Film Review
The Niklashausen Journey
(a.k.a.
Die Niklashauser Fart)
is Rainer Werner Fassbinder's most overtly political film and also,
arguably, his most experimental, as it combines historical references
and contemporary concerns in an attempt to portray all kinds of
political radicalism as a fundamentally lost cause. Fassbinder
co-directed the film with Michael Fengler, another up-and-coming force
in New German cinema, and is clearly greatly influenced by Jean-Luc
Godard's similarly themed
Week End (1967). (Godard
was the main inspiration for much of Fassbinder's early work.)
As in Godard's
Week End,
present-day anti-bourgeois, anti-capitalist sentiment is expressed
through an anarchic collage of incongruous and provocative images,
although Fassbinder appears to be far more pessimistic over the ability
of violent revolution to change things for the better. Germany's
recent history - the rise of Fascism and its ultimate defeat by
capitalist democracy - had shown that revolution merely replaces one
oppressive oligarchy by another. Never has it achieved what it
sets out to achieve - the liberation of the masses, who are portrayed
by Fassbinder as mindless sheep who are, invariably, led by
self-serving hypocrites and fools.
Incredible as it may seem,
The
Niklashausen Journey was originally made for German television,
on a budget that vastly exceeded most of Fassbinder's previous
films. The money was not wasted - here Fassbinder creates some of
his most striking visual compositions, including some that appear to
have been aspired by medieval religious art (the meaning of the
original cheekily subverted by the inclusion of a modern idiom).
Whilst the film does perhaps lack the cohesion and clarity of the
director's other experimental films, it is a strangely beguiling piece
of film art, one that positively revels in its digression from the cosy
conventions of cinema as we know it.
Most spectators may have difficulty piecing together the disjointed
elements of the film but its authors' message is received loud and
clear. Fassbinder and Fengler appear to be arguing that religion
and revolution are part of the same dangerous delusion, the means by
which the masses allow themselves to be controlled and bled by a
self-selected elite of misguided fools and unscrupulous crooks.
In the five hundred years since the shepherd Hans Bölm was burned
at the stake for preaching his revolutionary doctrine, so little
appears to have changed. Capitalism may have taken over from
religion as the main controlling influence of humanity (the law of
supply and demand overriding all other religious tenets to become the
one true commandment which governs all human activity), but the same
social structure prevails. Revolutions may come and revolutions
may go, but the same old cycle of oppression and exploitation goes on forever.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Rainer Werner Fassbinder film:
The Merchant of Four Seasons (1972)
Film Synopsis
On 3rd March 1476, a shepherd named Hans Böhm makes a public
declaration in the town of Niklashausen that he has been visited by the
Virgin Mary. Before a mass assembly of peasants, Böhm
preaches that he has been instructed by God to lead a revolution
against the established Church, a revolution that will eradicate those
leaders who presently enjoy power and privilege over the masses.
Five months after his vision, Böhm is arrested and executed by the
Bishop of Würzburg. Five hundred years later, a pair of
radical German filmmakers have a vision...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.