Posts Tagged ‘Benjamin Heisenberg’

Berlin 2010 Preview: Competition, Part 1

February 3, 2010

The Berlin Film Festival is often overshadowed by Cannes Film Festival as it’s very difficult to dock a yacht in Berlin. It’s endured for 60 years, though, as an early warning system for the best of the year’s international art house fare. The Competition strand features those films vying for the Golden Bear, which in past years has gone to Jose Padilha’s The Elite Squad and Claudia Llosa’s The Milk of Sorrow. The field’s first half features Japanese war stories, the making of one of the worst films ever made, criminals old and young and the returns of Polanski, Baumbach and Popogrebsky.

Bal (Honey)

Turkish director Semih Kaplanoglu’s fifth film is a father/son story set in the remote mountains. Young Yusuf is ostracized at school for his stammer, but worships his beekeeper dad, who tends to a network of precarious treetop hives. When his father is called away on business, Yusuf follows him into the forest.

Kyatapira (Caterpillar)

Lieutenant Kurokawa returns from the front of the second Sino-Japanese War. He’s had his arms and legs blown off. Shigeko is expected to dutifully attend to her immobile war hero husband. Director Koji Wakamatsu’s previous film, the acclaimed United Red Army, still awaits release in the U.S. Based on the story by Edogawa Rampo, which was censored by the Japanese authorities in 1939.

(more…)

Trailerama: Der Räuber (The Robber)

December 23, 2009

During the mid-1980s, Austria became gripped by the story of “Pumpgun Ronnie,” so-called because of the Ronald Reagan mask he wore while robbing banks. Ronnie was in reality marathoner Johannes Rettenberger, a man who had frequent recourse to saying “feets don’t fail me now.” Benjamin Heisenberg has turned Martin Prinz’s account of the athlete/criminal into a breathless thriller that should boast some of the finest on-foot chase sequences since District 13.