Fassbinder's Women Explained

Fassbinder's Women
Director:Rosa von Praunheim
Producer:Gerold Hofmann
Holger Prebe
Starring:Brigitte Mira
Irm Hermann
Hanna Schygulla
Barbara Valentin
Ingrid Caven
Jeanne Moreau
Michael Ballhaus
Harry Baer
Music:Peer Raben
Cinematography:Elfi Mikesch
Editing:Mike Shepard
Studio:ZDF / ARTE
Runtime:90 minutes
Country:Germany
Language:German
Gross:$160,854 (USA)

Fassbinder's Women (German: Für mich gab's nur noch Fassbinder) is a 2000 German documentary film directed by Rosa von Praunheim. The film was shown at the Locarno Festival in 2000 and at the Outfest in Los Angeles in 2001.[1] [2]

Plot

The film consists of several interviews with men and women from the private and professional environment of the German film director Rainer Werner Fassbinder. Rosa von Praunheim gets to the bottom of her relationship with the director, who is said to have been a difficult and eccentric man who did not spare his actors and often treated them badly. Fassbinder's companions usually have an ambivalent relationship with him, since they admired him on the other hand and often had him to thank for their success.

Reception

"As in many of his films, Praunheim's documentary gaze exposes the cliché and thus makes it possible to see the 'Fassbinder phenomenon' in a new way. Praunheim's examination of Fassbinder thus becomes an important piece of German film history." (Prisma Magazin)[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Für mich gab's nur noch Fassbinder. Internet Movie Database. 2022-05-02.
  2. Web site: Für mich gab's nur noch Fassbinder. Mubi. 2022-05-02.
  3. Web site: Für mich gab's nur noch Fassbinder. Prisma Magazin, 2000. 2022-05-02.