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  1. Visit
  2. Festivals and symposiums
  3. Self-Determined – Perspectives of Women Filmmakers

Janna Marangosoff in ‘Im Innern des Wals’, FRG, 1985, directed by Doris Dörrie
© Olga Film GmbH

Festival

Self-Determined – Perspectives of Women Filmmakers

7.–17.2.19

Retrospective 2019

  • Publication

    Deutsche Kinemathek
    Bertz + Fischer, Berlin 2019
    216 Seiten, 163 Fotos, sw und farbig
    Hardcover, 21,5 x 22,5 cm
    ISBN 978-3-86505-262-9

     

    25 €

    More information
  • Brochure 2019

    Download (PDF)

Retrospective of the 69th Berlin International Film Festival

The Retrospective of the 69th Berlin International Film Festival takes as its subject women filmmakers between 1968 and 1999. The program encompasses 26 narrative and documentary features from the former East and West Germany, as well as German films after re-unification in 1990. In addition, the Retrospective will show some 20 shorter films on their own, or as lead-ins to the features. What the filmmakers and their protagonists have in common is an interest in exploring their own environment, and the search for their own cinematic idiom.

 

In West Germany, this development was embedded in the 1968 student movement, and closely linked to the new women’s movement and the New German Cinema wave. In East Germany, by contrast, all films were made within the state-controlled studio system. That studio, DEFA, gave a few women a chance to direct as early as the 1950s, however they were mainly assigned to children’s films. Towards the end of the 1960s, everyday life in the socialist country became the focus of East Germany’s women directors.

‘Zur Sache, Schätzchen’ (‘Go for It, Baby’), FRG, 1968, directed by May Spils
© Deutsche Kinemathek / Schamoni Film & Medien

About the film selection

The upcoming Retrospective ranges from May Spils’ first big theatrical hit ‘Zur Sache, Schätzchen’ (‘Go for It, Baby’, FRG, 1968) to the documentary ‘Mit Haut und Haar’ (‘With Skin and Hair’, GER, 1999), in which Martina Döcker and Crescentia Dünßer trace the memories of six women born before or during the Weimar era. Most of the films can be categorised as auteur works; the directors often fulfilled several functions on the productions. The films selected reflect on how women deal with their bodies, space and relationships, everyday life and work. The genre covers a variety of filmmaking types – from animated, essayistic, and experimental work, to traditional narratives and documentaries.

‘Berlin – Prenzlauer Berg. Begegnungen zwischen dem 1. Mai und dem 1. Juli 1990’ (‘Berlin Prenzlauer Berg - Encounters between 1st of May and 1st of July 1990’), GER, 1990, directed by Petra Tschörtner
© DEFA-Stiftung / Michael Lösche

Personal stories

The narrative thread of many of the films can be traced back to the filmmaker’s personal history. There is often a concordance between individual awakenings and developments in society, for example in Jutta Brückner’s ‘Tue recht und scheue niemand – Das Leben der Gerda Siepenbrink’ (‘Do Right and Fear Nobody’, FRG, 1975) or Marianne Rosenbaum’s ‘Peppermint Frieden’ (FRG, 1983). The aesthetic approaches are also varied. Opulent imagery such as in Ulrike Ottinger’s ‘Dorian Gray im Spiegel der Boulevardpresse’ (‘Dorian Gray in the Mirror of the Yellow Press’, FRG, 1984) or in Nina Grosse’s ‘Der gläserne Himmel’ (‘The Glass Sky’, FRG, 1987) stands alongside stark representations of everyday life in Helma Sanders-Brahms’ ‘Unter dem Pflaster ist der Strand’ (‘Under the Pavement Lies the Strand’, FRG, 1975), or Angela Schanelec’s ‘Das Glück meiner Schwester’ (‘My Sister’s Good Fortune’, GER, 1995). Several of the films benefit from poetic black-and-white cinematography and location shooting. Ingrid Reschke’s narrative feature ‘Kennen Sie Urban?’ (‘Do You Know Urban?’, GDR, 1971) is an impressive portrait of a young generation on large construction sites in East Germany, while in ‘Berlin – Prenzlauer Berg. Begegnungen zwischen dem 1. Mai und dem 1. Juli 1990’ (‘Berlin Prenzlauer Berg - Encounters between 1st of May and 1st of July 1990’, GER, 1990), Petra Tschörtner documents the upheaval during the collapse of communism. Both films are forays into an urban landscape in flux.

