As much as Munich has to offer, independent film is not something one normally gets here. German films are shown throughout the year, of course, and a handful of art houses still exist. French and other European cinema, as well as unusual documentaries are sometimes shown, but those theatres are off the beaten path.
The exception to this dearth of independent film is the one week of the year that the Filmfest München takes place. Along with German productions from the smallest to the biggest budgets, including television and even a children's programme, the Filmfest annually offers an impressive selection of international film. In addition, there are always people in attendance from the film world with whom one would never expect to be rubbing elbows with here in the Bavarian capital.
The featured guests this year are many. Melanie Griffith is here for the world premiere of 'The Grief Tourist', which she stars in. Directed by Suri Krishnamma, this is one of the bigger name films being shown. At the last minute, it was announced that James Franco would be part of the Filmfest. Not only is he in town to introduce three films that have not been screened in Europe before, but he has expressed some interest in visiting the Pinakotheken. If he is only to be here on Monday, as planned, I would hate to be the one who had to tell him that most of the museums are closed that day.
Oscar-nominated Brazilian director Fernando Meirelles (The Constant Gardener) is presenting his newest film, and best-selling French author Frédéric Beigbeder has made his directorial debut with the film 'L'amour dure trios ans' (Love Lasts Three Years), which is also being shown.
On the evening of 1 July, when it seems almost everyone will be watching the European Championship final, these artsy types at the Filmfest are offering an alternative to the football with a documentary titled 'Wagner's Dream' by Robert Lapage. It shows a behind the scenes look at New York's Metropolitan Opera, while they stage a production of the Ring Cycle. The five years of preparation and forty tonnes of stage technology (called 'The Machine') are included in the depiction of this massive opera production.
Other honoured guests to the Filmfest are American director Todd Haynes, musician Giorgio Moroder, British director Bruce Robinson, and Danish cult director Nicolas Winding Refn. Taking part in the homage to Rainer Werner Fassbinder are various actors including Ingrid Carven, Isolde Barth and Udo Kier, as well as American cameraman Ed Lachman and Fassbinder cameraman and German director Xaver Schwarzenberger.
A popular event that the Filmfest is bringing back is what they call the Open Lounge. After 10 pm, festival guests and members of the viewing public can meet one another in a very informal setting. From 24 June to 2 July, the Open Lounge can be found on the second floor of the Gasteig. Relatively late in the evening, by Munich standards, it seems it will be anything but stodgy.
Although there are films most of the day on Saturday 30 June, the Filmfest officially opens that evening with Canadian director Ken Scott's hilarious comedy 'Starbuck', about a perpetually irresponsible man who is suddenly faced with fatherhood on a grand scale. There is much more where that came from. The Filmfest München promises to be a compelling week of cinema.
"In an ideal world I'd see you eliminated. In this world I need you more than anyone."
Cherry Docs, which is getting its area premiere in Munich by the BeMe Theatre (Munich's English Language Theatre), is named after a pair of steel-tipped, cherry coloured Doc Martens combat boots. Gow's 1998 play, which was made into the 2006 film Steel Toes, has been performed around the world, not so much because it's a great piece of theatre but more as a result of its fiery call for tolerance.
It revolves around a neo-Nazi skinhead, Mike Downey who, in a drunken rage, repeatedly kicks a Southeast Asian in...
Discreetly sandwiched between high-end clothes stores in the centre of Munich, The Atomic Cafe is almost an easy venue to miss. Nevertheless, word of mouth from friend to friend seems to draw a steady crowd to this small club. Yet, though they arrive in their droves, they arrive quietly.
After a quick search on Google Maps, this Irish reporter was a little nervous about showing up to a venue that has been reviewed online as "foreigner unfriendly" and as having a reputation of turning away non-locals at the door. Thankfully, I did not find this to be the case. My error-ridden Deutsch did not...
So few big budget films these days are truly original. Whether based on a book, a TV series, or a remake or sequel (or even prequel) of a pre-existing film, most blockbusters these days are not entirely original. Joe Wright's "Hanna" (2011) is an exception. With a fantastic leading performance from one of the most promising young actresses of our generation, Saoirse Ronan, a truly gripping story and gorgeous scenery and visuals, "Hanna" is a film I would recommend to any movie-lover - though perhaps not one of delicate constitution.
Hanna (Ronan) and her father Erik (the brilliant Eric Bana)...
