Anselm (film)

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GermanAnselm – Das Rauschen der Zeit
Directed byWim Wenders
Produced byKarsten Brünig
Wim Wenders
Starring
Anselm
Theatrical release poster
GermanAnselm – Das Rauschen der Zeit
Directed byWim Wenders
Produced byKarsten Brünig
Wim Wenders
Starring
CinematographyFranz Lustig[1]
Edited byMaxine Goedicke[1]
Music byLeonard Küßner[1]
Production
company
Distributed byDCM
Release dates
  • 17 May 2023 (2023-05-17) (Cannes)
  • 12 October 2023 (2023-10-12) (Germany)
Running time
93 minutes[1]
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman
Box office$1.8 million[2]

Anselm (German: Anselm – Das Rauschen der Zeit) is a 2023 German 3D documentary film directed by Wim Wenders, chronicling the art of German painter and sculptor Anselm Kiefer.[3] The film had its world premiere at the 76th Cannes Film Festival on 17 May 2023 as a special screening, where it competed for the L'Œil d'or.[4]

The film opens with footage of some of Kiefer's creations inside natural environments - including dresses with tree branches, sticks and glass shards, he has also made some towers out of wall fragments of destroyed rooms.

It then shows the artist riding a bicycle around a large warehouse outside of Paris containing many of his works. After a musical montage, the film depicts the artist's childhood drawing houses. It also reads some of the poetry written by Paul Celan, a Ukrainian Jew who was persecuted during the Holocaust.

He shows a book with progressively darker paintings symbolizing brain cancer. Then there is footage of the making of one of his pieces - dead leaves and crops are glued to a canvas, he intentionally sets them on fire only for his crew to extinguish them immediately after. The finished products are half-burnt, and he has made a collection of them.

In the winter, he goes to a field and a forest taking pictures with an analog camera, obtaining inspiration for his next paintings. He takes more pictures and draws more paintings inside of an attic, with the film juxtaposing his current work with archival footage of what he did in the 1970's and 80's. In the 1980's, while representing Germany at international competitions, his work was criticized for how his paintings invoked German legendary heroes which the Nazis glorified.

After looking through some books, he paints an enormous mural of a winter field with some creeks. In the 1990's, he spends time doing aerial photography of various regions of Earth, making enormous books with printouts of the images and building an oversized library with them. Analysts claim he wants his work to grapple with Germany's past, described as an "open wound."

In the 1960's he traveled around Europe taking pictures of himself doing the Nazi Salute in front of various European momuments. He says it was to educate people about it. In his childhood he read stories about Greek Argonaut mythology. In 1990, after exhibitions in America, he built model warplanes as the Gulf War was breaking out. Two years later, he and his team moved to a new studio in the south of France. Its 200 acres of space means he can build enormous warehouses with all of his works.

The next few scenes juxtapose his younger self playing in enormous mansions and discovering his older self's work, with his older self traveling around aimlessly. This is until they both find themselves in the same room where his younger self reads poetry from the same book as the beginning of the film. Carrying his younger self to the edge of a lake, his older self remarks, "Childhood is an empty room like the beginning of the world." An old man, standing in front of an art creation, disappears from existence.

Cast

Production

Described as "immersive",[5] the film focuses on painter and sculptor Anselm Kiefer. The project illuminates his work, life journey, inspiration, creative process, and the artist's fascination with myth and history. The aim is to "blur" the boundary between film and painting.[6]

Karsten Brünig produced the documentary for Road Movies Filmproduktion.[7]

Wenders shot the film at 6K resolution and in the 3D format, which he previously utilized for his 2011 documentary Pina. It was shot over the course of two years,[8] in Germany, France and Italy.[5] Wenders called the film "a labor of love and turned out to take seven shooting periods and altogether three years to become a film like nothing I've ever done before. I think we stretched the possibilities of 3D into an unknown territory."[8]

Release

Anselm was selected to be screened in the Special Screenings section at the 76th Cannes Film Festival,[9] where it had its world premiere on 17 May 2023.[10] On the same occasion, Wenders also received an invitation to the festival's main competition for his feature film Perfect Days.[11]

World sales were acquired by HanWay Films. DCM Film Distribution secured the distribution rights for Germany, Austria and Switzerland.[5] It was also invited at the 28th Busan International Film Festival in 'Icon' section and was screened in 6 October 2023.[12]

Anselm was theatrically released in Germany by DCM on 12 October 2023,[13] and in France by Les Films du Losange on 18 October 2023.[6] U.S. distribution rights were acquired by Sideshow and Janus Films.[8]

Reception

References

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