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Margarethe von Trotta

Margarethe von Trotta (German: [maʁɡaˈʁeːtə fɔn ˈtʁɔta] (listen); born 21 February 1942) is a German film director, screenwriter, and actress.[1] She has been referred to as a "leading force" of the New German Cinema movement.[2][3] Von Trotta's extensive body of work has won awards internationally.[2] She was married to and collaborated with director Volker Schlöndorff. Although they made a successful team, von Trotta felt she was seen as secondary to Schlöndorff.[4] Subsequently, she established a solo career for herself and became "Germany's foremost female film director, who has offered the most sustained and successful female variant of Autorenkino in postwar German film history".[5] Certain aspects of von Trotta's work have been compared to Ingmar Bergman's features from the 1960s and 1970s.[6]

Margarethe von Trotta
von Trotta in 2007
Born (1942-02-21) 21 February 1942 (age 81)
Berlin, Germany
Occupation(s)Film director, screenwriter, actress
Years active1968 – present
MovementNew German Cinema
Spouse(s)Jürgen Moeller (1964–1968)
Volker Schlöndorff (1971–1991)
ChildrenFelix Moeller

Von Trotta has been called "the world's leading feminist filmmaker".[7] The predominant aim of her films is to create new representations of women.[8] Her films are concerned with relationships between and among women (sisters, best friends, etc.), as well as with relationships between women and men, and include political settings. Nevertheless, she rejects the suggestion that she makes "women's films".[9]

She is a recipient of one Golden Lion at Venice Film Festival, 2 David di Donatello Awards, Gold Hugo Award at Chicago International Film Festival, Lifetime Achievement Award at European Film Award, Lifetime Achievement Award at German Film Awards, 2 Palme d'Or nominations at Cannes Film Festival, and numerous other awards and nominations.[10][11][12][13][14][15][16]

Early life

The child of Elisabeth von Trotta and painter Alfred Roloff,[17] she was born in Berlin. She and her mother moved to Düsseldorf after the end of World War II.[18] Von Trotta shared a strong bond with her mother in the absence of her father.[18] She has spoken about how her relationship with her mother gave her a sensitivity for friendships and solidarity between women, a theme that is seen in most of her films.[18] Von Trotta relocated to Paris in the 1960s, where she worked for film collectives, collaborating on scripts and co-directing short films.

In her early career, von Trotta was an actress, appearing in the early films of directors Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Volker Schlöndorff. In one of many interviews, von Trotta said: "I came from Germany before the New Wave, so we had all these silly movies. Cinema for me was entertainment, but it was not art. When I came to Paris, I saw several films of Ingmar Bergman, and all of the sudden I understood what cinema could be. I saw the films of Alfred Hitchcock and the French Nouvelle Vague. I stood there and said, 'that is what I'd like to do with my life.' But that was 1962, and you couldn't think that a woman could be a director. In a way, as an unconscious act, I started acting and when the New German films started, I tried to get in through acting."[7] Through her acting career, von Trotta was able to create an initial name for herself before becoming a director.[7]

Career

Her first input on a film, before making a solo-career out of it, was on Volker Schlöndorff's The Sudden Wealth of the Poor People of Kombach(1971), which she also acted in. In 1975, they proceeded to co-write and co-direct The Lost Honor of Katharina Blum (Die verlorene Ehre der Katharina Blum) which was based on an adaptation of Heinrich Böll's novel that dealt with "political repression in the Federal Republic".[19] Within this first film of von Trotta's, one can see the conflict "between the personal and the public" that resonates throughout her early film career.[5] The female characters within the story must occupy suffocating spaces that von Trotta uses to represent the confinement that women are subjected to in a world run by men.[5] Von Trotta was in charge of supervising the performance aspect while Schlöndorff dealt with the film's mechanics. As a director, he was not considered to be very audacious, while von Trotta's strong suit was in how she directed the film's actors "through whom she creates her story". Thus the two were able to complement each other. Their film was considered to be "the most successful German film of the mid-1970s". The couple collaborated on one more film, Coup de Grâce (1976), where von Trotta helped to write but not direct the work, before she branched off into her own career.[9]

Trotta's first solo film was The Second Awakening of Christa Klages (Das zweite Erwachen der Christa Klages) in 1978, which focused on "a young woman's political radicalization."[19] This film presented multiple subjects that von Trotta's films would be known for in the future: "female bonding, sisterhood, and the uses and effects of violence".[20] The film's script used real-life information about the seizure of school teacher Margit Czenki from Munich.[9]

Throughout her years of filmmaking, von Trotta has addressed many points of special concern to women: "abortion, contraception, the situation of women at work, spousal abuse, and [the] traditional female role".[8]

In 2001 she was the President of the Jury at the 23rd Moscow International Film Festival.[21]

She is a Professor of Film at the European Graduate School in Saas-Fee and remains an important personality of German cinema.

The Sister Films

Margarethe von Trotta's second feature film was Sisters, or the Balance of Happiness (Schwestern oder die Balance des Glücks, 1979). Unintentionally, she created a "trilogy of sister films" with her succeeding works: Marianne and Juliane (Die Bleierne Zeit, 1981) and Three Sisters (Fürchten und Lieben, 1988).[6] Barbara Quart, author of the book Women Directors, commented on the three works: "It is the quest for wholeness that is the preoccupation of von Trotta's entire sister series."[6] The women in these films are born into a traditional time (late 1940s and '50s), but they reject the positions that society has established for women.[6] As well, the topic of suicide plays an important role in the first two films and how the live sister connects to the dead one.[22] These three films investigate sisterhood and their bonds within a world that is falling apart all around them; this matter places von Trotta's work into New German Cinema.[6]

Sisters, or The Balance of Happiness delves into bonds, both physically and mentally, between sisters Maria and Anna, along with a third party.[6] The siblings are close before Anna commits suicide, but hidden behind her facial expressions is a desire to escape this feeling of frustration between following what she wants and what Maria asks of her.[22] Maria faces post suicide trauma, coping with her devastation by transplanting the memory of her sister onto her co-worker, Miriam. This ultimately leads Maria to deal with her inner issues so she can try to move on with her life in a peaceful manner.[6] This film garnered the Grand Prix Award at Créteil International Women's Film Festival in 1981.[23]

Marianne and Juliane (also known in English as The German Sisters) (1981) also deals with losing a sister and learning how to handle the grief.[6] Marianne and Juliane grow much closer after Marianne is put behind bars for her radical, terrorist activities. After unexpected news of Marianne's death, Juliane becomes obsessed with finding out the truth behind the supposed suicide, which she does not believe to be true.[22] The characters are based on the real-life Christiane and Gudrun Ensslin, which made "feminist critics" give extra notice to this work in comparison to all other films that von Trotta has done. Critics question the way von Trotta structured the plot and why she positioned it from that of Christiane's character, Juliane, instead of from Gudrun (Marianne). The film is characterized by the use of multiple flashback sequences, jumping between present day to childhood and everywhere in between, breaking any chance of a linear structure.[4] In this film, it is predominantly the Nazi era that influences Marianne and Juliane, albeit in different ways.[24]

 
Margarethe von Trotta (January 2013)

A theme within Marianne and Juliane that von Trotta uses throughout her works is that of "the personal is political".[25] In Marianne's jail cell, the sisters come to terms with "their personal and political differences".[25] One take on this theme is that Marianne's personal past has fostered her political, terrorist present. In the story's present day, her political actions effect her personal life: she is sentenced to prison and dies in her cell, her husband takes his own life, and her son is put in danger.[25] Not surprisingly, this film was the subject of much debate from conservatives who believed that Marianne's character as a terrorist was given too much understanding.[26] This film won the AGIS Award, FIPRESCI Prize, Golden Lion Award, New Cinema Award, and OCIC Award at the Venice Film Festival in 1981, along with a few more listed in the awards section.[23] Von Trotta winning the Golden Lion was a true achievement for women in film, for an honor of this stature had not been awarded to a female director since Leni Reifenstahl received "the Mussolini Cup" in 1938 for Olympia.[27] In 1994 Ingmar Bergman listed it as one of his favorite 11 films of all time.

