| Index | 1 reviews in total |
5 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Political thriller, partly very avant-garde and nostalgic 70s, 16 October 2005
![]()
Author:
tlatosmd from Germany
It's not quite clear when this film has been made or screened,
sometimes between 1968-71. It seems it was originally made for TV but
screened at international festivals with the alternate English title
"Bottom".
It's very hard to find any information on this film anywhere, the only
critic available seems to be a short negative German rating by a 1971
Catholic film magazine appearing on several sites on the net, often
without references to the original source of this rating. However, I've
found two English-language sites where they seem to be looking for
copies of this German film that received Film Award in Gold for
Outstanding Individual Achievement: New Director Thomas Schamoni and
for Outstanding Individual Achievement: Cinematography Dietrich
Lohmann.
"Ein großer, graublauer Vogel" works brilliantly on several levels:
The first level is the plot, a gripping political thriller with some
sci-fi elements. It starts with a team of reporters that research on
tracks and hints on a group of WWII scientists of the Axis Powers
(Germany and Italy) who during the war had found the Big Theory of
Everything (aka "Weltformel" in German) that allegedly had made them
able to manipulate space and time in complete omnipotence, however when
these scientists realized what they'd just invented they were shocked
from the potential negative uses by the Fascist regimes they were
living in and therefore intended to delete their minds and
personalities by hypnosis, hide away in secret, with new identities,
probably had their faces surgically altered. "Ein großer, graublauer
Vogel" is the title of a poem which will supposedly break the spell of
their hypnosis so they will remember.
The reporter team have been set on this track by a mysterious young mod
character named Tom X (a bit of a stoner and womanizer Peter Fonda
type). Does he really know pieces to the puzzle, or are his poetical
offerings only drug-induced hallucinations?
During investigation, this first journalist team run into a second team
of their likes who found out about those scientists completely
independently from Tom X, and the two teams start to fight each other,
each desiring to be the first group to find the scientists and make the
headlines. That's when all of a sudden, organized mob gangsters appear
on the scene, turning the international race into a murderous one. You
don't know which side they're on, are they sent from yet other
reporters? Are they sent from someone to prevent any investigations on
these affairs at all? Or are they sent from a foreign dictatorship or
mob lords to get hold of the scientists themselves and use their theory
for evil?
The second level is a very groovy late 60s and 70s atmosphere of the
whole film and the characters, for example in the today old-fashioned
suits. Those gangsters are so cool (especially Lunette starring Rolf
Becker) they'd make Bogey look like a hysteric. The soundtrack by the
German Krautrock band The Can falls into this level ("She brings the
rain"), very groovy, smooth, and cool music. Plus, as ought to be
fascinating for any film and cine geek, the reporters record all of
their investigations on varied formats of small gauges, audio tapes,
etc., it's a big orgy of cameras, tape machines, projections, partly
very 70s amateur and home movie-style.
This leads into the third level of the film being a wild, avant-garde
experiment and collage of all those media clips and recordings, partly
pseudo-realistic whenever the characters screen and sift their material
in a seemingly chaotic multi-playing fashion, partly this material is
edited into the film as if this were the only capturing devices present
at the particular moment, yet still mixed pretty chaotically which
blends in with the varied philosophical, mystical dialogues and uttered
greedy visions of desired omnipotence concerning the potentials of the
Big Theory of Everything.
Through these complex plot layers and technical collages, the film
portrays both existential and mass-media induced uncertainty also
present in Faßbinder's "Welt am Draht", Orson Welles's "Fake!", or
modern-day "The Matrix": What is truth; what is fiction; what is real;
what is reality; what is hallucinations and illusions; and are there
ways of telling them all apart in this chaotic kaleidoscope of
sensations?
Due to its extra-ordinary techniques, "Ein großer, graublauer Vogel" is
not an everyday flick for everyone. However, film geeks, lovers of
avant-garde films, fans of 70s nostalgia, conspiracy theories and spy
films, or epistemology and existentialism will really enjoy this 95
minutes film.
| Ratings | Awards | External reviews |
| Plot keywords | Main details | Your user reviews |
| Your vote history |