#344
Post
by klee13 » Tue Mar 04, 2008 12:25 am
It took me almost a week to watch this movie, and I finally feel ready to write a few words on it.
First of all, I completely agree with Denti on the Epilogue. It ties the entire movie together in a way that nothing else could. I may not watch the entire movie back to back ever again, but I can definitely see myself watching the Epilogue again in the near future. An interesting note about the organization of the film is that I felt like I was watching a TV series until about halfway through the eleventh chapter. From then on I viewed the entire thing as a movie.
A lot of people have complained about the repetitive nature of the visual style in this film, but I think that is pretty much par for the course for a fifteen and a half hour film. If the style changed every episode, not only would it be only classifiable as a TV series, but it would be terribly inconsistent and schizophrenic. The thing that kept it from getting boring for me was that the story doesn't introduce all of it's main characters at once. Consider: Two of the story's most important characters, Reinhold and Mieze are not introduced until the end of the second and third discs, respectively. Furthermore, each character lends a distinct flavor to the story, (illustrated very well by the set's box art) so the movie stays consistently fresh. In addition to Lamprecht Günter who was obviously excellent, I thought John Gottfried was really great too. Reinhold is not a typical villain, and doesn't even play the part of one in the story until close to the end, but Gottfried's stammering speech made me uncomfortable from the very first moment he was introduced on.
For what it's worth, this is the first Fassbinder film I've ever seen, and I enjoyed it quite a bit. I've had opportunities to watch other films of his in the past, but his body of work never really interested me up until now. However, I think that if you are the type of person who can sit through a fifteen and a half hour movie, it doesn't really matter whether you are the type of person who will enjoy a Fassbinder film anymore.
In response to the earlier comments about how almost every woman in the movie jumps into Franz Biberkopf's lap at the first opportunity they get, I think I might have an answer to why that is. I obviously have not seen it before, but I believe Fassbinder's The BRD Trilogy uses female characters as an allegory for the state that Germany is in. Well, I think that it is possible that he was trying to do the same thing here: In pre-Nazi era Germany, the people were ready and willing to follow anyone (i.e.: Hitler, once he came around) who had power and promised to make everything better. Franz might not have always been a very good example of the latter, but he definitely had a dominating physical presence. (Or at least until certain events halfway through the movie transpire.)
Basically, I liked Alexanderplatz a lot. The length of it almost makes you feel like you're in the environment of Weimar-era Germany, a neat trick. I definitely want to check out some more of Fassbinder's work now.