‘Nie wieder schlafen’ (‘Never Sleep Again’), GER, 1992, directed by Pia Frankenberg
© Deutsche Kinemathek / Pia Frankenberg Musik- und Filmproduktion

Berlin

Berlin is both the anchor of many of the filmmakers, and the location of many of the stories. In Pia Frankenberg’s ‘Nie wieder schlafen’ (‘Never Sleep Again’, GER, 1992), three women ramble aimlessly around the city. They are flaneurs, much like the main character in Claudia von Alemann’s ‘Die Reise nach Lyon’ (‘The Trip to Lyon’, FRG, 1980), who is following in the tracks of a feminist ancestor. In the films made around 1970, the filmmakers and their protagonists are often conquering the streets for the first time; in the films from the 1990s, street settings have become a matter of course, even for personal stories. 

 

Among the highlights of the Retrospective will be the introduction of the films by their directors. There will be discussions in the Retrospective cinemas with filmmakers such as Iris Gusner, Jeanine Meerapfel, Helke Misselwitz, Helke Sander, Evelyn Schmidt, Ula Stöckl, Margarethe von Trotta, and Katja von Garnier.

The films of the Retrospective

  • Bandits

    GER, 1997, directed by Katja von Garnier

    Jutta Hoffmann, Katja Riemann, Nicolette Krebitz, Jasmin Tabatabai in ‘Bandits’, (GER, 1997, directed by Katja von Garnier)
    © Olga Film / Rieger

    Four female musicians succeed in escaping from prison. With their rock band, the fugitives become overnight stars. Borrowing from genre cinema and music video aesthetics, ‘Bandits’ brings musical girl power to the screen.

  • Berlin–Prenzlauer Berg. Begegnungen zwischen dem 1. Mai und dem 1. Juli 1990

    (‘Berlin Prenzlauer Berg – Encounters between 1st of May and 1st of July 1990’), GER, 1990, directed by Petra Tschörtner

    © DEFA-Stiftung / Michael Lösche

    A cinematic ramble through an East Berlin neighbourhood in the weeks before the monetary and economic unification of East and West Germany. A pastiche of everyday scenes and encounters during the “short summer of anarchy” from May 1 until July 1, 1990.

  • Das Fahrrad

    (‘The Bicycle’), GDR, 1982, directed by Evelyn Schmidt

    Anke Friedrich, Heidemarie Schneider in ‘Das Fahrrad’, (GDR, 1982, directed by Evelyn Schmidt)
    © DEFA-Stitung / Dietram Kleist

    A young single mother quits her burdensome job. When money runs short, she claims her bicycle was stolen and collects an insurance payment. A realistic depiction of the encrustation of East German society.

  • Das Glück meiner Schwester

    (‘My Sister’s Good Fortune’), GER, 1995, directed by Angela Schanelec

    Anna Bolk, Angela Schanelec in ‘Das Glück meiner Schwester’, (GER, 1995, directed by Angela Schanelec)
    © Deutsche Kinemathek / DFFB

    A man falls in love with his girlfriend’s sister. But his lover is unwilling to let go and fights against his plans to leave her. Angela Schanelec, a member of the Berlin School, depicts the gritty everyday reality of romantic relationships.

