Hans Arnhold Center Library

Counter-Cinema of the Berlin School

Abel, Marco

Counter-Cinema of the Berlin School - 1 Aufl.(Nachdr.) - 348 S. III. b/w. - Screen Cultures: German Film and the Vis .

The contemporary German directors collectively known as the "Berlin School" constitute the most significant filmmaking movement to come out of Germany since the New German Cinema of the 1970s, not least because their films mark the emergence of a new film language. The Berlin School filmmakers, including Christian Petzold, Thomas Arslan, Angela Schanelec, Christoph Hochhäusler, Ulrich Köhler, Benjamin Heisenberg, Maren Ade, and Valeska Grisebach, are reminiscent of the directors of the New German Autorenkino and of French cinéma des auteurs of the 1960s. This is the first book-length study of the Berlin School in any language. Its central thesis - that the movement should be regarded as a "counter-cinema" - is built around the unusual style of realism employed in its films, a realism that presents images of a Germany that does not yet exist. Abel concludes that it is precisely how these films' images and sounds work that renders them political: they are political notbecause they are message-driven films but because they are made politically, thus performing a "redistribution of the sensible" - a direct artistic intervention in the way politics partitions ways ofdoing and making, saying and seeing. Marco Abel is Professor of English and Film Studies at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln.

9781571139412


Motion pictures--Germany--History--21st century

Class of Fall 2019 Dirk Ippen Fellow Fellow
©American Academy in Berlin GmbH, 2023
Technical support: HKS3, Koha support in Austria and beyond, for the American Academy in Berlin GmbH, 2022-2023
Background picture: by Annie Spratt  on Unsplash

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