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Agnes and His Brothers

Agnes und seine Brüder

Germany

2004

115 Min
Color
2.35:1
English, German
  • Currently 2.9/5 Stars.
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DIR Oskar Roehler

PROD Stefan Arndt

SCR Oskar Roehler

DP Carl-Friedrich Koschnick

CAST Martin Weiß, Moritz Bleibtreu, Herbert Knaup, Katja Riemann, Tom Schilling, Suzan Anbeh, Vadim Glowna, Margit Carstensen, Lee Daniels, Marie Zielcke, Til Schweiger

ED Simone Hofmann

PROD DES Sabine Rudolph

MUSIC Martin Todsharow

Venice (Horizons), Rotterdam (Kings & Aces), Mar del Plata, Berlinale (German Cinema), Göteborg

Synopsis

Agnes and his brothers have little in common except an eccentric father, relationship problems that are totally screwing up their lives, and a distinct possibility those two things are connected. Sex addict /meek librarian Hans-Jörg can’t stop peeping on comely women. Werner, a successful politician, watches powerlessly as his bored wife and smartass son destroy their family. And Agnes, a transsexual, can’t quite fit into the mold of happy homemaker expected by her bossy boyfriend. An outrageous story of how everyday desires for sex, love and understanding can end up pushing people closer and closer to the edge. –First Run Features

Director

Original

Oskar Roehler

Oskar Roehler, born January 21, 1959, in Starnberg, as the son of writer Gisela Elsner (who later emigrated to the GDR) and Luchterhand editor Klaus Roehler. Oskar Roehler grew up with his father in Berlin. From the beginning of the 1980s on, Roehler worked as a writer und published “Abschnappuniversum”, a collection of stories, in 1984. He wrote screenplays for Christoph Schlingensief (“Terror 2000”, 1992) and for Niklaus Schilling ("Deutschfieber, 1992), among others. In 1995, Roehler made his debut as a director with the one-hour long low budget production “Gentleman”. In 1997, Roehler won the award as “Best new director” at the Munich film festival for his second film “Silvester Countdown” (“In With The New”, 1996). Three years later, he made his final breakthrough with “Die Unberührbare” (“No Place To Go”, 2000), a film about the life of his mother. Roehler won the German film award for “Best picture” as well as several awards from international festivals (including Miami, Karlovy… read more

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