  • Der gläserne Himmel

    (‘The Glass Sky’), FRG, 1987, directed by Nina Grosse

    Klaus Mikoleit, Tobias Engel, Sylvie Forcier, Helmut Berger  in ‘Der gläserne Himmel’, (FRG, 1987, directed by Nina Grosse)
    © Deutsche Kinemathek / Simona Fix

    While a murderer is killing women in Paris, an office clerk begins an affair with a proud, young prostitute. An erotic mystery-thriller that combines elements of film noir with those of an elegant extravaganza.

  • Die allseitig reduzierte Persönlichkeit – Redupers

    (‘The All-Round Reduced Personality – Redupers’), FRG, 1978, directed by Helke Sander

    Helke Sander in ‘Die allseitig reduzierte Persönlichkeit – Redupers’, (FRG, 1978, directed by Helke Sander)
    © Basis-Film Verleih, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    Helke Sander’s film is an ironic and clever depiction from a feminist perspective of the everyday life of a working mother. Her essayistic narrative also draws an authentic portrait of a divided Berlin.

  • Die bleierne Zeit

    (‘The German Sisters’), FRG, 1981, directed by Margarethe von Trotta

    Jutta Lampe, Barbara Sukowa in ‘Die bleierne Zeit’, (FRG, 1981, directed by Margarethe von Trotta)
    © Studiocanal

    The story of two sisters, one who is active in the women’s movement, the other who ends up arrested as a terrorist. A family tragedy set against the background of the Red Army Faction era in Germany, with a decidedly female point of view.

  • Die Reise nach Lyon

    (‘Blind Spot’), FRG, 1980, directed by Claudia von Alemann

    Rebecca Pauly in ‘Die Reise nach Lyon’, (FRG, 1980, directed by Claudia von Alemann)
    © Deutsche Kinemathek

    A young historian roams Lyon on the tracks of French women’s rights activist Flora Tristan (1803–1844). She wants to reconstruct a sense memory of Tristan’s life and finds the city to be an historical echo chamber.

  • Die Taube auf dem Dach

    (‘The Dove on The Roof’), GDR, 1973/2010, directed by Iris Gusner

    © DEFA-Stiftung / Klaus Goldmann

    A young building site manager maintains her independence despite two suitors. Accused of “distorting the image of the working class”, the film was banned in 1973. Screening of the 2010 digitally restored version.

  • Dorian Gray im Spiegel der Boulevardpresse

    (‘Dorian Gray in the Mirror of the Yellow Press’), FRG, 1984, directed by Ulrike Ottinger

    Veruschka von Lehndorff, Delphine Seyrig in ‘Dorian Gray im Spiegel der Boulevardpresse’, (FRG, 1984, directed by Ulrike Ottinger)
    © Ulrike Ottinger

    Frau Dr Mabuse, boss of a media company, creates a glamorous artificial character to boost circulation. This futuristic media satire combines various different arts and styles into a piece of raging world theatre.

  • Etwas tut weh

    (‘Something Hurts’), FRG, 1980, directed by Recha Jungmann

    Simone Maul, Anja Burak in ‘Etwas tut weh’, (FRG, 1980, directed by Recha Jungmann)
    © Recha Jungmann, source: DFF - Deutsches Filminstitut & Filmmuseum, Frankfurt am Main

    The director traces her childhood with the help of the abandoned family home in Germany’s Rhön region. This cinematic tale brings memories of her deceased relative to life.

  • Female Misbehavior

    GER, 1992, directed by Monika Treut

    Episode "Max"
    © Edition Salzgeber / Hyena Films

    In four short films, three women and a transgender man from New York talk about their sexuality. The subjects unfiltered testimonials turn their “female misbehaviour” into a demonstration of female self-empowerment.

  • Ich denke oft an Hawaii

    (‘I Often Think of Hawaii’), FRG, 1978, directed by Elfi Mikesch

    © Deutsche Kinemathek / Elfi Mikesch

    A documentary about life in a housing project on the margins of West Berlin, inspired by the camp aesthetics of American underground films of the era. In lavish make-up and flamboyant robes, a 16-year-old girl acts out her dreams in front of the camera.

