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Synopsis

Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s controversial, fifteen-hour-plus Berlin Alexanderplatz, based on Alfred Döblin’s great modernist novel, was the crowning achievement of a prolific director who, at age thirty-four, had already made forty films. Fassbinder’s immersive epic, restored in 2006 and now available on DVD in this country for the first time, follows the hulking, childlike ex-convict Franz Biberkopf (Günter Lamprecht) as he attempts to “become an honest soul” amid the corrosive urban landscape of Weimar-era Germany. With equal parts cynicism and humanity, Fassbinder details a mammoth portrait of a common man struggling to survive in a viciously uncommon time. —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 4 of 5 wall posts.
Picture of Henry Krinkle

Henry Krinkle

28Dec09

You could watch any three Fassbinder movies and see as clear as day that his entire career was leading up to this point. A monumental achievement, to say the least. Superb all around and possibly the greatest film I've ever seen; certainly the most impressive.  
Picture of ROCKY AND BULLWINKLE

ROCKY AND BULLWINKLE

24Dec09

The first episode was seriously one of the best things I've ever seen, but I won't be able to watch the rest for awhile...  
Picture of Tony Stark

Tony Stark

27Nov08

I really enjoyed this. The 15 1/2 hours went by faster than the 3 hours of "Pirates of the Caribbean: At Worlds End".  
Picture of William Rutledge

William Rutledge

26Nov08

This will take a lot out of you.  

Related Films

Fans

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Articles

Our roundup of essays and articles on this film.
24hberlinkt184

24h Berlin

By David Hudson on September 3, 2009
On September 5, 2008, 400 people, including directors Romuald Karmakar, Volker Koepp, Rosa von Praunheim and Andres Veiel, in 80 teams fanned out all over Berlin to capture 24 hours in the life of
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Berlin_alexanderplatz

Alexanderplatz, encore

By Andrew Tracy on December 13, 2008
Absent for so long, Berlin Alexanderplatz has become practically omnipresent this past year. As with last year’s revival of Melville’s Army of Shadows, familiarity, far from breeding contempt, has only
read article

Lists

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Reviews

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Untitled

By kuramo bay on October 6, 2009

First they worm their way into your heart and then they spring their nasty surprises. Only, you are not a saint, you are just as bad as the worst of them. The only difference is that you know it. You…  read review

Untitled

By Vlad on June 10, 2009

I just finished watching it for the first time, and I know that this experience will stay with me for a long time. BA is one of those films that incorporates the very act of watching it into its artistic…  read review

Untitled

By Adam Suraf on February 23, 2009

Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s detailed and sprawling 14-part adaptation of Alfred Doblin’s 1929 modernist tract is one of the director’s most revered films, brutalized in its day for over indulgence…  read review

Untitled

By CineSna​g on December 13, 2008

I always found a certain pleasure in Fassbinder. I purchased this hoping I liked him just THIS much, as the running time was a bit daunting. When you split it down episode by episode and make a day…  read review

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DVD

Buy the DVD from The Criterion Collection.