Shhh... You've found us.
Welcome to The Auteurs.
Your online cinema. Anytime, anywhere.

Synopsis

Germany in the autumn of 1957: Lola, a seductive cabaret singer-prostitute (Barbara Sukowa) exults in her power as a temptress of men, but she wants out—she wants money, property, and love. Pitting a corrupt building contractor (Mario Adorf) against the new straight-arrow building commissioner (Armin Mueller-Stahl), Lola launches an outrageous plan to elevate herself in a world where everything, and everyone, is for sale. Shot in childlike candy colors, Fassbinder’s homage to Josef von Sternberg’s classic The Blue Angel stands as a satiric tribute to capitalism. —The Criterion Collection

Director

Rainer_werner_fassbinder

Rainer Werner Fassbinder

Once declaring half-facetiously that he wanted to be to film “what Shakespeare was to the theater, Marx to politics, and Freud to psychology,” Rainer Werner Fassbinder was the premiere filmmaker of the New German Cinema, famous for his prodigious, inventive output over his short career. Making over 30 features in a dozen years, as well as creating works for TV and theater, Fassbinder became renowned for his potent combination of Hollywood genre gestures and overt stylization with an acutely sensitive, critical assessment of German society.Fassbinder also espoused the use of the overwrought conventions of melodrama to reach visceral truths and disrupt bourgeois propriety.

Born in 1945 in Bad Wörishofen, Fassbinder lived with his mother in Munich. He spent his youth at the movies and became a fan of Hollywood, particularly German émigré Douglas Sirk’s glossy 1950s melodramas. After high school, Fassbinder applied to the Berlin Film School — and was rejected. Undaunted, he began… read more

Wall

Displaying 3 wall posts.
Picture of rowdyman

rowdyman

9Dec09

Fassbinder's Lola is a wonderfully technicolor melodrama of a woman who knows what she wants and how to get it. Incredible colour & cinematography. It's not for everyone. You must enjoy German irony. See what I mean? Not for everyone. Though being able to share an inside Fassbinder joke with your spouse at a party makes you instantly more pretentious, intelligent & desirable. Like Lola herself.  
Picture of charlotte

charlotte

28Nov08

What a great film, all around. I love the candy colors.  
Picture of Tommy

Tommy

26Nov08

Probably the best of Fassbinders BRD Trilogy. But they're all good as well  

Related Films

Fans

Displaying 5 of 151 fans.

Lists

Displaying 5 of 9 lists.

Reviews

Displaying 1 of 1

Untitled

By Law on October 18, 2009

This is the final film in the BRD trilogy, where Fassbinder uses his narrative to access and criticise the social conditions of Germany’s miraculous economic recovery after their defeat in World War…  read review

Forum

Displaying 0 discussion topics.

DVD

Buy the DVD from The Criterion Collection.