Love and Fear or Paura e amore (in Italy), also known as Trois Soeurs (in France) or Three Sisters (1988) – von Trotta's sixth feature-length film – focuses on a set of three sisters: Olga, Masha, and Irina. It is through these females that von Trotta is able to present her opinions concerning the stature of females in society and the traditional politics of the time that play a role in shaping their lives. Once again, this film deals with sisters who yearn for significance in all aspects of their lives (Rueschmann, 168). Their constant quest for love is the way they cope with the unfavorable aspects of life. Compared to the other two preceding films in the "sister series", Love and Fear contains key melodramatic elements that focus on one's feelings and anguish. It does not address politics as heavily as the other films, but more on von Trotta's take of the distinction between men and women in society.[6] This film was nominated for the Palme d'Or Award at the Cannes Film Festival in 1988.[23]

Sheer Madness

Sheer Madness (Heller Wahn, 1983), one of von Trotta's popular feature films, also uses suicide as an important part of the storyline. An analysis on the film given by authors Susan Linville and Kent Casper reads: "suicidal states of mind may stem not from negative distortions of external reality, but from an accurate assessment of the way things are."[22] Within this story, once again, women's feelings are investigated through the friendship between two females, Ruth and Olga.[5] This film gave the impression that, supposedly, von Trotta was a "man-hater."[22] Von Trotta won the OCIC Award-Honorable Mention at the Berlin International Film Festival in the Forum of New Cinema for Sheer Madness in 1983. This film was also nominated for the Golden Bear at the Berlin International Film Festival in the same year.[23]

Rosa Luxemburg

Von Trotta's 1986 eponymous film about the feminist and marxist socialist Rosa Luxemburg examines both her "life as a public revolutionary and her private experience as a woman".[18] Barbara Sukowa, who stars in several of von Trotta's films, won the Best Actress honors at Cannes in 1986 for her delivery of the main role. Through her cinematic vision, von Trotta returns to the theme of "the political and the personal", giving fair attention to both Luxemburg's personal life as a female in society and her political life as a "public revolutionary".[18] Rosa Luxemburg was nominated for the Palme d'Or at Cannes Film Festival in 1986. This film won the Guild Film Award-Gold at the Guild of German Art House Cinemas in German Film in 1987.[23]

Rosenstrasse

Looking forward to some of von Trotta's more contemporary films, this same idea of female bonds and their emotions is still center stage, such as in her piece from 2003, Rosenstrasse. The film uses melodramatic elements, like in Paura e amore (1988), to express the emotions of the characters. The difference here is that Rosenstrasse is a "maternal melodrama."[5] There are three overlapping familial connections involving "mother-daughter relationships" within the story: "the bond between Hannah, a first-generation Jewish American, and her mother Ruth"; "the...mother-daughter bond between Ruth and her Jewish mother Miriam"; "and...the central relationship between surrogate mother Lena von Eschenbach/Fisher and Ruth."[5] In this, the definition of a mother is stretched from the "biological" standpoint to the "symbolic."[5]

Vision

The film Vision (2009) chronicles the true tale of Hildegard von Bingen, a nun who stands for another of von Trotta's independent women protagonists—one who fights the patriarchal society of the church by foregoing the established rules of conduct and, upon learning one of her fellow sisters is with child, asks for a different area for the nuns to call their own. In an interview between von Trotta and Damon Smith from Filmmaker Magazine, von Trotta explains her choice for the subject of her film: "When I'm searching for a woman in the very distant past, I look for a woman who is in a way near to my own vision...I am always attracted by a woman who has to fight for her own life and her own reality, who has to get out of a certain situation of imprisonment, to free [herself]. That is perhaps the main theme in all my films."[27]

Again, a deep bond is witnessed in this story, as in the rest of von Trotta's films, between Hildegard and a young nun, Richardis. Continuing with the interview, von Trotta says, "It's not a lesbian love! At one point she [Hildegard] says, ‘She is my mother and I'm her mother, I'm her daughter and she's my daughter.’ Hildegard couldn't have children, so in a way Richardis is her daughter and friend and mother [all at once]; it's a very deep love."[27]

Von Trotta wanted to make a film with a female protagonist that viewers could relate to instead of looking at her from below, as she clarifies in an interview with Zeitgeist Films:

The figures that appeal to me are always strong women who also have moments of weakness; therefore, I never try to make heroines out of them. Instead I show how they fought to find their own way, how they put themselves out there, and how much they had to swallow in order to find themselves. I am fascinated by how they overcome obstacles in order to achieve their goals. Hildegard von Bingen had a dream of founding her own abbey, and she suffered a lot of setbacks in the process. The moments of her greatest weakness are when the nun Richardis is to be taken away from her. In this situation, she behaves either like a small, abandoned child, or with fury. This conduct is all recorded in her letters. And it is precisely these moments of extreme self-abandonment that I find so beautiful, surprising, and contradictory. Hildegard von Bingen demands for herself what she usually gives to others. I absolutely did not want to portray her as a saint.[20]

Hannah Arendt

Hannah Arendt (2012) portrays an important segment in the life of the German-Jewish academic Hannah Arendt.[28] In an interview with Thilo Wydra, von Trotta is asked if Arendt is similar to the women she has portrayed in past films. Von Trotta replies with an explanation about how real-life characters from her past films, Rosa Luxemburg and Die bleierne Zeit (Marianne and Juliane), fought and died for causes they found to be right: Luxemburg wanted more equality in her community, and Gudrun Ensslin (Marianne) wanted to revolutionize humanity. Von Trotta says, "Hannah Arendt is a woman who fits into my personal mold of historically important women that I have portrayed in my films. ‘I want to understand,’ was one of her guiding principles. I feel that applies to myself and my films as well.[28]

Television work

The common problem that filmmakers run into is budget issues and where they get their funds; during the mid-eighties, many films went under due to money cuts by the "German subvention system." Several of von Trotta's fellow women filmmakers took the safe route and went into the education field in media. But not Margarethe von Trotta—to stay in the game, she accepted proposals for TV pieces, even if it meant losing a bit of her artistic allowances.[8] Her first piece for television was Winterkind (1997), which was the first time she did not compose the screenplay for a work she was directing. She followed this with three more TV films: At Fifty Men Kiss Differently [de] (1997), Days of Darkness [de] (1997), and Anniversaries [de] (2000). Through her experience of working in television, von Trotta learned how to try to hold on to her stamp as an "independent filmmaker" in terms of keeping her artistic approach.[8]

Personal life

In 1964, von Trotta married Jürgen Moeller and had one son, German documentary director Felix Moeller. They divorced in 1968 and von Trotta married German filmmaker Volker Schlöndorff. Together, they raised Felix and worked together on film projects. Von Trotta and Schlöndorff's film collaboration in Germany during the politically turbulent 1970s is documented in Felix's 2018 film Sympathisanten: Unser Deutscher Herbst ("Sympathizers: our German Spring").

