Rejected
by the Berlinale, Oskar Roehler's Die Unberührbare
(The Unapproachable) follows the same route to
the Directors' Fortnight taken by another post-wall
Berlin film a year ago Andreas Kleinert's Paths
In The Night. Ten years after the fall of
the Wall, The Unapproachable is appropriate
in helping to redress some of the imbalance in measuring
the cross-border cultural significance of that historical
event.
For
although TV sets the world over were flooded with
images of cheerful euphoria on the 9 November 1989,
there were some who were sceptical, and others who
were bitterly disappointed to see the existing socialist
society come crashing down before their eyes. One
of these was the West German writer Gisela Elsner
(renamed as Hanna Flanders in the film and portrayed
brilliantly by Hannelore Elsner), who in real life
was writer-film-maker
Oskar Roehler's mother.
In
1964, Elsner was acclaimed for her best-selling book
"The Big Dwarfs," a searing portrait of West
German society. Based in Munich and a member of the
Communist Party, she was praised by leftists in the
West and saw her novels published in the East. On 9
November, however, her GDR publisher in East Berlin
(played by Michael Gwisdek in a memorable cameo) is
only interested in toasting the fall of the Wall. When
Flanders arrives unexpectedly in East Berlin, he couldn't
care less about her existential problems and her suicidal
frame of mind. For that matter, neither could her son,
nor her ex-husband, nor her parents (whom she visits
to beg for money), nor her erstwhile
friends and colleagues.
The
Unapproachable is both a legacy and a requiem.
Shot in stunning black-and-white, the film unfolds
psychologically like a dream imploding into the blinding
light of a nightmare. It's also a passion play, one
with clearly marked dramatic stations in one woman's
agony. The viewer accompanies a wounded Hanna on a
Bergman-like journey into the self.
Roehler
portrays her as a vain woman, a writer too proud to
admit she could be wrong, a schizophrenic who smokes
one cigarette after another, an eccentric poet with
heavily painted eyes under a Cleopatra-wig, a mother
who had abandoned her husband and son (three years after
his birth) "because they disturbed me at work". But
he does so with
love, with understanding, with forgiveness.
As
a screen-writer and novelist in his own right, 41-year-old
Roehler didn't make much of a critical splash with
his previous auteur films Gentlemen
(1995), New Year's Eve Countdown (1997),
and Greedy (1999). No matter, Die
Unberührbare will change all that.
Ron
Holloway
|

| Cast
|
Hannelore Elsner, Vadim Glowna, Jasmin Tabatabai, Michael
Gwisdek, Tonio Arango, Lars Rudolph, Nina Petri, Helga
Goehring, Charles Regnier, Catherine Flemming |
| Screenplay |
Oskar
Roehler
|
| Producer
|
Kaete
Erhmann, Ulrich Caspar |
| Prod
co |
Distant
Dreams Film (Germany), Geyer-Werke, ZDF |
| Run
Time |
103
mins |
| Int'l
Sales |
Bavaria Film International |
|
|