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A Way

Ausweg

Germany

2005

13 Min
Color, Black and White
German
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DIR Harun Farocki

SCR Harun Farocki

Synopsis

War always finds a way (Brecht). If there is a relationship between production and destruction, between the development of productive and destructive forces, then the atom bomb is the ultimate weapon of the post-industrial age. Greatest tonnage, highest mortality, maximum devastation. But what comes next, what are the weapons of the post-industrial age ? Post-industrial products are characterised by a declining proportion of material components, meaning that they depreciate more slowly. In order to prevent them clogging the market they have to be artificially aged, or as Marx put it, morally depreciated. The same is true for monopolists : only through constant innovation can products age and lose value ; competition is no longer needed. Until now it was competition that gave rise to enmity. Now, the competition is internal and an external enemy is no longer to be found. The enemy is amongst us and within us. Weapons are needed that can hit one person amongst a thousand. The economics demand wars with maximum precision targeting. Such as : wars fought on humanitarian grounds. —Harun Farocki, www.farocki-film.de

Director

Original

Harun Farocki

Harun Farocki was born in Novi Jicín in 1944 in what is today the Czech Republic. He studied at the German Cinematic and Television Academy (DFFB) in Berlin, from which he was expelled in 1968 for political reasons. In addition to writing theoretical texts, he has scripted numerous films and television productions. His work was shown at Documenta 12 in Kassel and in numerous international retrospectives and has received many awards.

Farocki’s early films are marked by ideas of a cultural revolution as formulated by the increasingly radical Left of the time and are explicitly developed as effective means of political propaganda. In this way, “Inextinguishable Fire” (1968/69) seizes upon the Vietnam War as one of the quintessential themes of the student movement. While his politically-motivated educational films subject the audience to an analytical and consciousness-raising agenda, the subsequent auctorial, essayistic, and documentary films call for a more active reception on… read more

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