Filmography

Feature films

Year Title Role Notes
1975 The Lost Honour of Katharina Blum (Die verlorene Ehre der Katharina Blum)
1978 The Second Awakening of Christa Klages (Das zweite Erwachen der Christa Klages)
1979 Sisters, or the Balance of Happiness (Schwestern oder die Balance des Glücks) Screenplay, Director [29][30]
1981 Marianne and Juliane (Die bleierne Zeit) Also known by the English title of The German Sisters
1983 Sheer Madness (Heller Wahn) [31][32]
1986 Rosa Luxemburg Director [33][34][35]
1988 Felix [it] Anthology film. Segment "Eva"
1988 Love and Fear (Fürchten und Lieben / Paura e amore) Also known as Three Sisters or Trois Soeurs in French
1990 The African Woman (Die Rückkehr / L'africana)
1993 The Long Silence (Zeit des Zorns / Il lungo silenzio)
1995 The Promise (Das Versprechen) Director [36][37][38][39]
2003 Rosenstrasse Director [40][41][42]
2006 I Am the Other Woman [de] (Ich bin die Andere)
2009 Vision (Vision – Aus dem Leben der Hildegard von Bingen) [43][44]
2012 Hannah Arendt Writer, director [45][46][47][48][49]
2015 The Misplaced World [de] (Die abhandene Welt)
2017 Forget About Nick Director [50]
2018 Searching for Ingmar Bergman Writer, director Documentary [51][52][53][54][55]
2023 Ingeborg Bachmann – Journey into the Desert Writer, director

Television films and series

Year Title Notes
2012 Mai per amore [it]: La fuga di Teresa TV series episode
2010 Die Schwester TV film
2007 Tatort: Unter uns TV series episode
2004 Die andere Frau (The Other Woman ) TV film
2000 Anniversaries [de]
1999 Days of Darkness [de] TV miniseries
1998 At Fifty Men Kiss Differently [de] TV film
1997 Winterkind TV film

Actress

Year Title Role Notes
1984 Bluebeard [pl] (TV film) Jutta
1977 Bierkampf [de]
1976 Coup de Grâce Sophie von Reval [56]
1976 Das Andechser Gefühl Movie star
1976 Die Atlantikschwimmer Swimming instructor
1974 Übernachtung in Tirol (TV film) Katja
1973 Desaster (TV film) Ulla Werther
1972 A Free Woman Elisabeth Junker Also, Screenplay [57][58][59]
1972 The Morals of Ruth Halbfass Doris Vogelsang
1971 Warnung vor einer heiligen Nutte Babs
1971 The Sudden Wealth of the Poor People of Kombach Sophie
1970 The American Soldier Chambermaid
1970 Gods of the Plague Margarethe
1970 Baal (TV film) Sophie
1969 Brandstifter [de] (TV film) Anka
1969 If You Play with Crazy Birds [de] Helga
1967 Tränen trocknet der Wind… [de] Gaby

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Work Result Notes
2022 European Film Awards Lifetime Achievement Award Won [11][14][60]
2019 German Film Awards Honorary Lifetime Award Won [61][15]
2013 Germany’s Art House Cinema Owners Association AG Kino Gilde Film Prize Hannah Arendt Won [62]
2012 Leo Baeck Medal Won [63]
2004 Taormina International Film Festival Taormina Arte Award Won
Hessian Film Awards Honorary Award Won
David di Donatello Awards Best European Film Rosenstrasse (2003) Won [13][12]
Golden Globes, Italy Best European Film Won
2003 Venice Film Festival Golden Lion Nominated
SIGNIS Award Honorable Mention
2001 Biarritz International Festival of Audiovisual Programming TV series and Serials Anniversaries (2000) Special Mention
2000 Golden Camera, Germany Audience Camera Award Days of Darkness (1999, TV) Won
1995 Guild of German Art House Cinemas Guild Film Award-Gold The Promise (1995) Won
Bavarian Film Awards Best Direction Won
1994 Flaiano International Prizes in Cinema Career Award Won
1993 Montreal World Film Festival Most Popular Film and Prize of the Ecumenical Jury Il Lungo Silenzio (1993) Won
1989 German Film Awards Special Film Award '40th Anniversary of the Federal Republic of Germany' Marianne and Juliane (1981) Won
1988 Cannes Film Festival Palme d'Or Love and Fear (1988) Nominated [16][64]
1987 Guild of German Art House Cinemas Guild Film Award - Gold Rosa Luxemburg (1986) Won
1986 Cannes Film Festival Palme d'Or Nominated [16][65]
1983 Berlin International Film Festival Golden Bear Sheer Madness (1983) Nominated
OCIC Award Honorable Mention
1982 David di Donatello Awards Best Foreign Film Marianne and Juliane (1981) Nominated [10][12]
Best Foreign Director Won [10][12]
Best Screenplay Nominated [12]
1981 Venice Film Festival Golden Lion Won [10][11][66]
Valladolid International Film Festival Honorable Mention
Créteil International Women's Film Festival Grand Prix Award Sisters, or The Balance of Happiness (1979) Won
Gold Hugo Chicago International Film Festival The German Sisters (Die bleierne Zeit) Won [67]
1972 German Critics Association

Awards in Film

Critics Award Won

References

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  54. ^ Künemund, Jan (11 July 2018). "Doku von Margarethe von Trotta: Suche nach Ingmar Bergman - Filmkritik". Der Spiegel (in German). ISSN 2195-1349. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  55. ^ Fear, David (2 November 2018). "'Searching for Ingmar Bergman' Review: One Filmmaker Pays Tribute to Another". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  56. ^ Canby, Vincent (6 February 1978). "'Coup de Grace,' A Film Parable". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  57. ^ Rosen, Marjorie (7 July 1974). "Is 'A Free Woman' The Woman We've Been Waiting For?". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
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  60. ^ "Triangle of Sadness takes four top prizes at European film awards". the Guardian. 10 December 2022. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
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  62. ^ Roxborough, Scott (20 September 2013). "Margarethe Von Trotta's 'Hannah Arendt' Wins German Arthouse Cinema Honor". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  63. ^ "Leo Baeck Medal for Margarethe von Trotta".
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  65. ^ "ROSA LUXEMBURG - Festival de Cannes". www.festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
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Further reading

