Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,736,044 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

All the rage.


What can you say about a fat, ugly sadomasochist sa·do·mas·o·chism  
n.
The combination of sadism and masochism, in particular the deriving of pleasure, especially sexual gratification, from inflicting or submitting to physical or emotional abuse.
 who terrorized everyone around him, drove his lovers to suicide, drank two daily bottles of Remy, popped innumerable pills while stuffing himself like a pig, then croaked from an overdose at 37? Marlene Dietrich in Touch of Evil probably said it all: "He was some kind of man. What does it matter what you say about people?"

Anyway, there's nothing you can say about Rainer Werner Fassbinder that he didn't say about himself (in countless interviews and the horrific self-portrait in Germany in Autumn, 1978). He was the faithful mirror of an ugly world that has grown uglier since his death, without his brilliance, his starving soul, his exorbitantly calculated persona. The contemporary-model artist, countering a century of both exalting ex·alt  
tr.v. ex·alt·ed, ex·alt·ing, ex·alts
1. To raise in rank, character, or status; elevate: exalted the shepherd to the rank of grand vizier.

2.
 and punitive myths, is a sensibly meretricious decorator, good at business, driven by mortgage payments rather than private demons Demons
See also devil; evil; ghosts; hell; spirits and spiritualism.

ademonist

one who denies the existence of the devil or demons.

bogyism, bogeyism

recognition of the existence of demons and goblins.
, preferably married with children, or, if homosexual, devoted to plangent plan·gent  
adj.
1. Loud and resounding: plangent bells.

2. Expressing or suggesting sadness; plaintive: "From a doorway came the plangent sounds of a guitar" 
 little ironies and charity work. Fassbinder, by contrast, thought it was worth dying young if you managed to live at a certain pitch and get your work done: most people are dead at 37 anyway, they just don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 it.

The current Fassbinder retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art features all forty-three of the director's films, including many never previously shown in America, like the seminal five-part television film Eight Hours Don't Make a Day and the director's sole science-fiction movie, World on a Wire. An important effort, though any five of these films are hard to take at one go. "Life is pessimistic in the end because we die and in between because of corruption in our daily lives," the artist said, and there you have the unvarying flavor of everything. There are no lighthearted moments in any Fassbinder film that I can recall. If a character's happy, it's because he hasn't yet heard the bad news. There is, instead, a lot of hilarious brutality, suggesting a toxic blend of Moliere and Joe Orton Joe Orton (1 January, 1933, Leicester, England - 9 August, 1967, Islington, London), born John Kingsley Orton, was a satirical modern playwright.

In a short but prolific career from 1964 until his death, he shocked, outraged and amused audiences with his scandalous
.

Fassbinder started in the theater, where his will to power over others quickly manifested itself, though he would always claim that his leader status was forced on him by the group. It was, in reality, a symbiosis symbiosis (sĭmbēō`sĭs), the habitual living together of organisms of different species. The term is usually restricted to a dependent relationship that is beneficial to both participants (also called mutualism) but may be extended to , not unlike Andy Warhol's Factory, where people of a certain talent and readiness for manipulation orbited around a demiurge demiurge (dĕm`ēûrj') [Gr.,=workman, craftsman], name given by Plato in a mythological passage in the Timaeus to the creator God.  whose work needed collaborators. In the atmosphere of the late '60s, the search for communal utopia produced among "the Fassbinder people," as in many other contexts, a dystopia Dystopia


Eagerness (See ZEAL.)

Brave New World
 ruled by the whims and eccentricities of its prime mover prime mover: see energy, sources of.
Prime mover

The component of a power plant that transforms energy from the thermal or the pressure form to the mechanical form.
.

Both Warhol and Fassbinder, homosexuals with conspicuous, complex attachments to their mothers, used a repertory situation to reenact their childhood humiliations on reversed terms, instilling infantile helplessness in those around them and assuming the dominant role of the withholding/bountiful parent.

They both thought of themselves as unattractive, unlovable, and only able to secure "love" from people by conferring public attention on them, i.e., by putting them in movies. The enormity of these unfillable needs may be gauged by the staggering number of films each made in a short span of years. That the process was more important than the finished product is obvious in Warhol's case; Ronald Hayman's excellent book, Fassbinder Filmmaker, reveals how surprisingly much this was also true of the latter. Paradoxically, in both directors this film-mediated bonding created heightened mistrust of their love objects, more distance instead of intimacy.

In the parlance of sex, Warhol was bossy bossy

1. in dog conformation, used to describe overdevelopment of the shoulder muscles.

