Ingemo Engström

  • Ingemo Engström – Letzte Liebe (1979)

    1971-1980DramaGermanyIngemo Engström

    uote:
    A film about a connection between love and death, which is different from ‘Till death do us part’: If love for each other is more important than life, then the common, voluntary death is a possibility to preserve this love. And if life dies inexorably, then death is an attempt to preserve life. A film about an amour fou between a young doctor and a former teacher. She, daughter of German Jews who emigrated to France, returns to Germany one day: she escapes from her external reality (life in France) into an internal past (the memory of her childhood). The locations of this ‘love and death film’: the Rhine, where it is not romantic, but productive: dirty banks, chemical factories, nuclear power plants and hopeless sadness. Shabby hotel rooms in crummy dosshouses; the view of industrial suburbs where one can only die, but not live. A film of a desolate beauty.Read More »

  • Ingemo Engström – Flucht in den Norden AKA Flight North (1986)

    1981-1990DramaGermanyIngemo Engström

    Johanna (Katharina Thalbach), after escaping Nazi Germany, takes refuge on a friend’s family estate in Finland. There, she experiences a passionate erotic romance with her friend’s brother, Ragnar (Jukka-Pekka Palo), who shares her anti-fascist feelings and wants to join the resistance movement in France. Based on Klaus Mann’s novel.Read More »

  • Ingemo Engström – Ginevra AKA Guinevere (1992)

    Ingemo Engström1991-2000ArthouseDramaGermany
    Ginevra (1994)
    Ginevra (1994)

    Clarke Fountain, Rovi wrote:
    Celia, who calls herself Ginevra, is a movie actress who is appearing in an art-film. When she collapses from exhaustion while browsing in a bookstore and subsequently has a car crash, she decides to run away, throwing away her belongings and attempting to live incognito with a bar singer. Eventually she returns to her oh-so-boring life and shuttles between two additional lovers while working on the set of “Tears of an Angel.” Some allusions are made to the Arthurian and Camelot myths, but these are not developed. Reviewers found the main attraction of this “art film” to be the numerous sex scenes between the star (played by Amanda Ooms) and her various lovers.Read More »

  • Ingemo Engström & Gerhard Theuring – Fluchtweg nach Marseille AKA Escape Route to Marseilles (1977)

    Ingemo Engström1971-1980ArthouseDocumentaryGerhard TheuringGermany
    Fluchtweg nach Marseille (1977)
    Fluchtweg nach Marseille (1977)

    Documentary in two parts that blends dramatized reconstructions, personal reminisces and newsreel footage to tell the story of the flight of German refugees through occupied France to Marseille in 1940.

    Quote:
    Anna Segher’s novel Transit (1944) is the leitmotif of this film essay on German exiles in France and their escape to the South after Hitler marched into Paris. But Fluchtweg nach Marseille is neither adaptation nor documentary: actors recite and react to passages from the novel. Eyewitnesses speak. Documents from the Nazi era are contrasted with images of places and landscapes in which the settings of persecution and escape come back to haunt both the filmmakers and us. This is a search for evidence that interweaves facts, personal recollections, and both literary and visual reflections.
    -Anke HahnRead More »

  • Ingemo Engström – Flucht in den Norden (1986)

    1981-1990DramaGermanyIngemo Engström

    Based on Klaus Mann’s 1934 novel “Entkommen zum Leben”. Johanna, a young Berliner, flees the Nazis in 1934. She goes to Finland and begins an affair with a man of similar Radical beliefs. His death encourages her to join the resistance in ParisRead More »

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