  • Andac, Ben. "Margarethe Von Trotta." Senses of Cinema. Web. 4 May 2012. <http://sensesofcinema.com/2002/great-directors/von_trotta/>.
  • "Awards for Margarethe Von Trotta." IMDb. IMDb.com. Web. 2 May 2012. <https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0903137/awards>.
  • "Birds Eye View: Filmmaker Focus: Margarethe Von Trotta." 2011 Film Festival: Celebrating Women Filmmakers. Birds Eye View. Web. 2 May 2012. <>.
  • Eifler, Margret. "Margarethe Von Trotta as Filmmaker: Biographical Retrospectives." The German Quarterly 76.4 (2003): 443–48. JSTOR 3252242.
  • Gerhardt, Christina. “RAF as German and Family History: Von Trotta's Marianne and Juliane and Petzold's The State I Am in.” The Place of Politics in German Film. Ed. Martin Blumenthal-Barby (Bielefeld: Aisthesis, 2014). 166–184. Print.
  • Gollub, Christian-Albrecht. "Volker Schlöndorff and Margarethe Von Trotta: Transcending the Genres." New German Filmmakers: From Oberhausen through the 1970s. Ed. Klaus Phillips. New York: Ungar Pub., 1984. 266–302. Print.
  • "An Interview with Margarethe Von Trotta: Director of ‘Vision’" Interview by Zeitgeist Films. Spirituality Practice. Zeitgeist Films. Web. 3 May 2012. <http://www.spiritualityandpractice.com/films/features.php?id=20271>.
  • Kuttenberg, Eva. "The Hidden Face of Narcissus: Suicide as Poetic Speech in Margarethe Von Trotta's Early Films." Women in German Yearbook: Feminist Studies in German Literature & Culture 20 (2004): 122–44. JSTOR 20688975.
  • Linville, Susan E. "Retrieving History: Margarethe Von Trotta's Marianne and Juliane." PMLA 106.3 (1991): 446–58. JSTOR 462778.
  • "Margarethe Von Trotta." German Flicks. HyperEd. Web. 2 May 2012. <>.
  • "Margarethe Von Trotta." IMDb. IMDb.com. Web. 6 May 2012. <https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0903137/>.
  • Parkinson, Anna M. "Neo-Feminist Mütterfilm? The Emotional Politics of Margarethe Von Trotta's 'Rosenstrasse'" The Collapse of the Conventional: German Film and Its Politics at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century. Ed. Jaimey Fisher and Brad Prager. Detroit: Wayne State UP, 2010. Print.
  • Prot, Bénédicte. "Von Trotta to Start Shooting Hannah Arendt Biopic." Cineuropa. German Films. Web. 4 May 2012. <http://cineuropa.org/2011/nw.aspx?t=newsdetail>.
  • Rueschmann, Eva. "The Politics of Intersubjectivity: The Sister Films of Margarethe Von Trotta." Sisters On Screen: Siblings in Contemporary Cinema. Philadelphia: Temple UP, 2000. 147–75. Print.
  • Seiter, Ellen. "The Political Is Personal: Margarethe Von Trotta's 'Marianne and Juliane'" Films For Women. Ed. Charlotte Brunsdon. London: British Film Institute, 1986. Print.
  • Skidmore, James M. "Intellectualism and Emotionalism in Margarethe Von Trotta's "Die Bleierne Zeit"" German Studies Review 25.3 (2002): 551–67. JSTOR 1432601.
  • Sklar, Robert. "Invaded by Memories of Germany's Past: An Interview with Margarethe Von Trotta." Cineaste 29.2 (2004): 10–12. Web. 3 May 2012. <>.
  • Smith, Damon. "MARGARETHE VON TROTTA, "VISION" | Filmmaker Magazine." Filmmaker: The Magazine of Independent Film. Filmmaker Magazine, 13 October 2010. Web. 5 May 2012. <http://www.filmmakermagazine.com/news/2010/10/margarethe-von-trotta-vision/>.
  • Wydra, Thilo. "Margarethe Von Trotta on Hannah Arendt: 'Turning Thoughts into Images'" German Filmmakers and Movies. Goethe Institute. Web. 4 May 2012. <http://www.goethe.de/kue/flm/far/en8898031.htm>.

External links

  • at European Graduate School. Biography and filmography.
  • Margarethe von Trotta at IMDb
  • Senses of Cinema: Great Directors Critical Database
  • |"MARGARETHE VON TROTTA, 'VISION' | Filmmaker Magazine."
  • "An Interview with Margarethe Von Trotta: Director of ‘Vision’"
  • "Von Trotta to Start Shooting Hannah Arendt Biopic."
  • "Margarethe Von Trotta on Hannah Arendt: 'Turning Thoughts into Images'"
  • Margarethe von Trotta at IMDb
  • Awards for Margarethe von Trotta

