Die allseitig reduzierte Persönlichkeit - Redupers (1978) Poster

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8/10
Good Film and Underrated
BRKSpeed14 February 2008
This film is a popular feminist film, but it should be viewed as more than that. The protagonist is more than just a woman fighting for woman's causes. There are themes of economic instability and national unity addressed as well as the struggles of artists and social activists.

The aesthetics are commendable as well. The camera work is not spectacular, but is interesting in how it is used in the film. And the landscapes of Berlin, which are used as a motif throughout the film, gives viewers a better sense of the city itself. The pace can be kind of slow at times, but there are plenty of "real" things being said to engage you student intellectuals who are interested in any of the things mentioned above.

I think the 4.8 rating the film received has more to do with American IMDb users aversion to slow-paced European films more than this films particular traits. If you have to watch this movie for a film class or community screening or some such event, don't be too disappointed. It's lighthearted and could be pretty good if you give it a chance.
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9/10
Quality and Complex Feminist Commentary
evengdahl22 November 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Redupers is a 1978 film from the notable feminist director Helke Sander. Photographer Edda struggles to fulfill her duties as a mother while also pushing back against the narrow vision of women's art that she and a group of female artists have been stifled by. Clear here are the feminist undertones; the film's conflict appears to be a divergence of the expectations and reality in the life of women. While a worthy topic, the simplistic portrayal of this particular aspect can leave viewers underwhelmed.

What others have missed is the artful way Sander applies the East/West divide of Berlin to play into this dichotomy and deepen the commentary on women's experiences. As Julie Mayne argues in her review of the film, Redupers is dedicated to the integration of supposedly dichotomous categories. It does so by having the female artists find similarities between the supposed opposites of East and West Berlin, proving that many binaries are falsely juxtaposed. Mayne writes about this in conjunction with the private/public divide that has been the site of a longstanding feminist debate, but I believe that the gap between expectation and reality also fits within this analysis. In a particularly striking scene, Edda's artist group puts a curtain around an elevated platform, gathering a group of eager tourists. When the women open the curtain to reveal the rather unremarkable sight of an East Berlin street, the tourists stand quietly, confused and disappointed. Their thirst for sensationalized difference is not satisfied by the boring reality of a similar looking life on the other side of the wall. Likewise, when Sander pulls back the curtain and shows the reality of women's lives, the audience is often too disappointed by the lack of spectacle that they entirely miss the point; women's lives are challenging in a very ordinary sort of way that can't always be dramatized. Perhaps interpretations of the film as a superficial presentation of women's issues is just more proof of Sander's point.
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2/10
Feminist Masterpiece
timlin-49 October 2014
Tedious and clumsy movie, narrated in the most simpleminded and boring way possible, about a mousy single mother photographer who is empowered by subsidies extracted by the government from productive taxpayers to take completely unremarkable photos that no one would buy with money they earned, have pseudo-intellectual conversations with her women associates, who are just as devoid of intelligence and creativity, ponder social issues of which she has not the slightest real understanding, and in general pretend to do very important and meaningful things while in reality accomplishing absolutely nothing, converting the tension of partitioned Berlin into a dull depiction of a housewife whose unease with being liberated from that position leaves her nagging society like she would a husband.
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