| Index | 8 reviews in total |
11 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
Naiive wife determined to clear murder/suicide husband's name, 8 October 2004
Author:
mdm-11 from United States
Fassbinder's most political film, mixes all imaginable elements
dominating the news in 1970s Germany. The story begins with a radio
news bulletin about a factory worker going berserk, killing a
supervisor, then himself. The man's lower class family (busy with small
assembly "homework") engages in evening small talk, casually mentioning
the news flash in their conversation. Minutes later the bad news
arrives at the door.
Immediately the vulnerable "Mother Kusters" is hounded by reporters
from the boulevard press. Twisting her words, as well as those of
children and a pregnant daughter in-law, along with taking countless
bad-angle photographs, the press has their story. The name of
easy-going, kind and obedient Father Kusters is ruined.
Several characters bring definite color to this unusual story. Mother
Kusters' 30-something daughter, an aspiring lounge singer (a la Marlene
Dietrich) shamelessly exploits her newly gained celebrity status by
initiating press interviews about her father's tragedy, then moving in
with the questionable reporter, who also arranged singing work through
"connections".
Mother Kusters soon is "lulled in" by some upscale and persuasive
communists, who appear sympathetic, but eventually seem to be
exploiting the poor old woman for their own political gains. Finally
Mother Kusters ends in a bizarre trap she unwittingly fell for: A group
of anarchists, under the pretense of assuring that her husband's name
will be cleared, use the woman in a hostage stand-off aimed at the
release of political prisoners. - The final scene suddenly stops in a
freeze frame, with a brief written description of the immediate action
to follow. WOW!
Although not among Fassbinder's great classics, this is an impressive
film. The statements made here were originally (in the mid-70s) met
with criticism. The treatment of communism and anarchy (in a not
necessarily negative way) were seen as contrary to common acceptance of
the day. Years after the Cold War's end, the story of "the factory
murderer" seems dated. Still, a well-worth-seeing film!
7 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Vintage Fassbinder with his exceptional cast company, 11 October 2004
Author:
ksie_15241 (ksie_15241@yahoo.com) from Virginia, USA
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Another of Fassbinder's 'man's cruelty to man' films, Mother Kusters
features the wonderful Bridgit Mira in the title role. She is superb,
delivering a wonderfully restrained and poignant performance. Other
Fassbinder regulars also appear including Karl Heinz-Bohm (in one of
his trademarked icy-sophisticate roles), Margit Carstensen (excellent
also as another of Fassbinder's self-absorbed characters) and Ingird
Caven (oozing all over the screen brilliantly as a Dietrich-esque
singer). All of the Fassbinder films I have seen contain strong female
roles, and this movie is certainly no exception. The relationship here
between Mira and Caven, as mother and daughter, is particularly
interesting, yet not really explored sufficiently.
WARNING: PLOT SPOILERS
The early part of this story deals with the death of Frau Kusters'
husband, and the initial repercussions. At first it seems that the
movie is to be an indictment of the press. Reporters and photographers
immediately swoop-down onto the Kusters family, invading their privacy
and mourning, in search of a fantastic story about a homicidal maniac.
They sensationalize everything the family tells them about Hermann
Kusters, and do indeed print an inaccurate, exaggerated portrait of
this simple family man.
But the exploitation of Mother Kusters goes even farther. First, it is
her family. They are basically indifferent to their father's passing,
and seem to have little concern about their mother's grief. The singer
daughter (Caven) even goes so far as to use the sensationalism of the
incident to further her career. It is here that a prior conflict
between Corrina and her parents is hinted. The singer seems to have
some empathy with her mother, and perhaps some deep-rooted issue with
her father. But this is never quite explained or explored.
Nevertheless, Mother Kusters seems to be alone in showing any respect
for her dear departed.
The film then takes a subtle but surprising direction. Whereas the
story to this point has dealt with emotional exploitation, Fassbinder
introduces a political bend. A seemingly caring couple turn out to be
members of the Communist Party. Their interest in the widow is as a
symbolic example of the exploitation of the worker. The political angle
of the story works surprisingly well, and is taken further with the
introduction of anarchists, who of course also wish to use Frau Kusters
for their own means.
The DVD version I have contains two endings. The first was apparently
never filmed, and is instead shown in a summarized script format. The
second was obviously tacked-on at a later date (everyone looks
different), for American audiences. This is curious. Although upbeat
('happy'), the second ending is inferior and really rings untrue to the
rest of the story. Did Fassbinder really feel this made the movie more
saleable, or was this a corporate dictate? The endings' confusion
aside, this is an excellent film.