margarethe, trotta, this, german, name, surname, trotta, trotta, german, maʁɡaˈʁeːtə, fɔn, ˈtʁɔta, listen, born, february, 1942, german, film, director, screenwriter, actress, been, referred, leading, force, german, cinema, movement, trotta, extensive, body, w. In this German name the surname is von Trotta not Trotta Margarethe von Trotta German maʁɡaˈʁeːte fɔn ˈtʁɔta listen born 21 February 1942 is a German film director screenwriter and actress 1 She has been referred to as a leading force of the New German Cinema movement 2 3 Von Trotta s extensive body of work has won awards internationally 2 She was married to and collaborated with director Volker Schlondorff Although they made a successful team von Trotta felt she was seen as secondary to Schlondorff 4 Subsequently she established a solo career for herself and became Germany s foremost female film director who has offered the most sustained and successful female variant of Autorenkino in postwar German film history 5 Certain aspects of von Trotta s work have been compared to Ingmar Bergman s features from the 1960s and 1970s 6 Margarethe von Trottavon Trotta in 2007Born 1942 02 21 21 February 1942 age 81 Berlin GermanyOccupation s Film director screenwriter actressYears active1968 presentMovementNew German CinemaSpouse s Jurgen Moeller 1964 1968 Volker Schlondorff 1971 1991 ChildrenFelix MoellerVon Trotta has been called the world s leading feminist filmmaker 7 The predominant aim of her films is to create new representations of women 8 Her films are concerned with relationships between and among women sisters best friends etc as well as with relationships between women and men and include political settings Nevertheless she rejects the suggestion that she makes women s films 9 She is a recipient of one Golden Lion at Venice Film Festival 2 David di Donatello Awards Gold Hugo Award at Chicago International Film Festival Lifetime Achievement Award at European Film Award Lifetime Achievement Award at German Film Awards 2 Palme d Or nominations at Cannes Film Festival and numerous other awards and nominations 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 The Sister Films 2 2 Sheer Madness 2 3 Rosa Luxemburg 2 4 Rosenstrasse 2 5 Vision 2 6 Hannah Arendt 2 7 Television work 3 Personal life 4 Filmography 4 1 Feature films 4 2 Television films and series 4 3 Actress 5 Awards and nominations 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life EditThe child of Elisabeth von Trotta and painter Alfred Roloff 17 she was born in Berlin She and her mother moved to Dusseldorf after the end of World War II 18 Von Trotta shared a strong bond with her mother in the absence of her father 18 She has spoken about how her relationship with her mother gave her a sensitivity for friendships and solidarity between women a theme that is seen in most of her films 18 Von Trotta relocated to Paris in the 1960s where she worked for film collectives collaborating on scripts and co directing short films In her early career von Trotta was an actress appearing in the early films of directors Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Volker Schlondorff In one of many interviews von Trotta said I came from Germany before the New Wave so we had all these silly movies Cinema for me was entertainment but it was not art When I came to Paris I saw several films of Ingmar Bergman and all of the sudden I understood what cinema could be I saw the films of Alfred Hitchcock and the French Nouvelle Vague I stood there and said that is what I d like to do with my life But that was 1962 and you couldn t think that a woman could be a director In a way as an unconscious act I started acting and when the New German films started I tried to get in through acting 7 Through her acting career von Trotta was able to create an initial name for herself before becoming a director 7 Career EditHer first input on a film before making a solo career out of it was on Volker Schlondorff s The Sudden Wealth of the Poor People of Kombach 1971 which she also acted in In 1975 they proceeded to co write and co direct The Lost Honor of Katharina Blum Die verlorene Ehre der Katharina Blum which was based on an adaptation of Heinrich Boll s novel that dealt with political repression in the Federal Republic 19 Within this first film of von Trotta s one can see the conflict between the personal and the public that resonates throughout her early film career 5 The female characters within the story must occupy suffocating spaces that von Trotta uses to represent the confinement that women are subjected to in a world run by men 5 Von Trotta was in charge of supervising the performance aspect while Schlondorff dealt with the film s mechanics As a director he was not considered to be very audacious while von Trotta s strong suit was in how she directed the film s actors through whom she creates her story Thus the two were able to complement each other Their film was considered to be the most successful German film of the mid 1970s The couple collaborated on one more film Coup de Grace 1976 where von Trotta helped to write but not direct the work before she branched off into her own career 9 Trotta s first solo film was The Second Awakening of Christa Klages Das zweite Erwachen der Christa Klages in 1978 which focused on a young woman s political radicalization 19 This film presented multiple subjects that von Trotta s films would be known for in the future female bonding sisterhood and the uses and effects of violence 20 The film s script used real life information about the seizure of school teacher Margit Czenki from Munich 9 Throughout her years of filmmaking von Trotta has addressed many points of special concern to women abortion contraception the situation of women at work spousal abuse and the traditional female role 8 In 2001 she was the President of the Jury at the 23rd Moscow International Film Festival 21 She is a Professor of Film at the European Graduate School in Saas Fee and remains an important personality of German cinema The Sister Films Edit Margarethe von Trotta s second feature film was Sisters or the Balance of Happiness Schwestern oder die Balance des Glucks 1979 Unintentionally she created a trilogy of sister films with her succeeding works Marianne and Juliane Die Bleierne Zeit 1981 and Three Sisters Furchten und Lieben 1988 6 Barbara Quart author of the book Women Directors commented on the three works It is the quest for wholeness that is the preoccupation of von Trotta s entire sister series 6 The women in these films are born into a traditional time late 1940s and 50s but they reject the positions that society has established for women 6 As well the topic of suicide plays an important role in the first two films and how the live sister connects to the dead one 22 These three films investigate sisterhood and their bonds within a world that is falling apart all around them this matter places von Trotta s work into New German Cinema 6 Sisters or The Balance of Happiness delves into bonds both physically and mentally between sisters Maria and Anna along with a third party 6 The siblings are close before Anna commits suicide but hidden behind her facial expressions is a desire to escape this feeling of frustration between following what she wants and what Maria asks of her 22 Maria faces post suicide trauma coping with her devastation by transplanting the memory of her sister onto her co worker Miriam This ultimately leads Maria to deal with her inner issues so she can try to move on with her life in a peaceful manner 6 This film garnered the Grand Prix Award at Creteil International Women s Film Festival in 1981 23 Marianne and Juliane also known in English as The German Sisters 1981 also deals with losing a sister and learning how to handle the grief 6 Marianne and Juliane grow much closer after Marianne is put behind bars for her radical terrorist activities After unexpected news of Marianne s death Juliane becomes obsessed with finding out the truth behind the supposed suicide which she does not believe to be true 22 The characters are based on the real life Christiane and Gudrun Ensslin which made feminist critics give extra notice to this work in comparison to all other films that von Trotta has done Critics question the way von Trotta structured the plot and why she positioned it from that of Christiane s character Juliane instead of from Gudrun Marianne The film is characterized by the use of multiple flashback sequences jumping between present day to childhood and everywhere in between breaking any chance of a linear structure 4 In this film it is predominantly the Nazi era that influences Marianne and Juliane albeit in different ways 24 Margarethe von Trotta January 2013 A theme within Marianne and Juliane that von Trotta uses throughout her works is that of the personal is political 25 In Marianne s jail cell the sisters come to terms with their personal and political differences 25 One take on this theme is that Marianne s personal past has