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actingoutpolitics

31Oct11

R.W. Fassbinder’s “In a Year of 13 Moons” is dedicated to the analysis of the psychological nature of self-sacrificial love that is personified by the main character Erwin whose childhood was mutilated by the fact that he was abandoned by his mother and later on as a boy met with other situations that resonated with the primal rejection. Fassbinder scrupulously describes how Erwin’s childhood influences his behavior as an adult (including his decision to make a sex change operation to please the person he was in love with). In US today, sex change operations have become more widespread than before and even a popular topic of TV talk shows. For this reason for us, Americans of 21st century, it’s especially important to learn what Fassbinder thought about the readiness to maim the body so as to be in tune with the conventional morals or fashion. Erwin was not able to respect his homosexual desire and in a conformist way blamed his biology for not corresponding to “his true nature”. His sex change operation is a result of his inability to take responsibility for his unconventional sexual desire. The wider concerns of the film are the human ability to make genuine existential decisions instead of “choosing” between conventional ones and even more difficult the capacity to judge one’s decisions retrospectively as wrong. This film about Erwin/ Elvira‘s unique destiny can help us to contemplate about human life in general and our personal scripts inside it. Volker Spengler playing Erwin/Elvira impersonates the human soul wandering in between genders, as common denominator of a man and woman. It is an important step towards a new kind of humanity that refuses to be dichotomized into machos and pussycats. As always, in this film Fassbinder manages to make individual problem into a universal issue, and generously uses visual symbolism to make the points about human psyche, life, society and psychology of morality, amorality and immorality. Please, visit: www.actingoutpolitics.com to read about “In a Year of 13 Moons” and other Fassbinder’s films (with analysis of the shots), and also essays about films by Godard, Resnais, Bergman, Bunuel, Bresson, Kurosawa, Pasolini, Antonioni, Cavani, Alain Tanner, Anne-Marie Mieville, Bertolucci, Maurice Pialat, Herzog, Wenders, Ken Russell, Ozu, Rossellini, Jerzy Skolimowski, Moshe Mizrahi and Ronald Neame. By Victor Enyutin

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keldon

22Jun11

The hopeless agony that can stem from the inability to fulfill the desire to be loved. I find this film so much more moving when you consider why it was made (suicide of Fassbinder's former lover). There are some great monologues here, and who can ever forget the incredibly graphic slaughterhouse scene (both in terms of imagery and dialogue)?

Aaron Garrett

19Jun11

On my all time top ten.

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Hideous Bitch Princess

20Jan11

"The self-murderer doesn't reject life but only the conditions offered to him. Thus he rejects not the will to live but merely life; thereby destroying his experience of life."

DeJardinblum and 2 others like this

Z u, Commie Bee

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Vincent Bergeron

24Jan10

Like all Almadovar movies in one !! Makes Male Educatione looks like a cute documentary about gay culture. We forgot about the left field cinema of this kind and now makes conventional cinema that we find masterful when it is made in automatism of mind like ads on TV. I exagerate, but watch the kill floor scene and think about it.

Aaron Garrett likes this