A director fends off meddling execs and egotistical actors while remaking a German classic in this ensemble satire
In a German film studio amid a half-built set, documentarian-turned-feature director Vera (Judith Engel) is trying to pull together a remake of Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s 1972 film The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant. This adaptation of Fassbinder’s own play, now considered a queer classic, featured an all-female cast orbiting around the manipulative titular protagonist. However, Vera wants to recast the crucial role of Karin with a male star, which would entirely change the sexual dynamics of the story. Whether she’ll manage to pull it off looks increasingly doubtful as agencies, TV commissioners and producers jostle over the final casting decisions, and a series of moderately known (in Germany) female actors come in to screen test for the role of Petra, each one mildly put out that they’re being...
In a German film studio amid a half-built set, documentarian-turned-feature director Vera (Judith Engel) is trying to pull together a remake of Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s 1972 film The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant. This adaptation of Fassbinder’s own play, now considered a queer classic, featured an all-female cast orbiting around the manipulative titular protagonist. However, Vera wants to recast the crucial role of Karin with a male star, which would entirely change the sexual dynamics of the story. Whether she’ll manage to pull it off looks increasingly doubtful as agencies, TV commissioners and producers jostle over the final casting decisions, and a series of moderately known (in Germany) female actors come in to screen test for the role of Petra, each one mildly put out that they’re being...
- 8/5/2020
- by Leslie Felperin
- The Guardian - Film News
Cannes Film Festival, Critics' WeekEmily Atef's "The Stranger in Me" ("Das Fremde in Mir") is a clinically efficient case-study of post-natal depression that hints at becoming a psychological drama, then opts for a reassuringly happy ending. Technically impressive from beginning to end, with an excellent central performance by Susanne Wolff as the troubled mother, the movie may do business in Germany but is unlikely to travel well.
When Rebecca (Wolff) and her live-in boyfriend Julian (Johann von Bulow), both in their early 30s, decide to have a baby, everything goes according to plan up to the moment of the child's birth. Then Rebecca unexpectedly finds herself plunged into emotional turmoil without any of the maternal feelings she had expected to surge within her.
Counseling does not seem to help. She feels increasingly estranged from her child, and at one point abandons him in his pram in the street. Then she is found lying on her back in the woods, in a near-catatonic state. Professional caretakers are called in, notably Agnes (Dorte Lyssewski), herself a former sufferer from post-natal depression. Gradually, Rebecca is nursed back into a state of mind where she begins to harbor feelings of love for her child.
So far, so case-book. Little is provided to differentiate Rebecca in her relations with her man, her mother Lore (Maren Kroymann) or her work (in a flower shop) from the other hundreds of thousands of sufferers from post-natal depression.
When at last something like a plot is worked up -- failing to understand Rebecca's condition, Julian enrolls his sister (Judith Engel) and father to deny her access to her child -- the drama appears perfunctory and is too easily resolved.
Wolff is convincing in her portrayal of a mother in distress, but what her character lacks -- like the movie as a whole -- is that spark of fantasy that will engage audiences fully rather than simply elicit a degree of interest and mild sympathy.
Production companies: Niko Film, ZDF Das Kleine Fernsehspiel, Arte, DFFB
Cast: Susanne Wolff, Johann von Bulow, Marenn Kroymann, Dorte Lyssewski, Herbert Fritsch, Klaus Pohl, Judith Engel, Hans Diehl.
Director: Emily Atef.
Screenwriters: Emily Atef, Esther Bernstorff.
Photography: Henner Besuch.
Production design: Annette Lofy.
Music: Manfred Eicher.
Editor: Beatrice Babin.
Sales: Bavaria International Film
No rating, 99 minutes.
When Rebecca (Wolff) and her live-in boyfriend Julian (Johann von Bulow), both in their early 30s, decide to have a baby, everything goes according to plan up to the moment of the child's birth. Then Rebecca unexpectedly finds herself plunged into emotional turmoil without any of the maternal feelings she had expected to surge within her.
Counseling does not seem to help. She feels increasingly estranged from her child, and at one point abandons him in his pram in the street. Then she is found lying on her back in the woods, in a near-catatonic state. Professional caretakers are called in, notably Agnes (Dorte Lyssewski), herself a former sufferer from post-natal depression. Gradually, Rebecca is nursed back into a state of mind where she begins to harbor feelings of love for her child.
So far, so case-book. Little is provided to differentiate Rebecca in her relations with her man, her mother Lore (Maren Kroymann) or her work (in a flower shop) from the other hundreds of thousands of sufferers from post-natal depression.
When at last something like a plot is worked up -- failing to understand Rebecca's condition, Julian enrolls his sister (Judith Engel) and father to deny her access to her child -- the drama appears perfunctory and is too easily resolved.
Wolff is convincing in her portrayal of a mother in distress, but what her character lacks -- like the movie as a whole -- is that spark of fantasy that will engage audiences fully rather than simply elicit a degree of interest and mild sympathy.
Production companies: Niko Film, ZDF Das Kleine Fernsehspiel, Arte, DFFB
Cast: Susanne Wolff, Johann von Bulow, Marenn Kroymann, Dorte Lyssewski, Herbert Fritsch, Klaus Pohl, Judith Engel, Hans Diehl.
Director: Emily Atef.
Screenwriters: Emily Atef, Esther Bernstorff.
Photography: Henner Besuch.
Production design: Annette Lofy.
Music: Manfred Eicher.
Editor: Beatrice Babin.
Sales: Bavaria International Film
No rating, 99 minutes.
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