Fox and His Friends
Chazen Museum of Art 750 University Ave., Madison, Wisconsin 53706
press release:
West Germany | 1975 | 35mm | 124 min. | German with English subtitles
Director: Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Cast: Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Peter Chatel, Karlheinz Böhm
Fassbinder himself stars as an unemployed gay man who suddenly becomes rich—if no less vulnerable to bourgeois exploitation—after winning the national lottery. Aided by Michael Ballhaus’s evocative cinematography and Leonard Cohen’s melancholy tunes, this dazzling mixture of humanistic tragedy and etched-in-acid social criticism firmly established RFW’s international reputation.
Our Sunday afternoon series at the Chazen Museum of Art this fall will provide an opportunity to view 15 features by Rainer Werner Fassbinder, a founder of New German Cinema and one of the most controversial filmmakers of his generation. Fassbinder’s prolific oeuvre includes examples of virtually every genre, and while he drew inspiration from the melodramas of Douglas Sirk and the French Nouvelle Vague, Fassbinder’s own movies have influenced a whole generation of filmmakers including Todd Haynes, Quentin Tarantino and Todd Solondz. All screened on 35mm prints, the selections in this series conclude with Fassbinder’s trilogy of post-War German life (The Marriage of Maria Braun, Lola and Veronika Voss). The series will provide ample evidence of Fassbinder’s genius, reminding us of the miracle of his short career as well as the tragedy of his early demise, in 1982, at the age of 37.
All Cinematheque screenings are free and open to the public.