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Peaceful Days / Royal Baths - 2-DVD Set (DVD) (*)
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$35.99

Original Title: Friedliche Tage / Prinzenbad
Alternate Title: Peaceful Days / Royal Baths
Language Selections:
English ( Subtitles )
French ( Subtitles )
German ( Dolby Digital 2.0 )
German ( Mono )


Product Origin/Format:
Germany ( PAL/Region 0 )

Running Time:
161 min

Aspect Ratio:
Fullscreen

Special Features:
2-DVD Set
Interactive Menu
Scene Access
Booklet


Movie filmed in 1983 - 1993 and produced in:
Germany ( Germany, Central Europe )
Hungary ( Russia, Eastern Europe )


Directed By:
Richard Blank


Written By:
Richard Blank


Actors:
Richard Beek
Beppo Brem
Raphael Klachkin
Wilfried Klaus
Eleonore Melzer
Branko Samarovski
Hannelore Schroth
Katharina Thalbach
Bernhard Wicki ..... Dany
Ulrich Wildgruber ..... Gomorra
Róbert Alföldi ..... Mathias
Ekaterina Strizhenova ..... Lisa
Michael Mrakitsch ..... Hans Ossenberg
Sándor Szabó ..... Schlee
Gábor Reviczky ..... Werner
Nikolas Lansky ..... Albano
Martin Maria Abram ..... Harald
Christoph Baumann ..... Berti
Elisabeth Endriss ..... Herr Horst
Zoltán Gera ..... Ralph
Otto Grünmandl ..... Laxi
Constanze Heller ..... Tenor Körtes
Attila Kaszás ..... Johanna
György Kivés
Lászlo Kormos
Dietmar Mössmer
Abraham Ronai
Elizabeth Schofield
István Szilágyi
Gréta Szákaly
Iván Verebély


Synopsis:
This double DVD holds two unusual films by Richard Blank. In Friedliche Tage, we enter a totalitarian and inhuman society, in which daily life is a series of nightmares and the protagonists search for a utopia of freedom and love. Prinzenbad gives us a microcosm of a society dominated by male power plays, wheeling and dealing, corruption, love, and eroticism. Both films dispense with established dramatic conventions, instead consolidating scenes, episodes, and stories into a grotesque roundelay of the decline of civil society.

Peaceful Days (1983)
The dramatic arc of Friedliche Tage was developed from images and the people who sustained those images. As long as the film is set in the building where the executions are carried out and the delinquents await their end, the tale is told with "classic" suspense. After Hanna leaves there with Robert, her potential executioner played by Branko Samarowski the traditional, linear narrative form dissolves into individual motifs; images that taken together show that these two, as a couple, can't manage in the "normal" world. And in the end, some viewers are happy that the executioner returns to his old domain. He knows his way around there, he admits to being guilty of leaving. His career is advancing there. Happy ending? I've never been interested in heroes, their enemies and a sustained, suspenseful story with a happy ending. The prevailing laws of Hollywood movies, to this day, follow the old dramaturgy of classic drama, which hasn't played a role in European theater since the 1920s of last century. Literature about modern theater makes it clear that the principle of figurative imagery, which is much more in keeping with our current multiple realities, has replaced a suspenseful, rationally coherent course of events.
Royal Baths (1993)
I shot Prinzenbad in 1993. Five years earlier, my family and I had taken a trip to Budapest. We stayed at the Hotel Gellért, which is famous for its grand baths. Men and women visit separate sections of the baths. The water is heated to as much as 38 degrees Celsius. The men wear nothing but a small loincloth and it takes a while to get used to seeing the almost naked bodies. Once you get over your initial shame, you notice that the men in the baths talk about business, personal things, friendships, enemies, about women, and about which of them will win the lottery next weekend. It's a society of men that might amuse some people, but also frighten others - skin as far as the eye can see, male bodies, monstersin steaming water. On my first visit, I looked at all that from the edge of the bathing pool and wondered, "What would happen if a woman turned up here?" I wrote a script. It was clear to me from the beginning that no classic narrative could be set in these baths. There was no hero here; instead there were 150-200 protagonists. So I devised and combined various men's stories love and jealousy, criminal doings, business and deceit, boss and underling. One actor - Ulrich Wildgruber - plays an actor holding forth with a monologue, and the pool attendant, played by Bernhard Wicki in his last great role, stands above them all like God the father. The stories alternate. The dramaturgy may be reminiscent of a fugue, and the music that Loek Dikker composed for the film plays with Baroque elements.

DVD 1
Friedliche Tage 1983, 81'
Booklet with essays by Richard Blank and Helmut Schödel
DVD 2
Prinzenbad 1993, 80'
This product was added to our catalog on Wednesday 10 June, 2015.
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