Edith Clever Movies
Die Nacht would make a long night indeed for most filmgoers, there is no story to speak of, just six hours of a monologue related to European history by Edith Clever, enhanced by excellent music by Richard Wagner, Johann Sebastian Bach, and other composers, quotes from philosophers like Nietzsche and Goethe, and random images that match the narration. In the prologue Clever speaks from the ruins of the Danish Embassy in Berlin, commenting on the thoughts of the Native American Chief Seattle, who saw his own tribe succumb to the ravages of white dominant society. As this look at Europe's recent past continues, Clever's artful and sonorous presentation keeps attention fixed on the moods and feelings and information that mix and mingle throughout The Night.
~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Edith Clever
This is a four-hour film performance of Wagner's opera "Parsifal" - about the legend of the Holy Grail (the chalice from which Christ drank at the Last Supper) and the Sacred Spear used by Longinus to pierce the side of Christ. In the opera both of these revered objects were brought down from Heaven and installed in a magic temple on a sacred mountain (Monsalvat) in northern Spain. An order of knights was created to guard the two objects, but their leader Amfortas (Armin Jordan) (Titurel, the first head knight had died) was wounded by the Spear in a battle with the evil Klingsor (Aage Haugland), who managed to steal the sacred object away. Amfortas' wound will not heal, but he does not die because of the blessings of the Holy Grail. As predicted, "Parsifal" (Michael Kutter) arrives on the scene - pure and noble in heart - and is brought to the magic temple where he witnesses Amfortas and other knights in a ritual involving the Holy Grail but does not understand what is going on. Next, "Parsifal" is thrown out of the temple and goes to attack Klingsor and his knights, roundly defeating the knights, but not yet their leader. "Parsifal" then finds himself in an enchanted garden where the sorceress Kundry (Edith Clever), an ally of Klingsor and yet in service of the Holy Grail at the same time, unsuccessfully tries to seduce him. As he casts off Kundry, her rage at this treatment causes her to call forth Klingsor, who throws the Sacred Spear at "Parsifal" - but it remains suspended over his head. "Parsifal" grabs the spear, and defeats Klingsor, and causes his castle to totally collapse. After years of wandering, "Parsifal" returns to the magic temple where Amfortas is brought to him and cured with the Spear. The Grail glows with light and a white dove flies down to Parsifal, bringing him heavenly benediction. Most of the primary roles in the filmed version of the opera were played by actors miming the words sung by opera stars, combining the best of two distinct worlds. The third world, that of the cinema itself, is enhanced by the "front projection" technique and other optical techniques that play with the observer's visual perception. Marionettes are used to introduce and close the opera, and the allusions developed in the images and motifs of the opera further expand its symbolism. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Armin Jordan, Wolfgang Schöne, (more)
Gross und Klein is a respectable four-hour drama based on a play by Botho Strauss about a woman, Lotte (Edith Clever), and her relationships with a wide range of characters in Saarbruecken. Lotte interacts with liberal artists and a conservative elite, and along the way, the sorrows and joys of life are brought forward. With excellent acting to complement a good script, the four hours go by quickly, though the film is more like a stageplay since the camera is stationary and the actors perform in the manner of theater thespians. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Edith Clever, Gerhard Bienert, (more)
In a provincial town in West Germany, the director of the local art society is preparing to put on an exhibit of paintings. The patrons of the society are all upstanding local businessmen and members of the middle class, of not very refined tastes, but they are all a-dither about the painting in the "Capitalist Realism" exhibit which is clearly insulting to a local banker. Nonetheless, in this comedy they all exert themselves to be polite to the painter and his boyfriend. The film is adapted from the play by Botho Strauss. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Libgart Schwartz
L'Adolescente (The Adolescent) was the second directorial stint for French film star Jeanne Moreau. This possibly autobiographical piece is set during the early war years. Laetitia Chauveau plays a twelve-year old girl whose future is determined by the events of one long summer holiday in the country in the period just before the outbreak of the Second World War. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Laetitia Chauveau, Simone Signoret, (more)
Mourning for a lost relationship can be every bit as devastating as mourning for someone who has died. In this drama based on the director's own novel, a couple with an unhappy marriage agree to a trial separation. They try to patch things up, and at the same time other relationships begin to develop for them. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Edith Clever, Markus Muhleisen, (more)
The costume drama Die Marquise von O is French director Eric Rohmer's first feature-length theatrical release after a four-year break from filmmaking. Based on a short story by Henrich von Kleist, the dialogue is spoken in the original German language and the story is set in Italy during the Franco-Prussian War. Edith Clever plays the widowed Marquise, who is sexually assaulted by Russian soldiers and rescued by a Count (Bruno Ganz). Some time later, she has to explain to her parents (Peter Lühr and Edda Seippel) and brother (Otto Sander) why she's pregnant. Die Marquise von O won the Grand Jury Prize in the 1976 Cannes Film Festival. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Edith Clever, Bruno Ganz, (more)
Based on the play by Maxim Gorky, this film re-creates the goings-on at a dacha in the Russian countryside during a turn-of-the-century summer. The eleven wealthy guests manage their intrigues and affairs in the presence of their hosts Jakov Schalimov (Otto Sander) and Julia (Elke Petri), a close but feuding couple. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Edith Clever











