The
Marriage of Maria Braun Movie Review:
As
the second Fassbinder film I`ve seen during the course of
a week, The Marriage of Maria Braun seems to suffer from
something which is even more pronounced than what occurred
in Fox and His Friends: the feeling that there is something
distant, even phony, about Fassbinder`s films. I can`t put
my finger on it; perhaps it`s Fassbinder`s obsession with
melodrama that does it. In any case, it is very difficult
for me to watch his films without occasionally getting either
bored or the urge to cringe at the foolishness on screen.
The
story, in any case, is rooted in very real situations. After
World War II, Germany is in ruins, and we peer into one
indivual victim, Maria Braun. Her family`s home is in ruins
(including holes in the kitchen walls), her mother is in
general poverty, and Maria`s husband is missing in action,
and presumed dead. The general emotional feeling is that
of apathy and hopelessness, and Maria soon represents fully
the entire implications of those emotions as she attempts
to rise above the financial and psychological distress of
the majority of her countryfolk. She has an affair with
a black man which ends in his death, yet she feels nothing.
Her husband unexpectedly returns, and finds himself in prison,
yet she sees this not as tragic, but as an excuse for her
to prove herself to the world, and the rest of the story
involves her wheeling and dealing in a textile company,
after sweet-talking its boss into allowing her "skills"
to creep into the firm.
Hanna
Schyulla, as Maria, gives a performance both cold and superficial.
It is hard to feel for a person whose character trait is
greed, and it is even harder to understand the character
who portrays that trait so emptily. I really did not get
a lock on this person at all, except for the fact that some
of her behaviour will strike one as occasionally chilling,
and, most often, absurd. Certainly, the two most absurd
moments in the entire film are the games she plays with
her two lovers, the black solider and the textile boss.
She acts so seductive and affectionate towards the black
man (and there is an amusing moment which seems to me to
be a takeoff of a scene in Lilies of the Field, with Sidney
Poitier), until the final moment, which I will not reveal
except to say that it is played out in a fairly nonsense
fashion, and makes us ask questions about her state of mind
(if not Fassbinder`s state of mind!!). And her behaviour
during her first meeting with the textile boss on the train
is too unbelievable for words (and is tainted by the appearance
of an raunchy, stereotypical black man, which only creates
more problems for those who question Fassbinder`s use of
black people in general). During her so-called romance with
the boss, she often surprises him with the urge to sleep
with him, yet never acts as if she really gives a damn for
anyone at all. Yet we are supposed to believe she is doing
all of this for her husband.
The
ending is the most ridiculous, and includes a mystifying
montage of the German chancellors up to the current date
(1978). Apparently, Fassbinder was making some sort of point
about the German financial and social structure - what that
point is, God only knows. Unless it has something to do
with the sentiments expressed by numerous characters, in
which the effect on people post-WWII is a lack of emotions,
creating a climate of greed and amorality. So.... does this
mean that the German leaders maintain this sick and heartless
climate? Maybe so.... but the film shows so much silly melodrama
that we don`t know if Fassbinder is capable of taking such
ideas seriously.
Fassbinder
does not seem to have the skills necessary to make a truly
powerful film. While Fox and His Friends had some decent
and honest storytelling peeking through the melodrama and
the unconvincing parts, Maria pratically drowns in the phony
theatrics. While this movie does have a germ of a good concept,
and it is somewhat clear in retrospect what Maria Braun`s
motivations truly are, Fassbinder alternatly bores and cheats
us with the silly stuff, and makes me wonder if he really
was this great German master who was taken from us much
too soon.
David
Macdonald
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