  • Im Innern des Wals

    (‘In the Belly of the Whale’), FRG, 1985, directed by Doris Dörrie

    Eisi Gulp, Janna Marangosoff in ‘Im Innern des Wals’, (FRG, 1985, directed by Doris Dörrie)
    © Olga Film GmbH

    A 15-year-old girl flees her violent father. On the trail of her mother, who left the family years ago, she embarks on an odyssey along the northern German coast. A road movie with a young heroine on the cusp of adulthood.

  • Im Kreise der Lieben

    (‘The Terrible Threesome’), GER, 1991, directed by Hermine Huntgeburth

    Barbara Auer, Karin Baal, Ruth Hellberg in ‘Im Kreise der Lieben’, (GER, 1991, directed by Hermine Huntgeburth)
    © Josefine Filmproduktion, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    A black comedy about a scam artist who bilks men with a marriage con, with the help and support of her mother and grandmother. When two defrauded men get wise to their ways, the family tribe uses brutal means to defend itself.

  • Kennen Sie Urban?

    (‘Do You Know Urban?’), GDR, 1971, directed by Ingrid Reschke

    Berndt Renné, Jenny Gröllmann, Harald Wandel in ‘Kennen Sie Urban?’, (GDR, 1971, directed by Ingrid Reschke)
    © DEFA-Stiftung / Klaus Mühlstein

    With the help of his fellow builders, a young convicted criminal finds a place back in society, and personal happiness with the love of a student. Shot on location in the tradition of the “Berlin films” made by the East German state studio DEFA.

  • Malou

    FRG, 1981, directed by Jeanine Meerapfel

    Grischa Huber, Helmut Griem in ‘Malou’, (FRG, 1981, directed by Jeanine Meerapfel)
    © ZIEGLER FILM

    In remembrance of her French mother, Malou, a Jew who was forced to emigrate from Germany, a young woman in Berlin goes in search of her identity. In conflict with her husband, she fights to determine her own life’s path.

  • Mit Haut und Haar

    (‘Under My Skin’), GER, 1999, directed by Martina Döcker, Crescentia Dünßer

    Dr. Gertraude Ils in ‘Mit Haut und Haar’, (GER, 1999, directed by Martina Döcker, Crescentia Dünßer)
    © Eva Gensch, source: DFF - Deutsches Filminstitut & Filmmuseum, Frankfurt am Main

    Six women born between 1907 and 1925 look back at “their” century. The montage of their memories produces a tightly-woven oral history, in which constants specific to women and individual experiences have equal prominence.

  • Neun Leben hat die Katze

    (‘The Cat Has Nine Lives’), FRG, 1968, directed by Ula Stöckl

    Christine de Loup, Liane Hielscher in ‘Neun Leben hat die Katze’, (FRG, 1968, directed by Ula Stöckl)
    © Deutsche Kinemathek / Ula Stöckl

    As they stroll the summery sidewalks of 1967 Munich, two girlfriends talk about society and its expectations. This narrative cinematic essay uses impressionist techniques to explore female ambition and desire – in Cinemascope and Technicolor.

  • Nie wieder schlafen

    (‘Never Sleep Again’), GER, 1992, directed by Pia Frankenberg

    Lisa Kreuzer,  Gabriela Herz in ‘Nie wieder schlafen’, (GER, 1992, directed by Pia Frankenberg)
    © Deutsche Kinemathek / Pia Frankenberg Musik- und Filmproduktion

    Three girlfriends roam through newly re-unified Berlin, exploring the East and meeting a few men along the way. An ironic, laconic film that is as adventurous as its wonderfully witty protagonists.

