A Dream, What Else? Explained

A Dream, What Else?
Director:Hans-Jürgen Syberberg
Producer:Kurt Liewehr
Herbert Machart
Starring:Edith Clever
Cinematography:Dieter Gessl
Editing:Michael Trnka
Studio:TMS Film
Runtime:132 minutes
Country:Austria
Germany
Language:German

A Dream, What Else? (German: '''Ein Traum, was sonst?''') is a 1995 Austrian-German drama film written and directed by Hans-Jürgen Syberberg. It stars Edith Clever as Sybille von Bismarck, the daughter-in-law of Otto von Bismarck.

Plot

The film consists of a monologue where the main character, aged and widowed, mourns the defeat of Prussia at the end of World War II. She recites from The Trojan Women by Euripides, The Prince of Homburg by Heinrich von Kleist and Faust: Part II (1832) by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.[1]

Production

The monologue was first performed on stage in Berlin in 1990 and toured several countries during the following years. The film was shot in the summer 1994 at Szene-Theater in Salzburg, Austria, for Szene Salzburg and ORF. It was produced through Syberberg's German company TMS Film.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rockwell. John. 1992-09-02. The Re-Emergence of an Elusive Director. The New York Times. 2013-07-06.
  2. Web site: Ein Traum, was sonst?. German. Filmportal.de. German Film Institute. 2013-07-06.