Movies We Like

The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant

Dir: Rainer Werner Fassbinder, 1972. Starring: Margit Carstensen, Hanna Schygulla, Katrin Schaake, Irm Hermann. Foreign.
Bitter Tears of Petra von KantWhen choosing where to start in a director's filmography, I've always enjoyed picking at random. Recommendations tend to be fairly overwhelming and a total buzz kill. The themes of Fassbinder's films were always intriguing to me, and since I enjoy seeing filmmakers break down and interpret romantic relationships, I started with The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant. The film surpassed my expectations in terms of human dynamics by exposing a character's relationship to the women in her life in such a constricting setting, from her lover down to her servant.

Petra von Kant (Margit Carstensen) is as far removed from an overnight success as a person could get. As a fashion designer in Germany, she had to go through the process of constant rejection and a humiliating divorce before being taken seriously in her field. These experiences have turned her into a cynic in matters of work and love. Her daughter is away at boarding school and she lives alone with her servant/secretary/assistant, Marlene (Irm Hermann). Marlene's role as a servant in her home goes far beyond the orthodox. In a sense, she's a broken extension of Petra, living vicariously through her disgrace and vanity. You get the feeling that she once aspired to be a self-sustaining fashion designer, but found herself tailoring not only Petra's designs, but her mess of an existence.

Cries and Whispers

Dir: Ingmar Bergman, 1972. Starring: Harriet Andersson, Ingrid Thulin, Erland Josephson, Liv Ullmann, Kari Sylwan. Foreign.
Cries and Whispers DVD"In the screenplay, it says that red represents for me the interior of the soul. When I was a child, I imagined the soul to be a dragon, a shadow floating in the air like blue smoke....But inside the dragon, everything was red." -- Ingmar Bergman

For most of Ingmar Bergman’s career, the decision to shoot in black and white, both before and after Cries and Whispers, has been one of choice and trust. The delight of seeing his vision in color is not simply based on color itself but of his use of it in the film. Like a poet, Bergman decided to look past what color can mean for the eyes alone, to its purpose to help us understand and appreciate life, death, and the soul.

Cries and Whispers follows the current and past lives of three sisters, Agnes (Harriet Andersson), Karin (Ingrid Thulin), and Maria (Liv Ullmann). Aided by a faithful maid Anna (Kari Sylwan) and involved doctor David (Erland Josephson) and total isolation, the group attempts to focus on the pain of Agnes, who is dying of cancer. Through her position, Agnes waits for her life to end peacefully, keeping good and important memories relevant, while her two sisters, now faced with witnessing death, constantly reevaluate their own lives and disappointment with their ability to have intimacy with the ones they love.