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TIFF Cinematheque Presents – ON THE ROAD – The Films of Wim Wenders
by Gilbert Seah
The On the Road – the films of Wim Wenders” retrospective is devoted to German director Wim Wenders and features new digital restorations of his essential early works.
Born Ernst Wilhelm, Wim Wenders, alongside Fassbinder and Herzog, is a major German director of the ‘New’ German cinema. Besides being a filmmaker, Wenders, still working at present in film is a playwright, author and photographer. Wenders works with the medium of photography, emphasizing images of desolate landscapes which resulted in his second latest film THE SALT OF THE EARTH featuring Brazilian photographer Sebastião Salgado.
Wenders has gone on to win many awards including prizes at Cannes, Venice as well 3 Oscar nominations. His most famous film is arguably WINGS OF DESIRE that won him Best Director at Cannes in 1987.
Wenders’ favourite collaborators include author Peter Handke whose directorial debut THE LEFT-HANDED WOMAN will also be screened.
Wenders’ films have encompassed different genres that include detective film noire, documentary and personal drama. This is the chance for the public to appreciate a whole range of films by Wenders,
Fo complete program, showtimes, venue and ticket ricing, please check the Cinematheque website at:
tiff.net
The series runs from Jan 28th to March 6th. Films are screened at The TIFF Bell Lightbox.
TIFF Cinematheque also presents a sidebar to the retrospective, Wim’s Films: American Friends & Foreign Influences, running from January 30 to March 17. Curated by James Quandt, Senior Programmer, TIFF Cinematheque, it spotlights fifteen of “Wim’s Films”—road movies and noirs, venerated classics and films maudits—gathered both from evidence (Wenders’ own list of favourites) and inference (of his obvious influences and affinities). Again check the Cinematheque website above for the complete sidebar program.
Selected films are capsule reviewed below. Films were provided courtesy of TIFF Cinematheque. Dates of screenings of the selected films listed below the reviews.
CAPSULE REVIEWS:
ALICE IN THE CITIES (ALICE IN DEN STADEN) (West Germany 1974) ****
Directed by Wim Wenders
Considered one of the best but little seen Wenders film that almost never got made when the director found his film too similar to Peter Bogdanovic’s PAPER MOON. ALICE is the first part of Wenders’ “Road Movie Trilogy” which included The Wrong Move (1975) and Kings of the Road (1976). The film is shot in black and white by Robby Müller with several long scenes without dialogue, also used by other directors like Wes Anderson and Jim Jarmusch. The story concerns a writer Philip Winter (Rüdiger Vogler) who has missed his publisher’s deadline for writing an article about the United States. He decides to return to Germany, and encounters a German woman, Lisa (Lisa Kreuzer), and her daughter, Alice (Yella Rottländer), who are both doing the same thing. Lisa leaves Alice temporarily in Phil’s care with Phil stuck with Alice, (like father and daunter in PAPER MOON) searching various cities of Germany for her grandmother. But it is more the story of Phil, who needs to find himself and some meaning in life. Phil does not feel his own existence and Alice is his saviour. A seemingly simple film with deeper undertones and a profound message.
(Screening: Jan 29)
THE AMERICAN FRIEND (W Germany 1977) ***
Directed by Wim Wenders
Wenders who has an obsession with Patricia Highsmith crime novels get his chance to film one of her stories. Unfortunately, the film fails as a crime thriller and barely succeeds as film detective noir. The plot concerns Tom Ripley (Dennis Hopper), who deals in forged art, suggesting a picture framer he knows who would make a good hit man for a mysterious Frenchman (Gerard Blain). It is this farmer, Jonathan Zimmermann (Bruno Ganz) who is the film’s lead character. Wenders treats him just as in his other films. It is a character study of a lonely man, suffering from fear of his death from leukaemia, wanting to provide for his family. So, he takes his job as a hit man. Wenders does provide surprisingly suspenseful scenes, like the ones in the subway when Jonathan executes his first hit and the train sequence. But there are too many loose ends in the story and the story lacks coherency.
(Screening: Feb 5)
BUENA VISTA SOCIAL CLUB (USA/UK/France/Germany/Cuba 1999) ****
Directed by Wim Wenders
The film that shows Americans more about Cuba than any other, while celebrating Cuban music at its best! The BUENA VIISTA SOCIAL CLUB is an old meeting of band musicians and singers in a building that does not exist any longer. The musicians used to meet weekly to perform band music while people listened and danced. In this delight tribute to these Cuban musicians, Ry Cooder assembled talents like Compay Segundo, Joachi Cooder, Omara Portoundo, Ruben Gonzale among others to perform together at NYC’s Carnegie Hall. The result is a reunion of friends and music. Just go with the flow, sit back and enjoy this free flowing tribute to times gone by and thankfully, not yet lost. The documentary also won Wim Wenders (a lover of music, as evident in all his film where music plays a large part) an Oscar nomination for Best Documentary.
(Screening: Feb 27)