Reviews of The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant
Displaying all 2 reviews
Robert W Peabody III
21Oct09
The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant (1972)
DIR Rainer Werner Fassbinder
SCR Reiner Werner Fassbinder
124 Min
To call Bitter Tears anything less than brilliant, would be cinematic blasphemy. Fassbinder used women as a proxy to express his inner conflicts regarding: instrumentality, autonomy, agency, violability, fungibility, ownership and subjectivity.
Objectification, however, remains the same from any perspective.
Jimmy Cline
15May09
There is an overall sadistic charm to this film. From the beginning the viewer is essentially being set up for what any perceptive person can see is a situation that is bound to end tragically. This ultimately makes Petra’s predicament so translatable. Her own bitterness is reflected in the rest of the women in the film. Whether it be an example of successful love, unrequited love, or bitter memories of a love long past, Fassbinder reminds us of the impossible reality of love. Regardless of what stage it is in, what once stood strong with passion will essentially whither under the lack of balance that the dynamic of desire infects most human relationships with.
- Currently 5.0/5 Stars.