Annamirl Bierbichler Movies
These days, things have gotten a little out of hand even in the Swiss countryside. At least, this is what Windleter (Wolfram Berger) thinks, on his farm in the mountains. Even the local girls are a little too forward for him. When he goes to Zurich on a brief jaunt, he visits a "girlie bar" there which showcases Asian girls. On the lookout for a suitable wife, he arranges to have a Thai farmer's daughter sent to him. She duly arrives a few weeks later, and things proceed much to his satisfaction (if not hers), since he is not interested in having sex, even after they marry. They pursue their rather unsatisfying lives together, but the suspicion and racism of their neighbors eventually grow out of control, with tragic consequences. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Wolfram Berger, Werner Herzog, (more)
This esoteric comedy is designed specifically for linguists who are fluent in German - or native German speakers with a passion for language used in the service of (as one reviewer put it) "intellectual anti-intellectualism." Others may find the film's rapid-fire wordplay which skillfully subverts the grammatical and linguistic conventions of the German language difficult or frustrating to follow. The story, such as it is, is that Mixwix is the owner of a department store who literally squats on the roof of his store, while a horde of attendants flatter him and look after his every imaginable want. Even the name of the owner is a play on words, connoting someone who masturbates. The symbol is apt, in that this almost onanistic fantasy is intended to poke fun at the awful seriousness of Germany's intellectual classes. Director Herbert Achternbusch, who has been at this sort of drollery since 1971, has numerous fans in Germany. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Alfred Edel
Several comedy situations are strung together for this offbeat satire. An unassuming businesswoman is discovered to be the mastermind behind a terrorist organization, and a disgruntled waitress has looks that can kill, literally and not figuratively speaking. In another tacky passage, played as a reoccurring gag, an official is infected with the AIDS virus after suffering a bite from the businesswoman. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Herbert Achternbush, Gabi Geist, (more)
Elizabeth (Annamirl Bierbichler) and her husband Ignaz (Franz Buchrieser) are a farm couple who are about to see their daughter get married. The wife has long been bored with life on the farm and looks forward to the ceremony. But trouble starts when the muscular, stoic Max (Claus Eberth) is hired to help with the farm labor. First Elizabeth shows disdain for the mute Max, but she later has an affair with him that leads to public scandal, humiliation, and tragedy. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Annamirl Bierbichler, Claus Eberth, (more)
With his usual cast of oddball characters and over two hours of polemics and shenanigans, director Herbert Achternbusch is at it again in Heilt Hitler!. The main thrust of this 1986 opus is focused on some questionable cultural traits of Bavaria, and, as might be expected in an Achternbusch work, a large dose of sexual situations, parodies, and innuendo. Certainly a bit long even for his admirers, this journey into a strange world is best taken by the already converted. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Günter Freyse, Herbert Achternbush, (more)
In one of his wittiest films since the 1977 Bye Bye Bavaria, writer and director Herbert Achternbusch focuses on a couple who have separated, but they meet again in Paris, find they are still in love, and go out to enjoy the city. The hitch is that one of them has had a sex change in the meantime, so they are now a lesbian couple. The former male, a bored and frustrated writer in more than one sense, adopted the name of the woman he loved, Rita, after he became female. It is Rita whom he/she discovers on the stage in Paris, culminating in a happy reunion between one old Rita and another newly created. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Annamirl Bierbichler, Christiane Cohendy, (more)
In yet another salty Herbert Achternbusch interpretation of life, sex, and politics, the prolific director relies on long monologues and visual references to the infamous 1936 Olympics in Berlin and to Nazi concentration camps in order to put across a story involving his father (played by the director himself) and his mother, who was a sports instructor during the time of the Olympics (the year when Achternbusch was conceived). In reality, the film is not so much a story, as a platform for Achternbusch's stand-up routines. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Herbert Achternbush, Annamirl Bierbichler, (more)
In another off-the-wall Achternbusch satire that is slow-paced, often unfunny and burdened with wooden acting, at least to those who are not Achternbusch fans, a factory worker carries around a stuffed dog (taxidermist-style) filled with gold and interacts with the Prime Minister, who drinks what looks like ketchup out of a bottle. Some of the comic barbs seem a little obscure, and other jokes -- like a Japanese tour guide played by a very Teutonic actress -- raise a chuckle for some viewers and a question mark for others. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Herbert Achternbush, Franz Baumgartner, (more)
This is the tenth film in eight years from writer and director Herbert Achternbusch and is radically out on its own limb. The premise is that Jesus Christ has returned as a fairly palpable ghost behaving in a slightly less than saintly manner, and no one knows how to react to him. He lives on bread and wine, teases the Mother Superior, and has a crown of thorns that nettles him at times. Achternbusch aficionados will readily enthuse about this latest creation though other reactions may vary from amusement to objection. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Herbert Achternbush, Annamirl Bierbichler, (more)
"The Blockhead" takes matters into his own hands in one segment in this satire when he puts cyanide in the beer glass of a prominent politician. That is one of the high points in this film from actor, writer, and director Herbert Achternbusch -- a film that is likely to remain enigmatic for anyone not steeped in the German intellectual and political scene of the early '80s. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Herbert Achternbush, Annamirl Bierbichler, (more)
Herbert Achternbusch wrote, directed, and starred in this comedy that pokes fun at the German way of subsidizing the art of creating movies and documentaries. He is a filmmaker playing the role of a filmmaker in a film he is making, and as a result, the film jokes might be a little abstruse for some of the viewers. The story centers on a "film" man just out of prison (Achternbusch) who has to make a living with his craft again. He is followed by a reporter who wants an interview, and winds up at an inn called "Zum Neger Erwin," run by a woman whom he convinces to be the leading lady in his planned production. As the story continues, the filmmaker finds ample excuses to pan the financial powers that be, and to paint the beknighted and talented seekers after funds as Neger Erwins, slaves to the funding process. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Herbert Achternbush, Annamirl Bierbichler, (more)
Director and writer Herbert Achternbusch talks his way through a series of monologues as he plays a private investigator out to discover the truth about the extermination of the Jews in World War II, but the people he interviews seem unwilling or unable to remember back that far. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Annamirl Bierbichler, Herbert Achternbush, (more)
This is another unclassifiable movie by Herbert Achternbusch, whose other odd movies give solid evidence of his gnomic abilities. These include The Atlantic Swimmers and Bye Bye Bavaria. The story of Der Comanche is a mix of satire and high philosophical comedy. Herbert (played by Achternbusch) is a patient in a hospital whose dreams are of such salable quality that his wife sells them, without editing, directly to television. This is an era, apparently, where the man's imaginings can be made visible through electronic magic of some kind. In one scene, he is in Ceylon, asking the two elephants if they are his wife and children. Generally, though, since he believes he is an actual Native American Comanche tribesman, his dream adventures unfold accordingly. Herbert speaks in a thick Bavarian dialect, so his extremely witty lines may be difficult for some German speakers to understand. Once he is released from the hospital, he goes to a restaurant in the Vienna Woods to conduct a Comanche raid on the palefaces drinking beer there. Once there, a highly abstruse discussion about life, etc., takes place. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Annamirl Bierbichler, Heinz Braun, (more)
In this somewhat experimental satirical black comedy, a renowned and sensitive poet and writer is fed up with the crudenesses of his native Bavaria and, in a well-publicized move, says he refuses even to die there. Instead, followed by reporters, he retires to Greenland. There, he has a reunion with his girlfriend, and gains some idea of the current situation of his wife before he dies. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Annamirl Bierbichler, Herbert Achternbush, (more)








