Donnerstag, 27. März 2025

FREE ON CINEGEEK.DE La Boum 2 



Willkommen in einer vergangenen Ära und zwar der als die 70er auf die 80er trafen. Wer nicht mehr so jung ist blickt voller Nostalgie auf diese Zeit zurück und erinnert sich daran, La Boum im Französisch Unterricht in der Schule gesehen zu haben. Das war natürlich dementsprechend zeitverschoben. Doch im Grunde sind zwei Generationen mit La Boum aufgewachsen. Diejenigen, die den Kinostart miterlebten und dann noch wir, die wir La Boum im Fernsehen sahen. Das war am nächsten Tag dann ein wichtiges Thema auf dem Schulhof, denn immerhin darf La Boum als erste europäische Teenager Komödie gelten, die uns wirklich bewegt hat. Und die Fortsetzung? La Boum 2 verdient den Titel Komödie im Grunde nicht, sondern stellt vielmehr ein Teenager Drama da. Entfaltet wird die Geschichte von Vic Beretton alias Sophie Marceau, dieser jahrelang unterschätzten französischen Schauspielerin. Denn Marceau ist die einzige ihrer Generation, die nicht nur Akademiker, sondern uns alle begeistert hat. Ein echter Filmstar, den jeder kennt und liebt! Umgeben ist Vico diesmal von zwei potentiellen Liebhabern, gespielt von Pierre Cosso und Lambert Wilson. Philippe und der nicht mehr ganz junge Felix der sich womöglich sogar strafbar gemacht hätte mit Vic. Im Grunde sind es sogar drei Liebhaber, denn Mathieu (Alexandre Sterling) aus Teil 1 taucht auch wieder auf und ihm zu Ehren wird diese zweite titelgebende Party auch geschmissen. Im Hintergrund für die Vorbereitungen der zweiten "Boum" müssen zudem Vics Eltern (Claude Brasseur und Brigitte Fossey) ihre Ehe retten, denn das moderne Berufsleben fordert vom Mann, dass er umzieht. Und die Frau? Das ist der Konflikt zweier berufstätiger Eltern. Und während Vics Freundin Penelope (Sheila O'Connor) Woche für Woche mit anderen Jungs geht und bereits die Pille nimmt, ist Vic noch Jungfrau. Ein Teenager, der noch Urlaub bei der Grossmutter in Salzburg macht. Und auf dem Rückweg trifft sie im Zug Philippe. Sie vertauschen ihre Pässe usw. Anders als primitive Teenager Filme der 80er plädiert La Boum 2 dabei ganz unaufdringlich für die Selbstverwirklichung beider Eltern und betrachtet auch Vics Probleme nicht lüstern und albern, sondern ehrlich und einfühlsam. Alles wirkt realistisch; Vic und ihre Freundinnen sprechen und denken so wie echte Teenage. Ein zeitloser Publikumsfilm.

Mittwoch, 26. März 2025

FREE ON CINEGEEK.DE Dardenne - Lorna's Silence 



The Dardenne brothers always focus on individual characters in their films. The camera hardly lets them out of the picture. In Lorna's Silence, however, Lorna is partially absent. A plot begins to unfold of which she is oblivious. Lorna (Arta Dobroshi) comes from Albania, is around 30, and now lives in Belgium due to a marriage swindle. Lorna herself is a beneficiary as well as a victim of the fraud. A miserable junkie married her for money. The deal was set up by Fabio, who in turn plans to murder the junkie. After that, in turn, Lorna has to marry a Russian. Lorna believes that after this plan she could be free to marry the man she loves: Sokol. Together they plan to open a small cafe. Everything is sad and shabby. The junkie's name is Claudy (Jeremie Renier); he's cold turkey. A pathetic guy. Lorna treats him coldly. But she is not angry. Slowly she wonders if she couldn't just divorce him without murdering Claudy with an overdose.... The Dardenne brothers' special talent is to never present characters like Lorna as part of a plot - but always in their own special human situation. That's why it would be too easy to evaluate Fabio (Fabrizio Rongione) as a villain. He is simply driven by money and heartless. He pursues his goals with brutality. A bully like so many of the characters in this cold Dardennes world. Lorna, on the other hand, is a pleasant woman with a warm smile. Even more than a prostitute, she is robbed of her personal integrity. Simply because of her sex! Claudy married Lorna for money, the Russian doesn't care if he sleeps with her. And Sokol? He is a sneaky man who is out of the country most of the time. Lorna dreams with him exist only in her head. In some respects, the Dardennes are breaking new ground. For the first time, we experience a time jump in one of their films. Meanwhile, Lorna is transforming. Like the previous Dardenne films, however, Lorna's Silence lives from this impetuous force that doesn't let us look away for a moment. You can't escape it. Everything you need to know, you see on the screen. There is nothing to interpret. In this Dardenne world, compassion exists, but mercy cannot be granted to anyone.

Samstag, 8. März 2025

Film List New Wave 



The 80s began cool, distant and introverted. The New Wave aesthetic lets a cool wind of modernity blow. In a Mercedes convertible with an Armani suit and the soundtrack by Blondie Call me, Richard Gere as American Gigolo merges with his luxury outfit. Let the neon 80s begin! 

Donnerstag, 6. März 2025

FREE ON CINEGEEK.DE Ingmar Bergman - The Seventh Seal 



A knight returns from the Crusades. He finds a church that is still open, even though the plague is raging all around him. He confesses. He speaks to a man with a frock about his indifference, which excludes him everywhere. He lives in a world full of spirits as a prisoner. He wants God to stretch out his hand and speak to him. He screams into the darkness, but there is no one there. The man in the frock turns around. It is death. Can anyone tell me a modern film that presents such pictures? Nobody. Ingmar Bergman's The Seventh Seal has much more in common with a silent film than with modern cinema. A rugged, uncompromising film (some of you may find it ridiculous or outdated). Hardly anyone asks about the DVD in our video store. Bergman has gone out of fashion. The subject, the absence of God, interests no one. But I am addicted to Bergman. I watched all his films one after the other. And The Seventh Seal is not primarily about the absence of God. It's about our gossip. Our restlessness. Bergman, on the other hand, poses existential questions. In contrast to his films from the 60s he still asks these questions directly in the 50s and therefore I prefer The Seventh Seal. A straightforward Bergman movie like he wasn't supposed to do later. In most of his movies Bergman settles accounts with God. Who doesn't know the famous picture of the knight playing chess with death? The work ends with an equally famous picture: The macabre dance of death before the horizon. Once the knight (embodied by Max von Sydow) asks a girl about the devil, who must know whether God exists. "Look me in the eye"; the girl answers. She refers to the priest who could see him. She tells of it almost proudly. But the knight's squire discovers nothing but emptiness in the girl's eyes. There is nothing. So is there only death and God doesn't matter? Bergman's films deal with this spiritual search. They desperately seek answers to the big questions of life. With regrettable answers. But there is one thing in Bergman's work: love. It exists. Like a consolation.