Fassbinder once again explores deeply his usual (apparently personal)
themes of emotional exploitation, cruelty, and the the political drama
of post WWII Germany. Highly recommended!
9 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Good Fassbinder with a great Brigitte Mira, 31 March 2005
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Author:
zetes from Saint Paul, MN
Good Fassbinder, if a little lethargic. Brigitte Mira, who just passed away earlier this month, plays a housewife who has long settled in her uneventful life. One day, however, her husband commits murder-suicide at the factory in which he works. Suddenly she has to deal with the media, as well as her uncaring family. She can't really figure out why her husband did what he did. Luckily, some local communists show up to help her figure it out. Soon she's a pawn in their politics. And, when they don't satisfy her need for an explanation, a group of anarchists steps in to use her for their own political purposes. The film ends twice once we read Fassbinder's original scripted ending, then we see the ending he did use. Both work, though I think the first, unfilmed one is a lot more Fassbinder-esque. Mira is wonderful, as usual; some of the family material is too close to Fear Eats the Soul, and is rendered somewhat ineffective because of that.
6 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
one of the best German films I have seen, 17 December 2005
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Author:
planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
So far, I have only seen a few of Fassbinder's films. Most (with the
notable exception of The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant) I have loved
and appreciate that Director Fassbinder was looking for "something
different" with his movies. They often broach topics that you would
seldom see elsewhere.
This movie is certainly one of these films! The movie begins with
Brigitte Mira (Mother Kusters) receiving a phone call that her husband
killed his boss' son and then himself at work! There had been no
apparent warning signs and Mother Kusters had great difficulty
understanding WHY. Unfortunately, she is not helped along this process
by her children, as they are an incredibly selfish and self-centered
lot. The daughter, a not particularly talented lounge singer, sees this
as a chance to get publicity for her lagging career. The son, is a
total wimp who lets his shrewish wife dominate him and abandon his
mother in her time of need. So who does she turn to? The newspaper man,
who promised to give them a fair account if they cooperated, just
wanted to create a tabloid piece and twisted much of what they said. To
make it worse, the trampy daughter begins sleeping with this
reporter--even when she knows what he did--apparently so he can give
her publicity and further her career! Well, at first, it appears NO ONE
cares. But, at the funeral a "nice couple" meet her and take her home.
Unfortunately, they have a hidden agenda and are Communists who only
want to use her for publicity by advertising her as the wife of a man
driven to "an act of revolution" when he murdered this man! She quickly
becomes disenchanted with these jerks and is tricked by radical
anarchists into joining them! Then, these radicals go with Kusters to
complain to the newspaper about how they misrepresented the story and
demanded an apology. This soon culminates with TWO alternate endings:
The German version shows the radicals in the editor's office with
Kusters when SUDDENLY they pull out guns and take hostages. Then, they
make a lot of crazy demands and Mother Kusters appears stunned that she
had just been used as an excuse by these nuts. Then, the very end of
the film is just in text--the last 5 minutes or so of the movie is
described only. Apparently, the anarchists AND Mother Kusters are
killed while trying to escape! I would have loved to seen this and
can't figure out WHY it was not filmed. Perhaps this was Fassbinder's
vision, perhaps the studio thought it was too brutal to show or perhaps
there was some weird German law that prevented this ending. Regardless,
it was a brilliant ending but I found myself wanting to see it for
myself.
The American version picks up when the anarchists and Mother Kusters
enter the office. However, everyone at the newspaper pretty much
ignores them and goes home! As the do NOT have guns in this version,
even the anarchists soon lose heart and go home--leaving poor Mother
Kusters sitting alone--refusing to leave. A little later, a nice older
man who seems to be the watchman asks her nicely to go. At first she
refuses, but agrees to go home with him as he's a widower and is making
a lovely meal! A "nice" ending where she seems to find love instead of
death in a hail of bullets.
I personally liked having BOTH endings on the DVD. If I had to pick
one, I'd pick the German version because it did not seem like a tacked
on "Hollywood" ending like the other one.
I particularly liked the acting of Brigitte Mira, as she did a nice job
in this movie and Fassbinder's Ali: Fear Eats the Soul. Apparently she
did many films for this director and I really admire her
"normalness"--i.e., she seems like an everyday older German woman and
not someone acting.
I also liked how everyone was portrayed in the movie--her kids, the
Communists, the newspapers, etc. It was a very jaded and unflinching
view into human nature.
About the only reason I didn't give it a 10 was the ending being all in
text. It just left me a little dissatisfied.