fostered her political terrorist present In the story s present day her political actions effect her personal life she is sentenced to prison and dies in her cell her husband takes his own life and her son is put in danger 25 Not surprisingly this film was the subject of much debate from conservatives who believed that Marianne s character as a terrorist was given too much understanding 26 This film won the AGIS Award FIPRESCI Prize Golden Lion Award New Cinema Award and OCIC Award at the Venice Film Festival in 1981 along with a few more listed in the awards section 23 Von Trotta winning the Golden Lion was a true achievement for women in film for an honor of this stature had not been awarded to a female director since Leni Reifenstahl received the Mussolini Cup in 1938 for Olympia 27 In 1994 Ingmar Bergman listed it as one of his favorite 11 films of all time Love and Fear or Paura e amore in Italy also known as Trois Soeurs in France or Three Sisters 1988 von Trotta s sixth feature length film focuses on a set of three sisters Olga Masha and Irina It is through these females that von Trotta is able to present her opinions concerning the stature of females in society and the traditional politics of the time that play a role in shaping their lives Once again this film deals with sisters who yearn for significance in all aspects of their lives Rueschmann 168 Their constant quest for love is the way they cope with the unfavorable aspects of life Compared to the other two preceding films in the sister series Love and Fear contains key melodramatic elements that focus on one s feelings and anguish It does not address politics as heavily as the other films but more on von Trotta s take of the distinction between men and women in society 6 This film was nominated for the Palme d Or Award at the Cannes Film Festival in 1988 23 Sheer Madness Edit Sheer Madness Heller Wahn 1983 one of von Trotta s popular feature films also uses suicide as an important part of the storyline An analysis on the film given by authors Susan Linville and Kent Casper reads suicidal states of mind may stem not from negative distortions of external reality but from an accurate assessment of the way things are 22 Within this story once again women s feelings are investigated through the friendship between two females Ruth and Olga 5 This film gave the impression that supposedly von Trotta was a man hater 22 Von Trotta won the OCIC Award Honorable Mention at the Berlin International Film Festival in the Forum of New Cinema for Sheer Madness in 1983 This film was also nominated for the Golden Bear at the Berlin International Film Festival in the same year 23 Rosa Luxemburg Edit Main article Rosa Luxemburg film Von Trotta s 1986 eponymous film about the feminist and marxist socialist Rosa Luxemburg examines both her life as a public revolutionary and her private experience as a woman 18 Barbara Sukowa who stars in several of von Trotta s films won the Best Actress honors at Cannes in 1986 for her delivery of the main role Through her cinematic vision von Trotta returns to the theme of the political and the personal giving fair attention to both Luxemburg s personal life as a female in society and her political life as a public revolutionary 18 Rosa Luxemburg was nominated for the Palme d Or at Cannes Film Festival in 1986 This film won the Guild Film Award Gold at the Guild of German Art House Cinemas in German Film in 1987 23 Rosenstrasse Edit Looking forward to some of von Trotta s more contemporary films this same idea of female bonds and their emotions is still center stage such as in her piece from 2003 Rosenstrasse The film uses melodramatic elements like in Paura e amore 1988 to express the emotions of the characters The difference here is that Rosenstrasse is a maternal melodrama 5 There are three overlapping familial connections involving mother daughter relationships within the story the bond between Hannah a first generation Jewish American and her mother Ruth the mother daughter bond between Ruth and her Jewish mother Miriam and the central relationship between surrogate mother Lena von Eschenbach Fisher and Ruth 5 In this the definition of a mother is stretched from the biological standpoint to the symbolic 5 Vision Edit The film Vision 2009 chronicles the true tale of Hildegard von Bingen a nun who stands for another of von Trotta s independent women protagonists one who fights the patriarchal society of the church by foregoing the established rules of conduct and upon learning one of her fellow sisters is with child asks for a different area for the nuns to call their own In an interview between von Trotta and Damon Smith from Filmmaker Magazine von Trotta explains her choice for the subject of her film When I m searching for a woman in the very distant past I look for a woman who is in a way near to my own vision I am always attracted by a woman who has to fight for her own life and her own reality who has to get out of a certain situation of imprisonment to free herself That is perhaps the main theme in all my films 27 Again a deep bond is witnessed in this story as in the rest of von Trotta s films between Hildegard and a young nun Richardis Continuing with the interview von Trotta says It s not a lesbian love At one point she Hildegard says She is my mother and I m her mother I m her daughter and she s my daughter Hildegard couldn t have children so in a way Richardis is her daughter and friend and mother all at once it s a very deep love 27 Von Trotta wanted to make a film with a female protagonist that viewers could relate to instead of looking at her from below as she clarifies in an interview with Zeitgeist Films The figures that appeal to me are always strong women who also have moments of weakness therefore I never try to make heroines out of them Instead I show how they fought to find their own way how they put themselves out there and how much they had to swallow in order to find themselves I am fascinated by how they overcome obstacles in order to achieve their goals Hildegard von Bingen had a dream of founding her own abbey and she suffered a lot of setbacks in the process The moments of her greatest weakness are when the nun Richardis is to be taken away from her In this situation she behaves either like a small abandoned child or with fury This conduct is all recorded in her letters And it is precisely these moments of extreme self abandonment that I find so beautiful surprising and contradictory Hildegard von Bingen demands for herself what she usually gives to others I absolutely did not want to portray her as a saint 20 Hannah Arendt Edit Hannah Arendt 2012 portrays an important segment in the life of the German Jewish academic Hannah Arendt 28 In an interview with Thilo Wydra von Trotta is asked if Arendt is similar to the women she has portrayed in past films Von Trotta replies with an explanation about how real life characters from her past films Rosa Luxemburg and Die bleierne Zeit Marianne and Juliane fought and died for causes they found to be right Luxemburg wanted more equality in her community and Gudrun Ensslin Marianne wanted to revolutionize humanity Von Trotta says Hannah Arendt is a woman who fits into my personal mold of historically important women that I have portrayed in my films I want to understand was one of her guiding principles I feel that applies to myself and my films as well 28 Television work Edit The common problem that filmmakers run into is budget issues and where they get their funds during the mid eighties many films went under due to money cuts by the German subvention system Several of von Trotta s fellow women filmmakers took the safe route and went into the education field in media But not Margarethe von Trotta to stay in the game she accepted proposals for TV pieces even if it meant losing a bit of her artistic allowances 8 Her first piece for television was Winterkind 1997 which was the first time she did not compose the screenplay for a work she was directing She followed this with three more TV films At Fifty Men Kiss Differently de 1997 Days of Darkness de 1997 and Anniversaries de 2000 Through her experience of working in television von Trotta learned how to try to hold on to her stamp as an independent filmmaker in terms of keeping her artistic approach 8 Personal life EditIn 1964 von Trotta married Jurgen Moeller and had one son German documentary director Felix Moeller They divorced in 1968 and von Trotta married German filmmaker Volker Schlondorff Together they raised Felix and worked together on film projects Von Trotta and Schlondorff s film collaboration in Germany during the politically turbulent 1970s is documented in Felix s 2018 film Sympathisanten Unser Deutscher Herbst Sympathizers our German Spring Filmography EditFeature films Edit Year Title Role Notes1975 The Lost Honour of Katharina Blum Die verlorene Ehre der Katharina Blum 1978 The Second Awakening of Christa Klages Das zweite Erwachen der Christa Klages 1979 Sisters