Die Ehe der Maria Braun The Marriage of Maria Braun Rainer Werner Fassbinder [videorecording]=
Material type: TextLanguage: German Summary language: English Original language: German Subtitle language: English Series: The Rainer Werner Fassbinder Collection | Die Ehe der Maria Braun | The Marriage of Maria BraunPublication details: Germany Albatros Filmproduktion Fengler Films Filmverlag der Autoren Tango Film Trio Film Westdeutscher Rundfunk 1979Description: 1 videodisc (ca. 120 min.) sound, color. 4 3/4 inOther title:- The Marriage of Maria Braun
- The Marriage of Maria Braun
- PN1997 .E440 1979
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
DVD - Video | SILC Learning Support Services DH132-DVD-B: DVD Cabinet B | PN1997 .E440 1979 | Available | German audio with English subtitles. | 002031 |
Contains the following:
- Main feature: "Die Ehe der Maria Braun" (1979).
- Documentaries: "Life, Love & Celluloid" (1998) and "The Fassbinder Family" (2016).
- Interview: "Rainer Werner Fassbinder" (1977).
From case cover:
Rainer Werner Fassbinder's penultimate film of the seventies was also his most successful. Popular with audiences and critics alike, among them Roder Elber and Francçois Truffaut, "The Marriage of Maria Braun" finally provided its director with the international breakthrough he had craved for so long.
Maria Braun marries a young soldier amid the Allied bombing raids of World War II the day before he must return to the Russian front. Awaiting his return in 1945, she is informed of his death and must endure and navigate the post-war years alone. Mirroring the German Wirtschaftswunder ('economic miracle'), she determinedly rises to prosperity as a self-made woman.
Centered on an astonishing performance from Fassbinder regular Hanna Schygulla in the lead role, "The Marriage of Maria Braun" took over four million Deutschmarks in its home country and made over a million dollars in the US. Such success proved influential too – without it we would likely never have seen Helma Sanders-Brahms's "Germany, Pale Mother" or Edgar Reitz's epic "Heimat".
Blu-ray video; Dolby Digital 1.0; monaural; 1080p; Region B; 1.66:1 as 16:9 widescreen.
German audio with English subtitles.
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