Martha 1973 M
When
7.45 pm, Wed 8 Nov 2017 (116 mins)Where
Gallery of Modern Art & Cinema A
About
I find women more interesting. They don't interest me just because they're oppressed – it's not that simple. The societal conflicts in women are more interesting because on the one hand women are oppressed, but in my opinion they also provoke this oppression as a result of their position in society, and in turn use it as a terror tactic. – Fassbinder
The title character in this brutal dissection of a bourgeois marriage takes her name from Martha Hyer, a star of 1950's Hollywood melodramas. But the Martha here (played by Margit Carstensen) is a meek, virginal librarian, vacationing in Rome with her domineering father. When he dies suddenly, Martha is released of one patriarchal hold only to find herself under the spell of another: her swift marriage to a wealthy, magnetic civil engineer (Peeping Tom's Karlheinz Böhm). Initially taken with Helmet's dominant personality, Martha accepts his insults and humiliation of her with no question. But as Helmet enacts a program of control that encompasses everything from Martha's taste in music to her diet and ultimately her entire body, Martha's submission turns her into a prisoner of Helmet's sadism. Fassbinder's baroque abstraction veers from social comedy to psychological horror with deftness, anchored by the forceful performances of Carstensen and Böhm.
M | Mature themes
Production Credits
- Director: Rainer Werner Fassbinder
- Script: Rainer Werner Fassbinder
- Based on: the story 'For the Rest of Her Life' by Cornell Woolrich
- Cinematographer: Michael Ballhaus
- Cast: Margit Carstensen, Karlheinz Böhm, Gisela Fackeldey
- Editor: Liesgret Schmitt-Klink
- Production Designer: Kurt Raab
- Art Director: Lothar Schulz
- Costume Designer: Gisela Röcken
- Print Source: StudioCanal Australia
- Rights: StudioCanal Australia
- Year: 1973
- Runtime: 116 minutes
- Country: West Germany
- Languages: German, Italian
- Subtitles: English
- Sound: Mono
- Colour: Colour, Eastmancolor
- Screening Format: 16mm Transferred to 35mm, 1.33:1