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Ali - Fear Eats the Soul By Sean Axmaker
Rainer Werner Fassbinder paid tribute to his mentor, Douglas Sirk, with
this loose adaptation of All That Heaven Allows, the classic
American soaper of a widow falling for younger man to the disapproval of
family and friends. Fassbinder combines the Sirk melodrama with the story
told in his own The American Soldier. An aging, lonely charwoman
(sweet old Brigitte Mira) befriends a Moroccan guest worker (El Hedi ben
Salem) at least 20 years her junior. Finding comfort and happiness in one
another's company, they suddenly marry. Her kids are aghast, his friends
appalled, and the neighborhood turns its back, so the two pull together
for support. Their relationship ironically begins to unravel when the
pressure of community prejudice eases and they must confront the gulf
between them. Combining melodrama with social commentary, Fassbinder
offers a sharp, incisive portrait of prejudice in modern Germany grounded
in contemporary social conditions. Mira delivers a tender, vulnerable
performance and Fassbinder molds Salem's stiffness into a distinctive
character trait of a man ill at ease in German society. It's an assured
and beautiful film, full of gliding camerawork and evocative images, and
invested with intimacy and gentleness. Even Fassbinder's
characteristically grim conclusion defies tragedy for a glimmer of hope, a
welcome and affecting rarity in his career.
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FILM
FACTS |
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|  | Director: Rainer Werner Fassbinder
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|  | Stars: Brigitte Mira, El Hedi ben Salem, Barbara Valentin
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|  | Released: October 5, 1974
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|  | Availability: DVD VHS | | |
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