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Summer in the City

West Germany

1970

125 Min
Black and White
German
  • Currently 3.6/5 Stars.
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DIR Wim Wenders

PROD Wim Wenders

SCR Wim Wenders

DP Robby Müller

CAST Hanns Zischler, Edda Köchl, Libgart Schwarz, Marie Bardischewski, Gerd Stein

ED Peter Przygodda

MUSIC Chuck Berry, The Troggs, Lovin' Spoonful

Synopsis

Titled in English, made on a shoestring provided by the Munich film school, Wenders’ first feature – ‘My longest short’, as he wryly put it – has a plot about an ex-jailbird drifting through Germany until he escapes, not to the America of his dreams but to Holland. Essentially, though, it’s a documentary about the time and the place, and as such it’s a fascinating source book for Wenders’ later work. The aimless odyssey with ubiquitous rock songs; the endless shots (by Robby Müller) of landscapes and nocturnal streets seen speeding by from the windows of cars and trains; the tangential encounters with strange friends or friendly strangers; the laments for lost movie palaces; above all, the celebration of obsessive enthusiasms, including a delightfully tangled attempt by someone never seen again to articulate the solemnity of John Wayne’s association with the Three Wise Men in Ford’s Three Godfathers. –Time Out

Director

Original

Wim Wenders

Born in Dusseldorf just after the end of World War II, German film director Wim Wenders grew up with an insatiable appetite for American movies. Not all that interested in big-budget products, he, instead, developed a fascination with B-movies, notably melodramas and Westerns. After studying Medicine and Philosophy in his native country, Wenders took up art in Paris (a mecca for viewing American films), and then returned to his homeland to attend Munich’s Academy of Film and Television. Like many of his French movie-fan brethren, Wenders began his career writing film criticism before directing a few short subjects of his own, and, in 1970, he and several other young filmmakers formed a production-distribution firm, Filmverlag Der Autoren. Summer in the City (1970) was Wenders’ first feature film, but it was his 1973 adaptation of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter that first brought him attention outside of Germany. The film included many accomplishments, most notably coaxing… read more

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