or the Balance of Happiness Schwestern oder die Balance des Glucks Screenplay Director 29 30 1981 Marianne and Juliane Die bleierne Zeit Also known by the English title of The German Sisters1983 Sheer Madness Heller Wahn 31 32 1986 Rosa Luxemburg Director 33 34 35 1988 Felix it Anthology film Segment Eva 1988 Love and Fear Furchten und Lieben Paura e amore Also known as Three Sisters or Trois Soeurs in French1990 The African Woman Die Ruckkehr L africana 1993 The Long Silence Zeit des Zorns Il lungo silenzio 1995 The Promise Das Versprechen Director 36 37 38 39 2003 Rosenstrasse Director 40 41 42 2006 I Am the Other Woman de Ich bin die Andere 2009 Vision Vision Aus dem Leben der Hildegard von Bingen 43 44 2012 Hannah Arendt Writer director 45 46 47 48 49 2015 The Misplaced World de Die abhandene Welt 2017 Forget About Nick Director 50 2018 Searching for Ingmar Bergman Writer director Documentary 51 52 53 54 55 2023 Ingeborg Bachmann Journey into the Desert Writer directorTelevision films and series Edit Year Title Notes2012 Mai per amore it La fuga di Teresa TV series episode2010 Die Schwester TV film2007 Tatort Unter uns TV series episode2004 Die andere Frau The Other Woman TV film2000 Anniversaries de 1999 Days of Darkness de TV miniseries1998 At Fifty Men Kiss Differently de TV film1997 Winterkind TV filmActress Edit Year Title Role Notes1984 Bluebeard pl TV film Jutta1977 Bierkampf de 1976 Coup de Grace Sophie von Reval 56 1976 Das Andechser Gefuhl Movie star1976 Die Atlantikschwimmer Swimming instructor1974 Ubernachtung in Tirol TV film Katja1973 Desaster TV film Ulla Werther1972 A Free Woman Elisabeth Junker Also Screenplay 57 58 59 1972 The Morals of Ruth Halbfass Doris Vogelsang1971 Warnung vor einer heiligen Nutte Babs1971 The Sudden Wealth of the Poor People of Kombach Sophie1970 The American Soldier Chambermaid1970 Gods of the Plague Margarethe1970 Baal TV film Sophie1969 Brandstifter de TV film Anka1969 If You Play with Crazy Birds de Helga1967 Tranen trocknet der Wind de GabyAwards and nominations EditYear Award Category Work Result Notes2022 European Film Awards Lifetime Achievement Award Won 11 14 60 2019 German Film Awards Honorary Lifetime Award Won 61 15 2013 Germany s Art House Cinema Owners Association AG Kino Gilde Film Prize Hannah Arendt Won 62 2012 Leo Baeck Medal Won 63 2004 Taormina International Film Festival Taormina Arte Award WonHessian Film Awards Honorary Award WonDavid di Donatello Awards Best European Film Rosenstrasse 2003 Won 13 12 Golden Globes Italy Best European Film Won2003 Venice Film Festival Golden Lion NominatedSIGNIS Award Honorable Mention2001 Biarritz International Festival of Audiovisual Programming TV series and Serials Anniversaries 2000 Special Mention2000 Golden Camera Germany Audience Camera Award Days of Darkness 1999 TV Won1995 Guild of German Art House Cinemas Guild Film Award Gold The Promise 1995 WonBavarian Film Awards Best Direction Won1994 Flaiano International Prizes in Cinema Career Award Won1993 Montreal World Film Festival Most Popular Film and Prize of the Ecumenical Jury Il Lungo Silenzio 1993 Won1989 German Film Awards Special Film Award 40th Anniversary of the Federal Republic of Germany Marianne and Juliane 1981 Won1988 Cannes Film Festival Palme d Or Love and Fear 1988 Nominated 16 64 1987 Guild of German Art House Cinemas Guild Film Award Gold Rosa Luxemburg 1986 Won1986 Cannes Film Festival Palme d Or Nominated 16 65 1983 Berlin International Film Festival Golden Bear Sheer Madness 1983 NominatedOCIC Award Honorable Mention1982 David di Donatello Awards Best Foreign Film Marianne and Juliane 1981 Nominated 10 12 Best Foreign Director Won 10 12 Best Screenplay Nominated 12 1981 Venice Film Festival Golden Lion Won 10 11 66 Valladolid International Film Festival Honorable MentionCreteil International Women s Film Festival Grand Prix Award Sisters or The Balance of Happiness 1979 WonGold Hugo Chicago International Film Festival The German Sisters Die bleierne Zeit Won 67 1972 German Critics Association Awards in Film Critics Award WonReferences Edit Margarethe von Trotta TVGuide com Retrieved 26 December 2022 a b Birds Eye View Filmmaker Focus Margarethe von Trotta Margarethe von Trotta Archived from the original on 10 January 2012 Retrieved 7 May 2012 Birds Eye View Filmmaker Focus Margarethe Von Trotta 2011 Film Festival Celebrating Women Filmmakers Birds Eye View Web 2 May 2012 Margarethe von Trotta Archived 27 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine at European Graduate School Retrieved 14 May 2010 a b JSTOR 462778 Linville Susan E Retrieving History Margarethe Von Trotta s Marianne and Juliane PMLA 106 3 1991 446 58 a b c d e f g Parkinson Anna M Neo Feminist Mutterfilm The Emotional Politics of Margarethe Von Trotta s Rosenstrasse The Collapse of the Conventional German Film and Its Politics at the Turn of the Twenty First Century Ed Jaimey Fisher and Brad Prager Detroit Wayne State UP 2010 Print a b c d e f g h i Rueschmann Eva The Politics of Intersubjectivity The Sister Films of Margarethe Von Trotta Sisters On Screen Siblings in Contemporary Cinema Philadelphia Temple UP 2000 147 75 Print a b c Margarethe von Trotta Archived from the original on 8 December 2008 Retrieved 7 May 2012 Margarethe Von Trotta German Flicks HyperEd Web 2 May 2012 a b c d JSTOR 3252242 Eifler Margret Margarethe Von Trotta as Filmmaker Biographical Retrospectives The German Quarterly 76 4 2003 443 48 a b c Gollub Christian Albrecht Volker Schlondorff and Margarethe Von Trotta Transcending the Genres New German Filmmakers From Oberhausen through the 1970s Ed Klaus Phillips New York Ungar Pub 1984 266 302 Print a b c d Ntim Zac 23 August 2022 European Film Awards Set To Honor Margarethe Von Trotta amp San Sebastian Launches Investors Conference With CAA Global Briefs Deadline Retrieved 26 December 2022 a b c Roxborough Scott 23 August 2022 Margarethe von Trotta to Receive Lifetime Achievement Honor at European Film Awards The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 26 December 2022 a b c d e Accademia del Cinema Italiano Premi David di Donatello www daviddidonatello it Retrieved 26 December 2022 a b Vivarelli Nick 15 April 2004 Italo telepic wins six Davids Variety Retrieved 26 December 2022 a b Keslassy Elsa 23 August 2022 Margarethe von Trotta to Receive European Film Awards Lifetime Achievement Prize Variety Retrieved 26 December 2022 a b Roxborough Scott 6 March 2019 Margarethe von Trotta to Receive Lifetime Honor at German Film Awards The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 26 December 2022 a b c Margarethe VON TROTTA Festival de Cannes 2023 www festival cannes com Retrieved 26 December 2022 Bernd Jordan Ein Pferdemaler aus Lassan In Die Pommersche Zeitung 10 2011 p 3 a b c d e Ben Andac von Trotta Margarethe Senses of Cinema Retrieved 24 January 2023 a b Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 11 November 2013 Retrieved 7 May 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Sklar Robert Invaded by Memories of Germany s Past An Interview with Margarethe Von Trotta Cineaste 29 2 2004 10 12 Web 3 May 2012 a b An Interview with Margarethe von Trotta Film Feature Spirituality amp Practice www spiritualityandpractice com Retrieved 24 January 2023 23rd Moscow International Film Festival 2001 MIFF Archived from the original on 28 March 2013 Retrieved 29 March 2013 a b c d e JSTOR 20688975 Kuttenberg Eva The Hidden Face of Narcissus Suicide as Poetic Speech in Margarethe Von Trotta s Early Films Women in German Yearbook Feminist Studies in German Literature amp Culture 20 2004 122 44 a b c d e 1 Awards for Margarethe von Trotta Gerhardt Christina RAF as German and Family History Von Trotta s Marianne and Juliane and Petzold s The State I Am in The Place of Politics in German Film Ed Martin Blumenthal Barby Bielefeld Aisthesis 2014 166 184 Web 7 August 2014 a b c Seiter Ellen The Political Is Personal Margarethe Von Trotta s Marianne and Juliane Films For Women Ed Charlotte Brunsdon London British Film Institute 1986 Print JSTOR 1432601 Skidmore James M Intellectualism and Emotionalism in Margarethe Von Trotta s Die Bleierne Zeit German Studies Review 25 3 2002 551 67 a b c Smith Damon 13 October 2010 Margarethe Von Trotta Vision Filmmaker Magazine Filmmaker Magazine Publication with a focus on independent film offering articles links and resources Retrieved 24 January 2023 a b http www goethe de kue flm far en8898031 htm Wydra Thilo Margarethe Von Trotta on Hannah Arendt Turning Thoughts into Images German Filmmakers and Movies Goethe Institute Web 4 May 2012 Maslin Janet 31 January 1982 MISS VON TROTTA S SISTERS The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Maslin Janet 22 April 1982 MARGARETHE VON TROTTA STUDIES SISTERS AGIAN The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Thomas Kevin 18 December 1985 VON TROTTA S MADNESS RESONATES WITH REALITY Los Angeles Times Retrieved 26 December 2022 Maslin Janet 20 September 1985 SCHYGULLA IN SHEER MADNESS The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Canby Vincent 1 May 1987 FILM ROSA LUXEMBURG NEW LIGHT ON EARLY LEFTIST The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Benson Sheila 5 June 1987 MOVIE REVIEW ROSA LUXEMBURG FIRE AMID A POLITICAL JUNGLE Los Angeles Times Retrieved 26 December 2022 Insdorf Annette 31 May 1987 ROSA LUXEMBURG MORE THAN A REVOLUTIONARY The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Holden Stephen 8 September 1995 FILM REVIEW Two Ill Fated Lovers With a Wall in Between The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Thomas Kevin 3 November 1995 MOVIE REVIEW The Promise Love and the Berlin Wall Los Angeles Times Retrieved 26 December 2022 The Promise La Promesse Film The Guardian www theguardian com Retrieved 26 December 2022 Klady Leonard 13 February 1995 The Promise Variety Retrieved 26 December 2022 Cheng Scarlet 15 August 2004 Like her characters the director waited Los Angeles Times Retrieved 26 December 2022 Weissberg Jay 23 June 2004 The Other Woman Variety Retrieved 26 December 2022 Dargis Manohla 20 August 2004 FILM REVIEW Revisiting a Berlin Protest That Changed Nazi Plans The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Holden Stephen 12 October 2010 A Multitasking Nun in Medieval Germany The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Goldstein Gary Times Special to the Los Angeles 12 November 2010 Movie review Vision From the Life of Hildegard von Bingen Los Angeles Times Retrieved 26 December 2022 Kaplan Fred 24 May 2013 The Woman Who Saw Banality in Evil The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Schmitter Elke 11 January 2013 Magnificent New German Film Depicts Hannah Arendt Der Spiegel ISSN 2195 1349 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Byrnes Paul 12 March 2014 Hannah Arendt review Brave attempt to get inside the mind of a complex thinker The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 26 December 2022 Young Deborah 9 September 2012 Hannah Arendt Toronto Review The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 26 December 2022 Being True Is Hard Work for Filmmakers www nytimes com Retrieved 26 December 2022 Young Deborah 26 October 2017 Forget About Nick Film Review Tokyo 2017 The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 26 December 2022 Gleiberman Owen 30 October 2018 Film Review Searching for Ingmar Bergman Variety Retrieved 26 December 2022 Hopewell John 15 May 2017 Cannes C Films Mondex Partner for Ingmar Bergman Legacy of a Defining Genius Variety Retrieved 26 December 2022 Goldstein Gary 9 November 2018 Review Ingmar Bergman documentary covers the Swedish director s genius quirks and faults Los Angeles Times Retrieved 26 December 2022 Kunemund Jan 11 July 2018 Doku von Margarethe von Trotta Suche nach Ingmar Bergman Filmkritik Der Spiegel in German ISSN 2195 1349 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Fear David 2 November 2018 Searching for Ingmar Bergman Review One Filmmaker Pays Tribute to Another Rolling Stone Retrieved 26 December 2022 Canby Vincent 6 February 1978 Coup de Grace A Film Parable The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Rosen Marjorie 7 July 1974 Is A Free Woman The Woman We ve Been Waiting For The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Cocks Jay 8 July 1974 Cinema Tied Down Time ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 26 December 2022 Thompson Howard 18 June 1974 Screen Feminism Is Defended in Free Woman The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Triangle of Sadness takes four top prizes at European film awards the Guardian 10 December 2022 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Werner Bernd 19 August 2019 Honorary Lifetime Achievement Award German Film World Socialist Website Roxborough Scott 20 September 2013 Margarethe Von Trotta s Hannah Arendt Wins German Arthouse Cinema Honor The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 26 December 2022 Leo Baeck Medal for Margarethe von Trotta TROIS SOEURS Festival de Cannes www festival cannes com Retrieved 26 December 2022 ROSA LUXEMBURG Festival de Cannes www festival cannes com Retrieved 26 December 2022 Morgan David 22 August 2022 Venice Golden Lion Winners Photos Of The Festival s Top Films Through The Years Deadline Retrieved 26 December 2022 Press Release 50 YEARS OF MEMORIES HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE HISTORY OF THE CHICAGO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL PDF Chicago International Film Festival Retrieved 31 December 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Further reading EditAndac Ben Margarethe Von Trotta Senses of Cinema Web 4 May 2012 lt http sensesofcinema com 2002 great directors von trotta gt Awards for Margarethe Von Trotta IMDb IMDb com Web 2 May 2012 lt https www imdb com name nm0903137 awards gt Birds Eye View Filmmaker Focus Margarethe Von Trotta 2011 Film Festival Celebrating Women Filmmakers Birds Eye View Web 2 May 2012 lt https web archive org web 20120110060906 http www birds eye view co uk 3878 filmmaker focus margarethe von trotta margarethe von trotta html gt Eifler Margret Margarethe Von Trotta as Filmmaker Biographical Retrospectives The German Quarterly 76 4 2003 443 48 JSTOR 3252242 Gerhardt Christina RAF as German and Family History Von Trotta s Marianne and Juliane and Petzold s The State I Am in The Place of Politics in German Film Ed Martin Blumenthal Barby Bielefeld Aisthesis 2014 166 184 Print Gollub Christian Albrecht Volker Schlondorff and Margarethe Von Trotta Transcending the Genres New German Filmmakers From Oberhausen through the 1970s Ed Klaus Phillips New York Ungar Pub 1984 266 302 Print An Interview with Margarethe Von Trotta Director of Vision Interview by Zeitgeist Films Spirituality Practice Zeitgeist Films Web 3 May 2012 lt http www spiritualityandpractice com films features php id 20271 gt Kuttenberg Eva The Hidden Face of Narcissus Suicide as Poetic Speech in Margarethe Von Trotta s Early Films Women in German Yearbook Feminist Studies in German Literature amp Culture 20 2004 122 44 JSTOR 20688975 Linville Susan E Retrieving History Margarethe Von Trotta s Marianne and Juliane PMLA 106 3 1991 446 58 JSTOR 462778 Margarethe Von Trotta German Flicks HyperEd Web 2 May 2012 lt https web archive org web 20081208001650 http www germanflicks com trotta html gt Margarethe Von Trotta IMDb IMDb com Web 6 May 2012 lt https www imdb com name nm0903137 gt Parkinson Anna M Neo Feminist Mutterfilm The Emotional Politics of Margarethe Von Trotta s Rosenstrasse The Collapse of the Conventional German Film and Its Politics at the Turn of the Twenty First Century Ed Jaimey Fisher and Brad Prager Detroit Wayne State UP 2010 Print Prot Benedicte Von Trotta to Start Shooting Hannah Arendt Biopic Cineuropa German Films Web 4 May 2012 lt http cineuropa org 2011 nw aspx t newsdetail gt Rueschmann Eva The Politics of Intersubjectivity The Sister Films of Margarethe Von Trotta Sisters On Screen Siblings in Contemporary Cinema Philadelphia Temple UP 2000 147 75 Print Seiter Ellen The Political Is Personal Margarethe Von Trotta s Marianne and Juliane Films For Women Ed Charlotte Brunsdon London British Film Institute 1986 Print Skidmore James M Intellectualism and Emotionalism in Margarethe Von Trotta s Die Bleierne Zeit German Studies Review 25 3 2002 551 67 JSTOR 1432601 Sklar Robert Invaded by Memories of Germany s Past An Interview with Margarethe Von Trotta Cineaste 29 2 2004 10 12 Web 3 May 2012 lt https web archive org web 20131111163708 http people ucsc edu stamp 162female 162 Female Fmkrs Readings files Cineaste 20Interview 20Sklar pdf gt Smith Damon MARGARETHE VON TROTTA VISION Filmmaker Magazine Filmmaker The Magazine of Independent Film Filmmaker Magazine 13 October 2010 Web 5 May 2012 lt http www filmmakermagazine com news 2010 10 margarethe von trotta vision gt Wydra Thilo Margarethe Von Trotta on Hannah Arendt Turning Thoughts into Images German Filmmakers and Movies Goethe Institute Web 4 May 2012 lt http www goethe de kue flm far en8898031 htm gt External links EditMargarethe von Trotta at European Graduate School Biography and filmography Margarethe von Trotta at IMDb Birds Eye View Filmmaker Focus Margarethe Von Trotta German Flicks Margarethe von Trotta Senses of Cinema Great Directors Critical Database Invaded by Memories of Germany s Past An Interview with Margarethe Von Trotta MARGARETHE VON TROTTA VISION Filmmaker Magazine An Interview with Margarethe Von Trotta Director of Vision Von Trotta to Start Shooting Hannah Arendt Biopic Margarethe Von Trotta on Hannah Arendt Turning Thoughts into Images Margarethe von Trotta at IMDb Awards for Margarethe von Trotta CAREER ACHIEVEMENT TRIBUTE MARGARETHE VON TROTTA What Goes Around Margarethe von Trotta s History Plays Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Margarethe von Trotta amp oldid 1146313199, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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