  • Peppermint Frieden

    (‘Peppermint Peace’), FRG, 1983, directed by Marianne S.W. Rosenbaum

    Cleo Kretschmer, Saskia Tyroller, Peter Fonda in ‘Peppermint Frieden’, (FRG, 1983, directed by Marianne S.W. Rosenbaum)
    Source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    The story of a post-war childhood in rural Bavaria, told with idiosyncratic camerawork from a child’s point of view. Made in 1983, this alternative take on the German Heimatfilm, with a star cast, was also a political statement.

  • Töchter zweier Welten

    (‘Daughters of Two Worlds’), GER, 1991, directed by Serap Berrakkarasu

    © Berrakkarasu

    A Turkish mother and her daughter talk about their experiences and problems. The mother arrived in Germany as a “guest worker”. Her daughter, now 24, survived an arranged marriage that was hell for her.

  • Tue recht und scheue niemand – Das Leben der Gerda Siepenbrink

    (‘Do Right and Fear No One’), FRG, 1975, directed by Jutta Brückner

    © Deutsche Kinemathek

    Using photos from archives and family albums, the director uses her mother’s life to draw a portrait of the lower middle-class experience in Germany between 1922 and 1975. A collage of sound and music accompanies the narrative.

  • Unter dem Pflaster ist der Strand

    (‘Under the Pavement Lies the Strand’), FRG, 1975, directed by Helma Sanders-Brahms

    Grischa Huber, Heinrich Giskes in ‘Unter dem Pflaster ist der Strand’, (FRG, 1975, directed by Helma Sanders-Brahms)
    © Deutsche Kinemathek / Helma Sanders GmbH, Anne Sanders

    A couple, both actors, in West Berlin seven years after the upheaval of 1968. She is active in women’s liberation, he still mourns the unrealized utopia of the student movement. A film about the clash between the political and the personal.

  • Verriegelte Zeit

    (‘Locked Up Time’), GER, 1991, directed by Sybille Schönemann

    © DEFA-Stiftung / Michael Löwenberg, source: Deutsche Kinemathek

    The director spent 1984/1985 in an East German prison after applying for an exit visa. In this documentary, she talks to the people involved in her case, including lawyers and Stasi agents, in a painful processing of the past.

  • Von wegen “Schicksal”

    (‘Is This Fate?’), FRG, 1979, directed by Helga Reidemeister

    © Deutsche Kinemathek / Helga Reidemeister

    Film as a sort of family therapy – an unvarnished chronicle of a divorced mother in West Berlin’s Märkisches Viertel neighbourhood. She talks without reserve about why her family is falling apart, while at the same time discussing her own ambitions.

  • Wer fürchtet sich vorm schwarzen Mann

    (‘Who’s Afraid of the Bogeyman’), GDR, 1989, directed by Helke Misselwitz

    © DEFA-Stiftung / Heiko Koinzer

    Portrait of a coal business in East Berlin’s Prenzlauer Berg district, run by a woman and staffed by rough-hewn men. This sensitive documentary turned into a survey of social contradictions in East Germany, shortly before the 1989 fall of the Berlin Wall.

  • Zur Sache, Schätzchen

    (‘Go for It, Baby’), GDR, 1968, directed by May Spils

    Werner Enke, Uschi Glas in ‘Zur Sache, Schätzchen’, (GDR, 1968, directed by May Spils)
    © Deutsche Kinemathek / Schamoni Film & Medien

    A layabout living in Munich’s arty district spends his birthday with a well-heeled young woman. May Spils’ enormously successful comedy proffers Werner Enke’s character as an alternative model to the traditional “male archetype”.

Short films

  • Short Films 1

    Work and everyday life

  • Für Frauen. 1. Kapitel

    (‘For Women – Chapter 1’), FRG, 1972, directed by Cristina Perincioli

    © Deutsche Kinemathek / DFFB

    Equal pay for equal work! Four female employees at a West Berlin supermarket, who feel heavy pressure both at work and at home, go on strike to demand the same salary that their male colleague gets.

