Coded Cinema | February Programme Code: 0200
Films selected by Dani Gal & Achim Lengerer in the framework of the project voiceoverhead
The Conversation
(1974) 120 min Francis Ford Coppola
The Conversation is an Academy Award nominated 1974 mystery thriller about audio surveillance, starring Gene Hackman, John Cazale, Teri Garr, and Cindy Williams; it also features an early performance by Harrison Ford and an uncredited appearance from Robert Duvall. In between The Godfather and The Godfather Part II, Coppola directed The Conversation, the story of a paranoid wiretapping and surveillance expert (played by Gene Hackman) who finds himself caught up in a possible murder plot. Though the script was written in the mid-1960s, the film was released shortly after the Watergate scandal broke and thus reflected contemporary issues of personal responsibility and the encroachment of technology on privacy.
Vampyr (1932) 30 min
Carl Theodor Dreyer
Freely adapted from classic Victorian supernatural tales by author Sheridan Le Fanu, Vampyr tells the story of a young man who becomes involved with two sisters, one of whom, wasting away with a strange sickness, turns out to be the victim of a vampire.
Klassenverhältnisse (1984) 122 min
Danièle Huillet, Jean-Marie Straub
This adaptation of the Franz Kafka novel Amerika - retains the prevalent theme and tone of Kafka?s work - an air of paranoia, a fear of authority, of being unaware of all the facts and not behaving in the correct way, of not knowing one?s rightful place and of being unable to persuade one?s case to a distant, uncaring authority. Being set in America, one would expect Kafka?s to be looking beyond the confines of his oppressive life, upbringing and employment towards a new beginning, but there is never any sense of Kafka?s America being the land of opportunity that it is for so many other immigrants.
Halfmoon Files (2007) 87 min
Philip Scheffner
Mall Singh's crackling words are heard as he spoke into the phonographic funnel on 11th December 1916 in the city of Wünsdorf, near Berlin. Ninety years later, Mall Singh is a number on an old Shellac record in an archive - one amongst hundreds of voices of colonial soldiers of the First World War. In his experimental search The Halfmoon Files, Philip Scheffner follows the traces of the voices to the origin of their recording. Like a memory game - which remains incomplete right until the end - he uncovers pictures and sounds that revive the ghosts of the past. His protagonists' words intersect along the concentric spirals the story follows. Those who pressed the record button on the phonographs, on photo and film cameras, were the ones to write official history. Mall Singh and the other prisoners of war of the Halfmoon Camp disappeared from this story. Their spirits and ghostly appearances seem to play with the filmmaker, to ambush him. They pursue him on his path, to bring their voices back to their home countries. Philip Scheffner lives and works as a filmmaker, video- and sound artist in Berlin.
Vampyr (2001-2002) 15 min Michael Pfrommer
The Japanese Chie Nagaura reads a phonetic transcription of a German text. The Latin characters used in German have been transcribed into the sign language "Katakana". This enables her to read a text in a language she doesn't know. The original German text was taken from the film Vampyr "The dream of Allan Grey", by Carl Theodor Dreyer produced in 1932. Michael Pfommer is a visual artist working in Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
The man who knew to much (1934) 75 min Alfred Hitchcock
Vintage Hitchcock, with sheer wit and verve masking an implausible plot that spins out of the murder of a spy (Fresnay) in an equally implausible Switzerland (all back-projected mountains), leaving a pair of innocent bystanders (Banks and Best) to track his secret - and their kidnapped daughter - in a dark and labyrinthine London. Where the remake had Doris Day maternally crooning with fateful foreboding, sharpshooting Best simply grabs a rifle and gets after the villains. Pacy, exciting, and with superb settings (taxidermist's shop, dentist's chair, mission chapel complete with gun-toting motherly body, shootout re-enacting the Sidney Street siege, terrific climax in the Albert Hall), it also has nice villainy from a scarred, leering Lorre (here making his British debut). At two-thirds the length of the remake, it's twice the fun. (From an original story by Charles Bennett and DB Wyndham Lewis.)
The Testament of Dr. Mabuse (1933) 122 min
Fritz Lang
This is a very unique crime-horror film by director Fritz Lang. Though you may initially be lost it doesn't take too long to figure out what is going on: the titled character (Rudolf Klein-Rogge) has plans to create havoc and destroy order in the World. However, his detailed instructions have to be carried out by others, like Dr. Baum (Oscar Beregi Sr.), because Mabuse is in an insane asylum. In fact, Mabuse dies and his ghostly soul inhabits Baum?s, who then directs the minions to do terrible deeds. One of these henchmen is an ex-con named Thomas Kent (Gustav Diessl), who's recently fallen in love with Lilli (Wera Liessem), from whom he'd borrowed (and repaid) money after he was released from prison. Kent is uncomfortable with performing his role and, after an ingenious escape with Lilli, ends up assisting the (feared by all criminals) police Commissioner Lohmann (Otto Wernicke), who'd been trying to figure out what happened to a former associate named Hofmeister (Karl Meixner) and the assassinated Dr. Kramm (Theodor Loos). Hofmeister had been drummed out of the department for accepting a bribe, but had learned both Mabuse?s name, which he etched on his apartment window, and of his counterfeiting plans.
The Coded Cinema offers 24 hour access to an intimate 12 seat film theater, allowing visitors to let themselves in at their own leisure. The Coded Cinema is located in a small building adjacent to the main entrance. The access codes and programmes are distributed monthly. |