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The State of Things

Der Stand der Dinge

Germany, Portugal, United States

1982

125 Min
Black and White
French, English
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DIR Wim Wenders

PROD Chris Sievernich

SCR Wim Wenders, Robert Krasker, Josh Wallace

DP Henri Alekan, Fred Murphy, Martin Schäfer

CAST Isabelle Weingarten, Rebecca Pauly, Geoffrey Carey

ED Jon Neuburger, Peter Przygodda, Barbara von Weitershausen

MUSIC Jim Jarmusch, Jürgen Knieper

Synopsis

Wim Wenders’ The State of Things (Der Stand der Dinge) was financed by one of the director’s chief mentors, Francis Ford Coppola. This highly autobiographical work concerns a shoestring movie producer and his ragtag crew. Stranded in the outer reaches of Portugal, the director doesn’t even have any film in his camera. There’s nothing left to do but scare up a potential backer—preferably one of those rich, movie-mad Americans. In illustrating the plight of the fictional filmmakers, Wenders strikes a blow on behalf of the homeless and disenfranchised everywhere; it is also an a clef recreation of the difficulties faced by the director during production of his first American film Hammett (also made under the auspices of Coppola).

(Source: http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:46710~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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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
read article

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