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Rainer Werner Fassbinder 
(1946 - 1982)

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Texts & Media:  Rainer Werner Fassbinder
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Chaos As Usual : Conversations About Rainer Werner Fassbinder

Names Index:
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QuerelleQuerelle (1982)

Brad Davis and Jeanne Moreau star in this steamy take on Jean Genet's homoerotic novel of sexual obsession and murder in a seedy seaport. Franco Nero is Qurelle's commanding officer who falls hard for the swaggering, sexually brazon sailer. A tale of passion, violence, degradation and intense sexual submission

Director:  Werner Rainer Fassbinder

Starring:  Brad Davis, Jeanne Moreau, Franco Nero

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Fox and his FriendsFox and His Friends (1975)

Fassbinder's first specifically male gay-themed film is a richly textured and powerful drama of the relationship between two gay men of vastly different social backgrounds. A lower-class carnival entertainer, Fox (played by Fassbinder), finds himself suddenly flush after winning 500,000DM in a lottery. He soon becomes involved in an ill-fated romance with gold-digging Eugen, a rich, manipulative young man. The eternal class struggle and the continued exploitation of the poor and working class is tragically played out as the unwitting Fox is swindled out of his money and self-respect by his bourgeois lover and his family. (German with English subtitles)

Director:  Rainer Werner Fassbinder

Starring:  Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Peter Chatel, Harry Baer, Kurt Raab

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Films directed by Fassbinder:

Why Does Herr R. Run Amok? (1969)
Katzelmacher (1969)
Gods of the Plague (1969)
Love Is Colder than Death (1969)
The American Soldier (1970)
Beware of a Holy Whore (1970)
The Merchant of Four Seasons (1971)
Whity (1971)
The Bitter Tears of Petra Von Kant (1972)
Wild Game (1972)
Nora Helmer (1973)
Martha (1973)
Ali -- Fear Eats the Soul (1973)
Effi Briest (1974)
Fox and His Friends (1975)
Shadow of Angels (1976)
Mother Kusters Goes to Heaven (1976)
I Only Want You to Love Me (1976)
Satan's Brew (1976)
Chinese Roulette (1976)
The Stationmaster's Wife (1977)
Germany in Autumn (1977)
The Marriage of Maria Braun (1978)
Despair (1978)
In a Year of 13 Moons (1979)
The Third Generation (1979)
Lili Marleen (1980)
Berlin Alexanderplatz (1980)
Lola (1981)
Veronika Voss (1982)
Querelle (1982)
Beware of a Holy Whore (1993)

Some Texts about Fassbinder:

Chaos As Usual: Conversations About Rainer Werner Fassbinder  by Juliane Lorenz (Editor), Marion Schmid (Editor), Herbert Gher (Translator), Maria Pelikan (Translator), Christa Armstrong (Translator)
Fassbinder's Germany: History Identity Subject (Film Culture in Transition) by Thomas Elsaesser
Rainer Werner Fassbinder  by Laurence Kardish (Editor), Juliane Lorenz (Editor)
Television, Tabloids, and Tears: Fassbinder and Popular Culture
Understanding Rainer Werner Fassbinder: Film As Private and Public Art (Understanding Modern European and Latin American Literature) by Wallace Steadman Watson

     

Fassbinder:  Dark Angel

By Gary Morris for Bright Lights Film Journal

Excerpt:

Few filmmakers lived their private lives more publicly than Rainer Werner Fassbinder (1945-1982), and few have had those lives so relentlessly linked to their artistic output. Starting at age 21, this self-created enfant terrible made over 40 films in 15 years along with numerous plays and TV dramas, but he still managed to become a well-known habitué of New York's leather bars in the '70s, easily recognized and often photographed in his trademark leather jacket, dirty jeans, and perpetual scowl. His films were a fixture in art houses of the time, but his personal life, always well publicized, was riddled with gossip and scandal...

  

 Rainer Werner Fassbinder

By Petri Liukkonen

Excerpt:

"The cinema was the family life I never had at home." Controversial and prolific German director and playwright, who attracted attention with his politically committed and unillusory stage plays and films. Fassbinder's central theme was the political and social corruption of postwar Germany. He wrote most of his plays in 1968-71 for his own "anti-theatre" in Munchen. Fassbinder completed 41 films...

   

Rainer Werner Fassbinder

Biography from Baseline's Encyclopedia of Film

Excerpt:

By far the best known director of the New German Cinema, Fassbinder has also been called the most important filmmaker of the post-WWII generation. Exceptionally versatile and prolific, he directed over 40 films between 1969 and 1982; in addition, he wrote most of his scripts, produced and edited many of his films and wrote plays and songs, as well as acting on stage, in his own films and in the films of others. Although he worked in a variety of genres-the gangster film, comedy, science fiction, literary adaptations-most of his stories employed elements of Hollywood melodrama from the 1950s overlaid with social criticism and avant-garde techniques. Fassbinder's expressed desire was to make films that were both popular and critical successes, but assessment of the results has been decidedly mixed: his critics contend that he became so infatuated with the Hollywood forms he tried to appropriate that the political impact of his films is indistinguishable from conventional melodrama, while his admirers argue that he was a postmodernist filmmaker whose films satisfy audience expectations while simultaneously subverting them...

  

A Date With Fassbinder & Despair

By Phillip Lopate for Hard Press

Excerpt:

It is a curious fact that, in the New York of the '70's, the films of this quintessentially gay director functioned as hot dates for straight couples. (I realize that Ingrid Caven has insisted, in the pages of Cahiers du Cinéma, that Fassbinder was bi-sexual, but I still maintain that his was largely a gay aesthetic: the camp treatment of melodrama, the stylization of women's romantic emotion, the emphasis placed on cruising and tricks, etc.) Their aphrodisiac effect came, I suspect, from the coldness with which he portrayed sex. Especially sex between men and women...

  

Rainer Werner Fassbinder

Excerpt:

"What I would like is to make Hollywood movies, that is, movies as wonderful and universal, but at the same time not as hypocritical, as Hollywood."

Rainer Werner Fassbinder was one of the phenomenons of the cinema. Perhaps the first openly homosexual major director, he was the most prolific filmmaker since the silent era, once making nine in a twelve month period. But, despite this assembly line productivity, and his continuous obsession with Hollywood kitsch, his body of work remains uniquely personal and distinctive throughout. Always controversial, despite numerous awards and critical huzzas, he has elicited wide ranging evaluations from such disparate critics as conservative historian Paul Johnson—"perhaps the most gifted film director even Germany has produced"— to distinguished film historian David Shipman—sample: "an example of the second-rate imitating the third-rate."

This site has short descriptions of several films, with photos.

  

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