X
How do I get paid? Learn about our new Secured Funds Program!
  Afficher le site en English, Español, ou Français
La billetterie solidaire
Créez un compte !  |  Identifiez-vous
 
Trouver un événement Créer votre événement Aide
 
Ticket of No Return
Suns Cinema
Washington, DC
Partager cet événement :
Obtenir des billets
Aucune date n'a été activée pour cet événement.


Événement

Ticket of No Return
A portrait of two unusual but also extremely different women. One rich, eccentric, hiding her feelings behind a rigid mask, consciously drinks herself to death. The other is a known drinker in town. In the course of the story they try to get to know each other, but they cannot come together. The background is Berlin, thrown open to a grotesque kind of sightseeing (drinkers geography) and complemented by authentic contributions from people who live here or are visiting, rock singers, writers, artist, taxi drivers. With Tabea Blumenschein, Magdalena Montezuma, Nina Hagen and Eddie Constantine.

"Within this relatively static framework, the variables  such as the heroines wardrobe, the diverse narrative settings for her drinking, and diverse inventions in the dialogue and mise en scène  give the film a flamboyant, expressive range." - Jonathan Rosenbaum

"Well, I thought The Image of Dorian Gray in the Yellow Press was pretty fantastic but somehow this is even better. Again, many Fassbinder regulars appear (Kurt Raab, Eddie Constantine, and Peer Raben even does the music), and while it's tempting to compare Ottinger to the great German New Wave director, it would also be a huge disservice to her own clearly singular and unique talent.

Even putting her in a box like "radical feminist filmmaker" feels insufficient and limiting. Obviously, there is a strong political subtext going on here, but it's fairly subtle and understated. Well okay maybe not exactly, but at the very least it's didactic in a funny way. Certainly it's a piece of accomplished artistic filmmaking far beyond being simply a political tract.

While on the surface Ottinger's style feels rooted in a similar vein of self-conscious artifice and theatricality as Fassbinder, she seems to share little of his interest in classic Hollywood melodrama. Instead her sensibility seems much more firmly derived from punk and the performance art of the period. Yet if this sounds intimidating or un-cinematic, it isn't at all. While certainly surreal, and surprisingly minimalistic compared to Dorian Gray, the film has a certain humorous and even almost playful bent, despite it's overall bleak premise and apparent world view.

The plot, to the extent that one exists (it's really more of a series of vignettes), concerns a wealthy woman who arrives in Berlin, resigned to drink herself to death. There she meets a homeless woman and the two form a friendship of sorts. The film follows the two perpetually drunk women as they traverse the surreal nocturnal cityscape. The wealthy woman never speaks. In fact, the film's relative dearth of substantial dialogue and static camera at times brings to mind Tsai Ming-liang, or even Jacques Tati (I believe the film's opening scene set it an airport might even be an explicit nod to Playtime), by way of Liquid Sky's striking, stylized post-punk costume design.

There's also something about the anarchic plot (not to mention the explicit feminist subtext, obviously) that recalls Vra Chytilová's cult favorite Daisies, although Ottinger's film is far more subdued (albeit at times strikingly strange) and lacks the overbearing antic spirit that has made Chytilová's film so popular (I can't imagine Ottinger's drier, downbeat approach ever catching on in quite the same way).

Yet despite these diverse and eclectic reference points, the film remains remarkably unique and distinctive. It's dense, if not impenetrable, and leaves one with a pleasantly disoriented feeling (appropriately enough considering it's a film all about being drunk). If nothing else, I can't think of another film were you'll find both Nina Hagen and one of the dwarf actors from Werner's Herzog's Even Dwarfs Started Small in one place." - Jake Gatsby Welles, Letterboxd

Adresse

Suns Cinema (Afficher)
3107 Mount Pleasant Street NW
Washington, DC 20010
United States

Catégories

Cinéma > Films

Âge minimum : 21

Contact

Propriétaire : Suns Cinema
Sur BPT depuis : 02 Mai 2016
 
Suns Cinema
www.sunscinema.com


Contactez-nous
Courriel
support@brownpapertickets.com
Téléphone
1-800-838-3006 (Temporairement Indisponible)
Ressources
Développeurs
Aide
Acheteurs de billets
Suivi de commande
Parcourir les événements
Points de vente
Organisateurs d'événements
Créer un événement
Tarifs
Services
Achat billets pré-imprimés
Salles et établissements
Découvrez des événements locaux
Recevez des notifications quotidiennes ou hebdomadaires par courriel sur les nouveaux événements et billets à prix réduit dans votre quartier.
Inscrivez-vous pour des événements locaux
Restez branché
Suivez-nous sur Facebook
Twitter
Suivez-nous sur Instagram
YouTube
Qui sommes-nous ?
L'utilisation de ce service est soumis aux Conditions d'utilisation, Politique de confidentialité et Politique sur les cookies de Brown Paper Tickets. Tous droits réservés. © 2000-2022 Mobile EN ES FR