000 02052ngm a22001697a 4500
005 20160920154608.0
245 _aProvokation der Wirklichkeit
_bDie Oberhausener
250 _afilmmuseum 69
260 _bFilmmuseum München, in collaboration with Internationale Kurzfilmtage Oberhausen, Deutsche Kinemathek and Bundesarchiv
_c2012
300 _aDouble DVD
_band one booklet.
306 _a274 min
505 _aDVD 1: 1.Menschen im Espresso 1958, 16' 2.Schicksal einer Oper 1958, 10' 3.Glühendes Eiland Kreta 1959, 12' 4.Das magische Band 1959, 21' 5.Moskau ruft 1959, 12' 6.Stunde X 1959, 4' (Fragment) 7.Trab Trab 1959, 11' 8.Salinas 1960, 11' 9.Schatten 1960, 10' 10.".... Geist und ein wenig Glück" 1965, 31' ; DVD 2 1.Brutalität in Stein 1961, 11' 2.Kommunikation 1961, 11' 3.Notizen aus dem Altmühltal 1961, 17' 4.Plakate der Weimarer Republik 1962, 10' 5.Süden im Schatten 1962, 9' 6.Das Unkraut 1962, 11' 7.Es muß ein Stück vom Hitler sein 1963, 11' 8.Anmeldung 1964, 10' 9.Marionetten 1964, 11' 10.Granstein 1965, 13' 11.Die Erben von Papas Kino 1968, 27'
511 _aThe Oberhausen Manifesto was a declaration by a group of 26 young German filmmakers at the International Short Film Festival Oberhausen, North Rhine-Westphalia on 28 February 1962. The manifesto was a call to arms to establish a "new German feature film". It was initiated by Haro Senft and among the signatories were the directors Alexander Kluge and Edgar Reitz. The manifesto was associated with the motto "Papas Kino ist tot" (Papa's cinema is dead), although this phrase does not appear in the manifesto itself. The signatories to the manifesto became known as the Oberhausen Group and are seen as important forerunners of the New German Cinema that began later in the decade. The Oberhausen Group were awarded the Deutscher Filmpreis in 1982.
546 _aGerman; subtitles: German, English, French, Spanish, Russian
700 _aDVD authoring: Ralph Schermbach; DVD supervision: Stefan Drößler
_917322
942 _2ddc
_cDVD
999 _c8823
_d8823