Leipzig 2003
Technik des Glücks
directed by Chris Wright & Stefan Kolbe
FIPRESCI Special mention
The People who loved their power station
by Leo Bankersen
The power station at Zschornewitz in the former GDR was
an industrial dinosaur that made electricity and employment out of coal
and survived two world wars and more than forty years of a centrally guided
economy. This is what we could have learned from any ordinary documentary.
But in 'Technik des Glück' by British born Chris Wright and his German
partner Stefan Kolbe there is more.
Actually, Wright and Kolbe started off by making this kind
of standard documentary about the unemployment in the region - the station
was closed down soon after East Germany disappeared. They however found
something they didn't expect. It turned out that quite a few of the workers
were avid amateur filmmakers who had been recording their work and private
lives for many years with great enthusiasm and were now aiming their cameras
at the collapsing chimneys. They wholeheartedly supplied loads of films
and tapes. Images that now form the core of 'Technik des Glücks'.
Putting
this material up front provides a fresh and intimate perspective. The
inventive montage of home movies, other archive footage and even some
propaganda results in an often humorous portrait of life in the socialist
era. Whatever the downside of the regime might have been, true happiness
did exist.
Of course, Wright and Kolbe are not the first to recognize
the autenticity of amateur footage. Sometimes they even seem to get carried
away by it a bit too much. While one of their protagonists never gets
tired of filming excursions through his house - we might. One could also
say that compared to this rediscovered vitality of the past the present
day situation remains somewhat underexposed.
Still, these are only small flaws in an otherwise charming
and entertaining enterprise that is cuts above the run-of-the-mill talking
heads formula. A touch of irony counters the danger of nostalgia and a
good cinematographic sense is shown throughout. For example by adding
as a framework the story of Wright’s grandfather, who was supposedly
the British bomber pilot in the Second World War that saved the power
station by not being able to find his target. The story of the pilot is
authentic to be sure, but Wright invented him as a relative of his. It
not only provides a striking opening, but also enables the filmmakers
to create moments of distance by means of short, laconic letters accompanying
quiet shots of houses and backyards in present day Zschornewitz. "It's
getting colder here, Granddad." 'Technik des Glücks' has it's
own subtle way of showing that it's not just blessings after 'die Wende'.
Leo Bankersen
© FIPRESCI 2003
top
Direction, script: Chris Wright, Stefan Kolbe
Camera: Stefan Kolbe
Music: Johann Sebastian Bach
Editing: Chris Wright
Production: Stefan Kolbe
Germany, 2003
|