Art. "We are pleased and honored to have worked with the Fassbinder Foundation in Berlin to present a complete retrospective of this superb filmmaker."
The series will feature nineteen new 35mm subtitled prints, many of them with new or rewritten subtitles and with color restored to the quality of the original 16mm prints. It will also feature the world theatrical premiere of World on a Wire (1973), the U.S. premieres of the television films Bolwieser (1976/77) and Women in New York (1977), and the New York premieres of several other films, including the Western Whity (1970). Rare versions of Fassbinder classics will also grace the program, such as the original English language versions of Despair (1977) and Lili Marleen (1980); an unusual print of Mother Kusters Goes to Heaven (1975) that includes both the "tougher" German and the "softer" American endings; and the only extant English subtitled copy of Jail Bait (1972), from the Museum's own archive.
"Prodigiously talented and productive, Fassbinder was an astonishing filmmaker whose acute psychological insight, empathy, and sense of space, rhythm, and dramaturgy constantly refreshes the viewer's notion of cinema," says Laurence Kardish, Curator and Coordinator of Film Exhibitions, Department of Film and Video, who co-organized the series with Juliane Lorenz, Director, Fassbinder Foundation, Berlin. "He was a social cartographer, illuminating the ways society influenced and circumscribed choice, and an ironic chronicler of German culture. There has been no one like him in contemporary film."
https://www.moma.org/momaorg/shared/pdfs/docs/...996_0079_66.pdf?2010 ----------- "History that repeats itself turns to farce. Farce that repeats itself turns to history." |