| Marianne & Juliane | 
enlarge | Buy New: $199.90
Buy New/Used from $59.10
Avg. Customer Rating:   (based on 4 reviews) Sales Rank: 15723 Category: Video
Actors: Jutta Lampe, Barbara Sukowa, Ruediger Vogler, Doris Schade, Verenice Rudolph Director: Margarethe Von Trotta Publisher: New Yorker Video Studio: New Yorker Video Manufacturer: New Yorker Video Label: New Yorker Video Format: Color, Subtitled, Ntsc Language: German (Original Language) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Media: VHS Tape Running Time: 106 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 4.2 x 1.1
ISBN: 630316868X UPC: 717119350437 EAN: 9786303168685 ASIN: 630316868X
Release Date: November 11, 1998 Theatrical Release Date: 1980 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Customer Reviews:
  Unforgettable April 8, 2007 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
In the early 1980's I lived for art-house films. "Marianne & Juliane" nearly cured me of that: My knees were knocking trying to leave the showing. No other film (for me) better portrays the love/hate bond between siblings or the experience of well-minded individuals slamming up against extablished politcal structures. What I only learned recently from trolling the internet, is that the film is based on real-life sisters and the events that transpired in their lives. The story is a series of horrors that von Troota underplays at each step. No other director could have, or would have made this film. Pair it with Fassbinder's "The Third Generation," and you have a haughting view of radical politics in Germany.
This film won several awards but never reached a wide audience. Sadly, this has been true of much of von Trotta's work until the recent "Rossenstrasse." For me, "Rossenstrasse" is powerful but von Trotta-lite. For the political seek out "Rosa Luxemburg," "Das Versprechen" (1995) [The Promise] and two films made with her then-husband Volker Schlondorf: The Lost Honor of Katharina Blum (1975) [codirector] and "Die Faelschung" (1981) [Circle of Deceit -coauthor] both bear her stamp. For the personal as political, "Schwestern oder Die Balance des Gluecks" (1979) [Sisters, or the Balance of Happiness] is a don't miss.
  Marianne and Juliane June 3, 2000 15 out of 15 found this review helpful
This is one of the best films I have ever seen, and I don't say that lightly. Images from this film haunt my sleep even now, and it is a week since I've seen it. That is the kind of impact that director Margarethe von Trotta must have been going for -- she wanted her audience to feel this film viscerally, which was exactly what her protagonists, the Baader-Meinhof group, were also going for -- one should generally feel a firebombing quite viscerally. Von Trotta succeeds. This is the story of two West German sisters during the politcally turbulant late 60's and early 70's. One works within the system to reform it; the other has abandoned all societal values and lives on the fringes as a terrorist (the film is based on real characters). The viewer is dropped into the story as it is already unfolding. Things have already gone downhill, and they're about to get worse. Von Trotta frames her story brilliantly and the inner portion, a series of ongoing tableaus and flashbacks, show how each sister has arrived to her present moral condition. This is not an easy film to watch. It is bleak and it is harrowing. It is simply a tragedy. The German title, "The Time of Lead", is infinitely more fitting than the vapid English title. There are various scenes that must remain with one. It is as tragic as anything Goethe or Shakespeare could have imagined. But -- stick around until the end. Von Trotta had something larger in mind. It is also one of the most life-affirming movies -- not syrupy, mind you (this film did NOT come out of Hollywood -- one must THINK about this one), that is available. "Think" is the key. The only violence one sees in this film is after the fact, at all generational levels. Baader-Meinhof were not the only ones inflicting violence, and bankers were not the only ones who suffered. Watch, and see who really suffers, and you may rethink your entire moral outlook -- as I did, after seeing this remarkable film.
  The Baader Meinhof time revisited, with a knockout punch November 30, 1999 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
I first saw this video at a writing conference at Skidmore; having been a student in Germany at the time of the events described, I have to say that the film brought back with ferocious emotional impact the ambivalent feelings of an American onlooker to the upheaval then going on in German academic and political circles. The film is one of the most gripping and involving I have ever seen. It deserves a wider public. I use it to show my German language students what the issues at stake were during the student revolt in Germany.
  two sisters on a collision course with history - wonderful! July 30, 1999 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
Die Bleierne Zeit (Marianne & Juliane) is a captivating film about two sisters, very different on the surface but forever linked by a common personal and political history. Von Trotta brings German history to life with this film set in the period of the Baader-Mainhof terrorist group's reign in Germany. A suspenseful film with a bit of conspiracy and unsolved mystery thrown in.
|
|
|