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
aka Why Did Herman K. Run Amok?, 12 July 2009
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Author:
MisterWhiplash from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This could be seen as something of a follow-up to Fassbinder's
collaboration of Why Does Herr R. Run Amok, only from a different
perspective and slightly altered details. In that film, Herr. R was a
seemingly normal, quiet family man with a wife and kid and after
putting up with crap from his family and work (even if not really
apparent) he just snaps and kills his family and then hangs himself at
work. In Mother Kusters Goes to Heaven we don't even see the freak-out
and murder and suicide, which is the right decision on Fassbinder's end
since this is not about the husband going insane as much as the wife,
who in this film, Emma (Brigitte Mira), is still alive, has to 'deal'
with the cards she's been dealt. Which includes a newspaper that prints
fabrications on the details of Mr. Kusters, children who leave poor
Emma all alone to her own devices, and an at-first sympathetic
communist couple who take her under their wing and prop up her late
husband as a revolutionary.
I would consider this not quite Fassbinder's most 'political' film as
another commenter on this site noted (that I would argue would be The
Third Generation), but it still contains much of what makes his dramas
about urban alienation and, in this case, exploitation work so well.
Emma Kusters is so much a genuine house-wife that it's almost too easy
for her to be picked apart by people who have their own interests at
heart. No one would give her a second look if she wasn't so vulnerable
after her husband's death and his crime, so shell-shocked about the
event and then the fall-out of not knowing anything else on her mind
except for Herman. And like in Fear Eats the Soul, Mira expresses such
vulnerability and precise, touching moments as an 'everyday'
middle-class German woman who has no such thing as a solid ideology.
Perhaps if there's any strong political commentary it's about being
aware in the first place, knowing what communists and anarchists
actually do when give the opportunity. Why did Hermann K Run Amok? Who
cares, they might really say. Emma does, or wishes she could.
There are many great scenes here and moments of cinematographic
ingenuity. I loved two particular shots, one where the camera tracks
backward from the podium of the communist meeting, at first on the male
speaker's face and seeing the audience in a kind of daze, and the other
in the "European" ending where the camera moves slowly on Emma Kuster's
bewildered expression as the anarchists make their demands, as she is
completely alone in a room full of people with guns and hostages. But
the curious thing are the two endings. The first, which as perhaps an
experiment or just a lack of funds, is the European ending which is
quite bleak, even for Fassbinder, as it shows what happens with the
anarchist's hostage situation. We see this ending in description via
screenplay-subtitles, and it's hard for me to figure if this was
intentional or not. The ending that was shot, for America, is better,
since it tries to keep the focus on Emma's lost cause of trying to
retract the newspaper story via sit-in (and contrary to what you might
think, the anarchists aren't any less nasty).
It ends, in fact, with a moment of hope, as the person locking up takes
Emma back to his place for dinner, the "Heaven and Earth" with
sausages. This too, however, isn't quite the best ending possible.
Perhaps a compromise between the two would have been the best thing, as
one is too bitter and the other possibly too sweet. Yet as it remains,
Mother Kusters Goes to Heaven is one of Fassbinder's most interesting
films, one of a few made in a year that also included the underrated
Fear of Fear and the powerful Fox & His Friends.
6 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Finally! A Fassbinder movie that I like!, 31 July 2006
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Author:
Spuzzlightyear from Vancouver
Mother Kunters is just so drolly funny. The story is about a woman coping with her husband's death. Her husband died after he fell into some machinery at work. Oh, and there's something else. Her husband killed 2 people on the job before doing himself in. Actually, if you listen closely during the first 15 minutes of the movie, the "There's something else" line is repeated 3 times, which is very oddly funny. Mrs. Kunsters is of course, devastated by the news, and when her children get together, they all don't really get along, and deal with the death in different ways, her daughter is especially malicious, using the death to promote her laughable music career. Mrs Kusters, not finding solace anywhere, finally finds a couple willing to listen and feel compassion. Problem is of course, they're COMMUNISTS! Ha ha. Pretty soon they're convincing poor Mrs Kusters that her husband's death is directly related to The Plight of The Common Worker! I mean, that's priceless. Pretty soon, she's getting caught up with the hardline commies and soon violently protesting against newspapers that published negative stories about her husband. I mean, clearly we're dealing with manipulation, (both personal and political) and Fassbinder does it brilliantly here. As you could tell by the title of my review, I'm not the biggest Fassbinder fan, but I personally loved this one. Although the ending (the American one even more so) leaves a little bit to be desired, I, all in all, enjoyed this tremendously.