After a couple of Christmases here in Munich, I began to miss things from home that I'd never even particularly liked before, Christmas Pudding being one of them. I thought I would try to make one, and apart from being time consuming, it really wasn't that difficult. So I began a new tradition in our house which is now an essential part of our Christmas lunch. All the ingredients listed are easily available from most supermarkets here, the only fiddly thing is the bowl or pudding basin. I ordered one online, but any heatproof bowl will work, one with a lip round the edge will be easiest to fix...
I have never attempted a Tiramisu until two months ago; the thought of the complicated and tedious preparation put me off several times. Only this year, when I visited my aunt in Frankfurt, did I realize how easy it is to make this dessert.
As it needs to sit in the fridge for at least three hours, this is something you could prepare the night before you have dinner guests.
"A Beautiful View" written by Daniel MacIvor and directed by Ross Manson
"A Beautiful View," a funny and insightful play written by Daniel MacIvor, premiered Tuesday night at BeMe Theatre. M (Becky Johnson) and L (Amy Rutherford) first meet at a camping store, Outdoor Outfitters. M is in a band and L is a bartender, or at least that is the story they tell each other. Later on, while they are looking back at their past, they confess to having been liars. This is one of many instances that make it easy for the viewer to relate to M and L.
Not only do M and L share a love of camping, but also a...
After having travelled the last two years to several parts of France and indulging sinfully in the heavenly food and mouth watering wines, it is hard to find somewhere in Munich that offers the same comparison. However, there is a hidden part of France in the heart of Munich which one can find nestled amid the lofts and buildings that pepper the city's trendy Schwabing area - in Le Cezanne.....
The friendly owners Patrick and Martina Geay have been running the restaurant since 1998 and somehow always manage to provide a very pleasant dining experience each time we go there. To top it all the...
Tom Hooper (director of the critically acclaimed "The King's Speech") has taken what has become one of the world's best-loved musicals, pulled-together an all-star cast (including Hugh Jackman, Russell Crowe and Anne Hathaway), thrown in a script containing very few lines of un-sung dialogue (reflecting the style of the musical itself) and created one of 2012's most-anticipated films. Now that it has been released, does it live up to the hype? Has Hooper succeeded in translating the stage-musical to screen?
As far as the plot is concerned, this is no light, easy-going subject-matter. "Les...
"Safety Not Guaranteed" stars Jake Johnson, Aubrey Plaza and Karan Soni as a newspaper reporter and his two interns who decide to respond to a newspaper ad requesting a companion for an unusual voyage - a voyage back in time. "Must bring your own weapons... Safety not guaranteed."
Darius (Plaza) is chosen as the official applicant and befriends self-proclaimed time-traveller Kenneth (Mark Duplass), who puts her through rigorous training to prepare her for their journey! Is he a genius, a prankster, or is he just nuts? Meanwhile Jeff (Johnson) attempts to reunite with the girl who got...
"Skyfall" is the 23rd "Bond" film but what's more significant, it marks the 50th anniversary of the 007 franchise. This film also appears to mark a turning point in the life of James Bond - arguably even more so than Daniel Craig's first stint as the eponymous hero in 2006's "Casino Royale". "Royale" presented a notably more intelligent "007" film than usual and introduced a completely made over Bond: Craig added a depth to the character never seen before and, what's more, he was the first blond Bond! Craig's third outing as James, "Skyfall", has been called by some "the best Bond yet". Whilst...
R: So you just finished a busy month-long run at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. Are you happy to be home from Edinburgh? Did you like Scotland?
M: I'm happy to be home, but not because I'm happy to be away from Scotland. It's more that four weeks is enough. It's a tough job for everyone at the Fringe. But for me, I think that the first cut was the deepest. English is a second language for me. So you have to work a lot harder than an English comedian or someone who is just going to see a show there.
R: You did a show at the Pleasance, how was that? What about...
Banter. Maybe it's a British thing, but I miss it.
I miss making trite and utterly inane observations about the weather just for the sake of it to a stranger at a bus stop, and receiving an equally platitudinous reply with a knowing smile. Ah, Blighty...
When I first moved to Munich, I couldn't help but insert a few little snatches of home-grown banter in bad German into my daily interactions. You know the score: sometimes in those vacant moments of silent, sullen waiting, you yearn for a few seconds to feel the fleeting vitality of a human connection, however small and pathetic it is.