2. vernacular pet name for a cow.
 bottom. The obdurate passivity of his films achieves all the hostile effects of silence and noncommitment. Fassbinder's temperament was far more confrontational, and in compromised ways more generous (to better control people, he actually paid them, unlike Warhol, and used them as actors rather than as personalities), but his first nine or ten films share something of Warhol's quietly sadistic sa·dism  
n.
1. The deriving of sexual gratification or the tendency to derive sexual gratification from inflicting pain or emotional abuse on others.

2. The deriving of pleasure, or the tendency to derive pleasure, from cruelty.
 duree, laconic la·con·ic  
adj.
Using or marked by the use of few words; terse or concise. See Synonyms at silent.



[Latin Lac
 limpness, and chaos in search of a methodology. But Warhol "professionalized" his film production by turning it over to Paul Morrissey, his imprimatur on Morrissey's films projecting the ultimate passive control. He manifested himself through his absence. Fassbinder, on the other hand, asserted the centrality of his person from the beginning, appearing in almost all of his own films, writing his own scripts, often doing his own camerawork.

Fassbinder's sensibility only fully emerged after his encounter with the films of Douglas Sirk. Under Sirk's influence, Fassbinder discovered in the conventions of melodrama the ideal means of showing why utopian wishes are doomed to crash in our system of life, how happy endings are smiles pasted over horror. Perhaps he had this idea long before seeing All That Heaven Allows and Written on the Wind, but after Sirk, Fassbinder sealed off the utopian exits - with Beware of a Holy Whore, 1970, his tenth film, Fassbinder dramatized the horrors of collective activity, the brutality of his own methods, and the deformities idealism wreaks on the personalities of idealists. After Whore - The Rocky Horror Picture Show for anyone who's worked in movies - Fassbinder no longer heroicized petty criminals, gays, immigrants, and other marginals, but instead showed how the system warped them and stunted their possibilities. This might not have activated much hysteria if he hadn't also shown the perverse complicity between the social order and its reformers - if you're part of the solution, you're part of the problem.

Fassbinder was typically attacked by people who needed heroes (in today's cant, "role models") and heroic causes. His enemies included both reactionaries and progressive types who couldn't bear looking at their own neuroses. Mother Kusters Goes to Heaven, 1975, and The Third Generation, 1979, alienated the whole spectrum of the conventional left, while films like Katzelmacher, 1969, and Veronika Voss, 1982, exposed the spirit of fascism thriving in postwar Germany. The play Garbage, the City and Death (filmed in 1976 by Daniel Schmid as Schatten der Engel) brought cries of anti-Semitism from people determined not to understand it. Fox and His Friends, 1974, and The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant, 1972, outraged gay groups by displaying homosexual relations that were every bit as corrupt as heterosexual ones. (The message: capitalism turns everyone into a whore; anyone who resists this fate comes to a bad end.) But the bigger scandal was Fassbinder's anarchism anarchism (ăn`ərkĭzəm) [Gr.,=having no government], theory that equality and justice are to be sought through the abolition of the state and the substitution of free agreements between individuals. , his proclaimed self-exemption from any program or belief system. Our beliefs are animated by feelings, and, as he relentlessly showed, our feelings are manufactured for us, not least by the movies.

A famed quote: "Love is the best, most insidious, most effective instrument of social repression." The tight bonds of Fassbinder's own pathology account for the claustrophobia claustrophobia /claus·tro·pho·bia/ (-fo´be-ah) irrational fear of being shut in, of closed places.

claus·tro·pho·bi·a
n.
An abnormal fear of being in narrow or enclosed spaces.
 of the world he pictured. Compare a film like Lola, 1981, or Beware of a Holy Whore with, say, Altman's Three Women, 1977, or The Long Goodbye, 1973. Altman too is a spinner of destructive microcosms, an anthropologist tracking systemic damage in human personalities. But in the margins of his films, Altman always presents evidence of other life, hints of alternative destinies. In Fassbinder the parts are the sum of the whole.

The infantile need for love, warped through a lifetime of twisted social forms, produces both the voluntary prison of family life and explosive methods of escape from it. These latter are uniformly self-defeating. One thinks of Hans Epp in 1971's The Merchant of Four Seasons, quietly and deliberately drinking himself to death. Or of Peter in I Only Want You to Love Me of 1975 braining a tavern-keeper with a telephone. Of Herr R. in Why Does Herr R. Run Amok?, 1969, killing his neighbor, then his wife and child, and finally hanging himself in the office toilet. Or of the final hours of Veronika Voss, the last dance in the desert in Whity, 1970, the hissing gas stove in The Marriage of Maria Braun, 1978, Elvira's overdose in In a Year of 13 Moons, 1978.

