A girl grows up in the fifties and sixties and later becomes a filmmaker. Docudrama by Petra Seeger, who depicts her childhood and youth in play scenes and in photo and film footage of her father.
[Image]Vatersland starts with the traumatic early death of the director’s mother. With great sensitivity, the film chronicles her personal journey to reappraisal and self-discovery. As a documentary film-maker, Petra Seeger interweaves autobiographical and fictional elements. Old film footage of her father, a photography enthusiast, is combined with fictional scenes, creating three different time and image registers that involve viewers in the film-making process in an almost dialogue-like manner.
Marie grows up in 1950s Cologne. It’s a childhood defined by Catholicism, the nuclear family and a terminally ill mother who dies young. Beate Klarsfeld’s famous face slap rings in the year 1968, and with it comes Marie’s own rebellion against the institutions of school, church, father. With plenty of typical Rhineland humour, Seeger recalls a youth caught between Konrad Adenauer and critique of capitalism.
With its wealth of visual layers, amateur shots, fictional scenes and surreal meta-images, this film, however, is also a homage to the power of pictures. In one key scene, the young Marie accompanies her father into his darkroom, where, bathed in red light, she is not only captivated by the magic of photo development but also confronted with its sexual coding. »Girls should be in front the camera!« says her father. The power relationship between seeing and gender becomes a subtle meta-narrative of this film about a generation that rebelled for the first time.
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Trailer:
Blu-ray rip:
The only subtitles available on opensubtitles.org are in German. Maybe someone wants to do some work...