3 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Egoism + Solipsism = Anarchism, 31 December 2009
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Author:
hasosch from United States
The above given (qualitative) equation means that if someone is clever
enough to recruit solipsist phrases in order to adorn his bare egoism,
he finds ways to give his egoism a societal, namely anarchist status
and thus the possibility to glorify even terror and murder.
Giving Piel Jutzi's Arbeiterfil "Mutter Krausens Fahrt ins Glück" from
1929 a U-turn, R.W. Fassbinders depicts in one of his most openly
political movies the last ten or so days in the life of Mother Küsters.
After her husband has killed in affect his boss because he and his
colleagues lost their jobs, he is talked up as a hero of the laborers,
and soon after the deed, everyone is prone to profit form the alleged
heroism of the quiet and during decades never disobeying plant worker.
A rich couple which declare themselves as Communists invite Mother
Küsters to join their party. But after she had had her introductory
speech, other problems seem to be more important. Fassbinder's open
critique against this "Salon-Communism" is splendid. However, Mother
Küsters is not interested in the doctrine of Communism; all she has in
mind is the rehabilitation of her husband whom the newspapers had
portrayed as a violent-tempered, drinking bad husband and father. One
day, she meats Mr. Knab who calls himself an Anarchist and convinces
her that what society needs are not salon-Communists, but determined
people who will complete an "action". Soon enough the old woman sees
herself amidst of such an "action" in the editorial department of the
famous German populist newspaper "BILD". Specially to mention is that
Fassbinder decided to exchange the bitter end his movie (which gave its
title) by a much more harmless "socialist" version for the American
audience - with the effect that during the premiere of "Mutter Küsters
Fahrt Zum Himmel", the theater got bomb threats from the ultimate
political Left as well from the ultimate political Right. - A movie,
despite its age, that has nothing lost from its provocative fervor.
One man's meat is another man's poison, 2 September 2010
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Author:
tieman64 from United Kingdom
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
"Mother Kusters Goes to Heaven" is the last film in director Rainer
Werner Fassbiner's most politically radical phase, a period from 1970
to 1975 in which he wrote and directed a staggering number of films
(approaximately 23), most notably "The Merchant of Four Seasons", "Ali:
Fear Eats the Soul", "Beware of a Holy Whore", "The Bitter Tears of
Petra von Kant", "Effi Briest" and "Fox and His Friends".
"Mother Kusters Goes to Heaven" tells the story of Emma Kusters (played
by Brigitte Mira), a hard working housewife whose life is turned upside
down when her husband - who works at a local factory - kills his boss's
son before committing suicide.
Fassbinder's films are always offbeat, and so it's no surprise that
"Mother Kusters Goes to Heaven's" tone is all over the place. Part
satire, part drama, heavily ironic and rife with distancing effects,
the film primarily observes how Emma Kusters deals with her
dysfunctional family after her husband's death, and the various
segments of society who seek to use her crisis for their own ends.
So we're introduced to Corinna (Emma's conniving daughter who uses her
father's suicide to bolster her lagging career as a singer), media
vultures (who sensationalize their stories and portray Emma's husband
as a fiend), political activists, anarchists, communists and tabloid
reporters, all of whom have hidden agendas.
Eventually it is revealed that Emmas's husband killed his boss due to
the threat of factory layoffs, the audience realizing that each
character injected into the film only serves to intrude on Emma's grief
and distort the truth, robbing her spouse's last acts of their
political significance. Misled and exploited by everyone in sight,
treated as a pawn by both the political right and ultra-left, Emma
eventually ends up dead, killed off screen like her spouse.
The film's title seems to reference Maxim Gorky's novel "Mother",
another tale about a working class woman who develops political
consciousness and joins a revolutionary movement, and also "Mother
Courage and Her Children" by Bertolt Brecht, a playwright whom
Fassbinder admired.
Like these tales, Fassbinder attempts to look at the social and
emotional consequences of exploitation, but unlike these works,
Fassbinder can find no optimistic solution. "Everybody is out for
something," he has Emma say at one point. "Once you realize that,
everything is much simpler."
8/10 - Visually the film is a bit weak the phenomenal speed at which
Fassbinder worked has this effect but Fassbinder's writing is
excellent and he makes simple but effective use of symbolism throughout
the picture (consider the dehumanizing shots of Emma which open the
film, or the use of shapes juxtapositions between "free circles" and
"constricting rectangles" etc).
Like most of Fassbinder's films, the script is packed with lines which
have a way of homing right in on the themes being explored ("Everything
is chemicals
", "One man's meat is another man's poison"), but mostly
it's Fassbinder's mad passion that holds things together. Few directors
were as wildly passionate, sensitive and raw as Fassbinder.
Worth one viewing.
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