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Christoph Bantzer Movies

2002  
 
A hectic young father's family life takes a turn for the worse in Swiss director Dani Levy's 2002 comedy/drama I'm the Father. Architect Marco Krieger (Sebastian Blomberg) has been working hard on a new project that will be the crowning achievement to his short career and will also make his name in the industry -- but his relationships with his son Benny (Ezra Valentin Lenz) and wife Melanie (Maria Schrader) have suffered greatly as a result. Marco has failed to notice how dire the situation is, however, until Melanie leaves with Benny and promptly files for divorce with severe custody limitations. Shattered and distraught, Marco must reevaluate his desires for success in the business world against his desires to be a father and husband, ultimately choosing the latter. The problem now is convincing Melanie to let him back into their lives, which may require extraordinary action on his part. I'm the Father was screened as part of the 2002 Montreal World Film Festival. ~ Ryan Shriver, Rovi

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Starring:
Sebastian BlombergMaria Schrader, (more)
 
1997  
 
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In this exploration of our violent society, writer and director Michael Haneke takes a disturbing look at how depictions of violence at once reflect and shape our culture. A well-to-do German family -- father Georg (Ulrich Mühe), mother Anna (Susanne Lothar), and son Georgie (Stefan Clapczynski) -- are settling in for the weekend at their vacation retreat near the lake. While Georg and his son head out for some sailing, a courteous young gentleman named Peter (Frank Giering) appears at the door, asking if he can borrow some eggs. When he breaks them, Anna offers him some more, but the conversation soon takes an odd turn; Peter goes from pleasant to sniveling to confrontational, and he's soon joined by his friend Paul (Arno Frisch). When Georg returns, he demands that Paul and Peter leave, but the two strangers refuse; Paul and Peter react with violence against Georg and his family, and they soon have the family tied up and begin torturing them. Peter and Paul occasionally refer to the camera in a manner recalling Bertolt Brecht, and near the end of the film, they even demand the opportunity to replay a scene so that they may mete out more punishment against their victims. The score includes classical selections by Mozart and Handel as well as performances by avant-garde composer John Zorn. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Susanne LotharUlrich Mühe, (more)
 
1983  
 
There was a large, Woodstock-style peace concert held in Hamburg in 1983, and this documentary records the performances and the statements made by many international notables, including Joan Baez, Harry Belafonte, and Floyd Westerman from the U.S., Udo Lindenberg from Germany, Cieslav Niemen from Poland, and many others. The program played to a crowd of 50,000 and lasted a total of 12 hours -- edited down to 100 minutes in this documentary. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

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Starring:
Joan BaezChristoph Bantzer, (more)
 
1970  
 
This dry, sarcastic humorous satire concerns two couples. One is a married couple where the workaholic husband has little time for his wife and child. The wife has an affair with a former teenage flame while her husband is off on a business trip. Director Ulrich Schamoni plays the busy husband, whose wife has the fling with the man of the unmarried couple. Music is provide by Xhol Caravan. Hella (Sabine Sinjen) is the neglected wife who takes comfort in the arms of another man. Christoph Bantzer, Corny Collins, and Blandine Ebinger also appear in the film. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi

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Starring:
Sabine SinjenChristoph Bantzer, (more)