  • Heimweh nach Rügen oder Gestern noch war ich Köchin

    (‘Homesick for Rügen or Yesterday, I Was a Cook’), GDR, 1977, directed by Róza Berger-Fiedler

    © DEFA-Stiftung / Klaus Schulze

    The mayor of the island of Ummanz off Rügen used to be a cook. Director Róza Berger-Fiedler weaves her encounters with her constituency, and discussions about the office with all its responsibilities into a sensitive portrait of a dedicated person.

  • Miss World

    GER, 1998, Regie: Barbara Marheineke

    Lotta Svalberg
    © Barbara Marheineke

    A modern Aphrodite – how is it possible to be super sexy and successful at the same time? A career woman faces the conflicting demands of her parents, social life, and her husband. The short combines live action and animation with a slapstick tenor.

  • Sie

    (‘She’), GDR, 1970, directed by Gitta Nickel,

    © DEFA-Stiftung / Nico Pawloff, Quelle: Deutsche Kinemathek

    A modern depiction of working women in East Germany – laborers and managers in a garment factory talk about relationships and family planning, raising children and career qualifications, women’s rights and equality in the socialist (meritocratic) society.

  • Short films 2

    Body and space

  • Alaska

    FRG, 1968, directed by Dore O.

    Dore O.
    © Deutsche Kineamthek / Dore O.

    Behind the concrete is the beach. The film travels from the cell block of Hamburg’s remand centre (where the 1968 anti-Springer demonstrators were held) out into the open air. Dore O. contrasts a concrete wall with waves, dunes, and naked bodies.

  • Alle Tage wieder – Let Them Swing

    (‘Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow – Let Them Swing’), FRG, 1974, directed by Margaret Raspé

    © Deutsche Kinemathek / Margaret Raspé

    Housework seen from a radically subjective point of view. The film shows a woman’s hands busy washing the dishes, which include a white porcelain cup in the shape of a woman’s body. It was shot with Margaret Raspé’s famous “camera helmet”.

  • Compartment

    GER, 1990, directed by Eva Heldmann

    © Eva Heldmann

    Sex on the metro! The director has taken footage shot in a completely empty compartment on the London underground and married it to the off-camera reading of a pornographic text that includes detailed masturbation instructions for a female rider.

  • Dress Rehearsal und Karola 2

    (‘Dress Rehearsal and Karola 2’), FRG, 1979/1980, directed by Christine Noll Brinckmann

    Karola Gramann
    © Noll Brinckmann

    A tie or lace? After trying on numerous treasures from New York’s second-hand stores, Karola Gramann decides on a traditional dinner jacket with cummerbund and bow tie. We then see her posing and vogueing to Bryan Ferry’s “These Foolish Things”.

  • Gemäldegalerie

    (‘Old Masters’), GDR, 1988, directed by Sieglinde Hamacher

    © DEFA-Stiftung / Helmut Krahnert

    From Ingres’ “Reclining Venus” to Gaugin’s Tahitian women – a museum guard presents famous female figures in art who, as if in a Las Vegas revue, step out of their frames and take on exciting new life.

  • Umweg

    (‘Detour’), FRG, 1981, directed by Ute Aurand, Ulrike Pfeiffer

    © Deutsche Kinemathek / DFFB

    The view from moving trains shows wintery landscapes through windows that sometimes reflect the interior. The montage that drives this technical, experimental short automatically embraces the detour. Shot with two Bolex cameras.

  • Opening shorts

  • Aktfotografie, z.B. Gundula Schulze

    (‘Nude Portraits – Gundula Schulze’), GDR, 1983, directed by Helke Misselwitz

    Gundula Schulze
    © DEFA-Stiftung / Jürgen Rudow

    Photographer Gundula Schulze wrote her graduate thesis on “nude photography of women in East Germany”. She wants to show what makes up the “whole woman”. Scenes of women in the professional world have been edited into the film.