These characters have reached their logical dead end, which happened also to be Fassbinder's: the implacable logic that leads them there is Fassbinder's signature mise-en-scene. For an artist who claimed an urgent interest in utopia and liberation, Fassbinder bears a curious resemblance to the Mauriac whom Sartre reproached for robbing his protagonists of free will and setting them down in an airless universe. They are almost always more intelligent than their situation, but between their insight and their emotions lies an area of blindness.

"Human beings have no interest in reality," Alexander Kluge (jargon) kluge - /klooj/, /kluhj/ (From German "klug" /kloog/ - clever and Scottish "kludge") 1. A Rube Goldberg (or Heath Robinson) device, whether in hardware or software.  has said, "They prefer to lie than to become divorced from their wishes." The most painful moments in Fassbinder's films come when his characters see their lives clearly for the first time - painful because they immediately flee into delusion. "Each and every one of you makes me want to puke Puke

Slang for selling off a losing position even if the loss is substantial.

Notes:
The point at which an investor decides to sell regardless of price has been dubbed "the puke point.
," Petra von Kant tells her family, honestly enough. A moment later she's running on about Karin, the lesbian girlfriend who's just ditched her: "That little girl's finger is worth more than the rest of you put together." The worst of it is that this is probably true within Petra's libidinal economy, but Karin herself is pretty worthless. Fox knows Eugen is bleeding him white and will dump him when his bank account is empty; he even knows this before Eugen does. But "love" has become everything. Fox would rather die than face the ruin of his "love."

Fassbinder dramatized aspects of his own social relations that he thought reflected truths about society at large. Their overwhelming negativity makes them useful. A film like Martha of 1973, which pictures bourgeois marriage as a torture chamber built on the complicity of its inhabitants
:This article is about the video game. For Inhabitants of housing, see Residency
Inhabitants is an independently developed commercial puzzle game created by S+F Software. Details
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame.
, is worth any hundred or so meet-cute Hollywood comedies, bittersweet bittersweet, name for two unrelated plants, belonging to different families, both fall-fruiting woody vines sometimes cultivated for their decorative scarlet berries.  romances, and earnest social dramas. (I'm writing this in a season offering two uplifting, whimsical studio films about angels.) This isn't to oppose the "art film" to Hollywood; Fassbinder put as much Hollywood and as little artiness into his films as he could. At the same time, no one as truly, brilliantly independent as Fassbinder would survive for a second in the American film industry. It's a pleasant exercise to imagine him alive, in Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. , making incredibly sinister movies about AIDS, immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important. , race relations race relations
Noun, pl

the relations between members of two or more races within a single community

race relations nplrelaciones fpl raciales

, the treatment of old people, the health-care system, prisons, corporations, and other things that are rarely the subjects of first-rate films. But who would let him? There are sites of cultural dissonance Cultural dissonance (education, sociology, anthropology, and cultural studies) is term used to describe an uncomfortable sense of discord, disharmony, confusion, or conflict experienced by people in the midst of change in their cultural environment.  and critique in which Fassbinder's view of things would not be unwelcome (mainly on TV: Melrose Place This article or section needs copy editing for grammar, style, cohesion, tone and/or spelling.
You can assist by [ editing it] now.
, The Simpsons), but his artistic obduracy and his personality would be. We prefer our geniuses to be passionately stupid and entirely complicit com·plic·it  
adj.
Associated with or participating in a questionable act or a crime; having complicity: newspapers complicit with the propaganda arm of a dictatorship.
 with the whims of the marketplace, and Fassbinder plainly wasn't. Like so many seminal artists of this waning century, he destroyed himself before others could do it for him.
COPYRIGHT 1997 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:retrospective on director Rainer Werner Fassbinder at the Museum of Modern Art
Author:Indiana, Gary
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Feb 1, 1997
Words:1784
Previous Article:Hanne Darboven: Dia Center for the Arts. (artist Hanne Darboven's work, 'Kulturgeshichte 1880-1983')
Next Article:Finding a Form: Essays.
Topics:



Related Articles
I Only Want You to Love Me.
Rainer Werner Fassbinder.
Darkness in Berlin.(Brief Article)
Criminal Lovers.(Summer Movie Preview 2000)(Brief Article)
Water Drops on Burning Rocks.(Summer Movie Preview 2000)(Brief Article)
Ozon layers.(director Francois Ozon)(Brief Article)
The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant.(Henry Miller's Theatre, New York, New York)(Review)
'HEDWIG' OFFERS SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE.(L.A. Life)(Review)
34 INDIES MAKE SUNDANCE CUT.(L.A. LIFE)
Rainer's parade: many of the great films of Rainer Werner Fassbinder, one of the cinema's foremost self-destructive geniuses, are headed to DVD for...

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles