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Room 666

Chambre 666

France, Germany

1982

45 Min
Color
English, French, German
  • Currently 3.3/5 Stars.
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DIR Wim Wenders

PROD Michel Boujut, Chris Sievernich, Claude Ventura

DP Agnès Godard

CAST Chantal Akerman, Michelangelo Antonioni, Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Jean-Luc Godard, Monte Hellman, Werner Herzog, Paul Morrissey

MUSIC Jürgen Knieper

Synopsis

In this unusual documentary based on a series of identical questions addressed to world-famous directors such as Werner Herzog, Steven Spielberg, and Jean-Luc Godard, director Wim Wenders placed each of his colleagues one-by-one in a single room, gave them one reel (11 minutes) of time to look into the stationary camera if they chose, and answer set questions. The juxtaposition of so many individualistic, experienced, and innovative filmmakers commenting on topics like television’s effect on cinema, the influence of ad techniques, the tendency toward miniseries, and other relevant subjects offers worthwhile moments that are unlikely to be found elsewhere.

(Source: http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:158320~T0)

Director

Wenders

Wim Wenders

Born in Dusseldorf just after the end of World War II, German film director Wim Wenders grew up with an insatiable appetite for American movies. Not all that interested in big-budget products, he, instead, developed a fascination with B-movies, notably melodramas and Westerns. After studying Medicine and Philosophy in his native country, Wenders took up art in Paris (a mecca for viewing American films), and then returned to his homeland to attend Munich’s Academy of Film and Television. Like many of his French movie-fan brethren, Wenders began his career writing film criticism before directing a few short subjects of his own, and, in 1970, he and several other young filmmakers formed a production-distribution firm, Filmverlag Der Autoren. Summer in the City (1970) was Wenders’ first feature film, but it was his 1973 adaptation of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter that first brought him attention outside of Germany. The film included many accomplishments, most notably coaxing… read more

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angggelo

4Dec09

You have to take yr socks off to watch a movie live this.  
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© <',))(

4Feb09

Brent, it's available on the Wim Wenders Collection, Vol. 2 released by Anchor Bay. I think you can rent it on netflix, too. It really is fascinating stuff...Herzog's interview was a highlight for me, not only because of his initially funny response (you'll know when you see it) and also because there is a lot of truth to his answer.  
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Brent E. Huffman

10Dec08

How can I see this film? Incredible list of seminal directors interviewed.  
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Matthew

30Nov08

Great short about what great filmmakers think, or thought, back in the early 80's. Great insight here.   

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Untitled-1

Tuesday Morning Foreign Region DVD Report: "The State of Things" (Wim Wenders, 1982)

By Glenn Kenny on October 20, 2009
"What did you do out in Hollywood?" Such is the question posed at the very end of this film, by some kind of auteur/mogul/god who has heretofore been inaccessible to director/potential auteur Frederich
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By Lefteri​s Becerra on August 20, 2009

muy instructivo ver este documental a 27 años de su realización… qué piensan algunos directores entonces del futuro del cine… un tema que me interesa hoy y que resulta fascinante en boca de godard…  read review

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