  • Der Fater

    (‘The Father’), FRG, 1986, directed by Christine Noll Brinckmann

    © Noll Brinckmann

    Dr Kurt Noll, a doctor in Shanghai in the 1930s, was passionate about shooting home movies. His daughter put together a montage of his footage, ranging from passage on a luxury liner to camels in Egypt, fakirs in India, and his daughter in the garden.

  • Die Mitspeisenden

    (‘Reunion’), FRG, 1989, directed by Hermine Huntgeburth

    Emanuela von Frankenberg, Ronald Reder
    © Hermine Huntgeburth

    After their mother’s death, three siblings meet up in her apartment – and revert to their childhood family dynamics. They play concentration and enjoy eggnog with their chocolate pudding, making the regression a not entirely unpleasant one …

  • Die Wahrheit um den Froschkönig

    (‘The Truth About the Frog Prince’), GDR, 1985, directed by Sieglinde Hamacher

    © DEFA-Stiftung / Werner Bensch

    Is he the dream prince? As each frog climbs out of the fountain, the princess hopes it will be the one, the love of her life. But no sooner has one been flung against the wall than it turns out to be pretty much a washout.

  • Ein Fest für Beyhan

    (‘Celebration for Beyhan’), GER, 1994, directed by Ayse Polat

    © AyÅŸe Polat

    The director, born in Malatya, Turkey, uses surrealistic scenes to trace the odyssey of a young woman between two worlds. She spent her childhood in the Anatolian countryside and now lives in a large city in northern Germany.

  • Familiengruft – Ein Liebesgedicht an meine Mutter

    (‘Family Crypt’), FRG, 1982, directed by Maria Lang

    Maria Lang’s autobiographical montage of family photos and new film footage is a description of family relationships that are typical of life in post-war, lower middle class Germany – with a domineering father and a mother who ministers to everyone.

  • Fraueninitiative Scharnhorst

    (‘Scharnhorst Women’s Initiative’), FRG, 1978, directed by Katrin Seybold

    Source: Filmmuseum München

    In the satellite settlement of Scharnhorst near Dortmund, more than thousand women live alone or with their children. This documentary uses the point of view of a 26-year-old single mother of two to document the commitment of the women’s initiative.

  • Heim

    (‘Home’), GDR, 1978/1990, directed by Angelika Andrees, Petra Tschörtner

    © DEFA-Stiftung / Thomas Plenert, Julia Kunert

    Young people living in a children’s home talk about their unstable home situations and domestic violence. Many of them have alcoholic parents. They speak openly about the past and their hopes for a better life.

  • Kribus – Krabus – Domine

    FRG, 1981, directed by Carmen Tartarotti

    Janine Tartarotti
    © Carmen Tartarotti

    Lisa is eight and spending the summer with her parents in the mountains. But her father is often away and her mother is always busy with washing and doing the dishes. Lisa watches and fantasizes about being far away.

  • Manöver

    (‘Manoeuvres’), FRG, 1967, directed by May Spils

    Werner Enke, May Spils
    Quelle: M. Spils

    Monday morning, 7 am. Three alarm clocks ring. Just in case. Even so, the young man doesn’t wake up until the young woman asks the postman to wallop him one. This is a merry rehearsal for ‘Go for It, Baby’.

  • Zärtlichkeiten

    (‘Tendernesses’), FRG, 1985, directed by Maria Lang

    Renate Kretschmar, Annette Sojc
    © Deutsche Kinemathek / DFFB

    Stories from the lesbian subculture in West Berlin, about being in love, clichés, desire, and conflict – “shot as a narrative, with real lesbians at real locations about real feelings”.

DVD of Retrospective 2019

Absolut Medien, 2 DVDs and booklet, language: German, subtitles: English, regional code: codefree, 407 min.

ISBN: 978-3-8488-8025-6

19,90 €

More information

  • Filmverleih

    Retrospektive revisited

    12 x films by women filmmakers

    A selection of 12 films from this year's retrospective can be rented at special conditions until the next Berlinale in February 2020.

    Further information

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