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The Indomitable Leni Peikert

Die Unbezähmbare Leni Peickert

West Germany

1970

60 Min
Black and White
1.33:1
German
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DIR Alexander Kluge

PROD Alexander Kluge

SCR Alexander Kluge, Hannelore Hoger

DP Guenter Hoermann, Thomas Mauch

CAST Hannelore Hoger, Theodor W. Adorno, Heinrich Böll, Alfred Edel, Hans Magnus Enzensberger, Sigi Graue, Alexander Kluge

ED Beate Mainka-Jellinghaus

SOUND Bernd Höltz

Synopsis

Kluge’s pendant to Artists Under the Big Top: Perplexed (Die Artisten in der Zirkuskuppel: Ratlos), this small-scale film picks up Leni’s (Hannelore Hoger) tale as she struggles on the fringes of show business. This time, the progression of her career is reversed. It begins with her work on television, where she is fired for smuggling in an uncensored film, forcing her to return to the circus.

Originally made for German television, this production offers a second look at the complex character of Leni Peickert, another of Kluge’s restless, impatient heroines. Not actually a sequel, this curious film consists of material originally shot for Big Top and represents the director’s ongoing exploration of melodrama and political modernism. —http://www.1worldfilms.com

Director

Original

Alexander Kluge

Alexander Kluge (born 14 February 1932, Halberstadt, Saxony-Anhalt) is a noted film director and author.

After growing up during the Second World War, he studied law, history and music at the universities of Marburg and Frankfurt am Main, receiving his doctorate in law in 1956. While studying in Frankfurt, Kluge befriended the philosopher Theodor Adorno, who had returned to Germany and was teaching at the Institute for Social Research, or Frankfurt School. Kluge served as a legal counsel for the Institute, and began writing his earliest stories during this period. At Adorno’s suggestion, he also began to investigate filmmaking, and in 1958, Adorno introduced him to German filmmaker Fritz Lang.

Kluge directed his first film in 1960, Brutalität im Stein (Brutality in Stone), a 12-minute, black and white, lyrical montage work which, against the German commercial (Papa’s Kino) cinematic amnesia of the prior decade, inaugurated an exploration of the Nazi past. The film premiered… read more

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