FREE ON CINEGEEK.DE Berlin Mumblecore: Philipp Eichholtz - Liebe Mich
Eventually I had bar shift in our Filmkunstbar Fitzcarraldo and a nice man with some beard came in. Philip Eichholz, Berlin Mumblecore director. With her, a girl who seemed kind of prolific. I thought, where did he get it? What does he want with her in a movie? Now I know it: Create a star of the street! How do you do that? Your picture must seem larger than life, as huge as a cinema screen. Sarah (Lilli Meinhardt) fills the whole canvas with her face. She's vulnerable, aggressive and sexual. Sometimes even threatening when she throws a laptop out her ex-boyfriend's closed window. He tried to break up decently or comfortably. Sarah needs drama, though, and that requires items to fly out. Sarah doesn't want to be abandoned, she wants to be loved. It was her own laptop, by the way, so she takes the junk and tries to get it repaired. The nice salesman reacts to Sarah just like I do in the store. In any case, her job as a graphic designer no longer turns into anything, because her data is in the piece of junk. Sarah always stands in her own way. Her father explains to her that this is probably "the solution of a brain amputee" and he is not completely wrong either. Fortunately, Eichholtz does not want to tell us a medical history, but that of a young Berlin woman with great feelings. Everything would be hers, she wants to have a lot of fun here and now! Because she's sexy and young, she always meets new men and destroys everything that's about to happen. Over and over again. Sarah feels lonely, alone or with others. When Eichholtz and his team shot a new film with Lilli Meinhardt in our shop, I noticed that instead of a script only a few sheets of paper were flying around. Meinhardt lay sunken with his head on the bar. Maybe she was asleep, too. Then turn again. Suddenly she seemed present. The camera loves her face. Your story touches us. She touches us. Thanks from here!
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