The director first visited Transylvania seven years ago. In the 20th century this ‘country beyond the forest’ was the battleground of major political changes and displays of intolerance towards several of the population groups. In this ethnically mixed area, besides Hungarian, Romanian and German, marginal languages such as Saxon were also spoken.
Hauzenberger met Johann Schuff, an old man of Saxon origins and the very old Maria Huber, who belongs to the Landleri community. In 1918, their population groups still numbered 200,000 souls. Now there are 900 left. Both Schuff and Huber are very nationalistic and it was inconceivable for them to enter into a mixed marriage in their lifetime. Both are waiting for death. He wants to die on the rug in his garden and be eaten by wild animals. She has already survived five years beyond the date that was written, to her annoyance, on her gravestone. They think it has been enough. But this is where their joint history stops.
Hauzenberger visited both broken yet humorous old people for six years and sketched the turbulent history of their country from their tragic and idiosyncratic perspective. Slowly but surely, the memories of for instance the Waffen-SS and the Russian work camps are not only an unrelenting history lesson, but also a homage to human resilience. (PvH)
- Director
- Gerald Igor Hauzenberger
- Country of production
- Austria
- Year
- 2007
- Festival Edition
- IFFR 2007
- Length
- 75'
- Medium
- Betacam Digi PAL
- International title
- Beyond the Forest
- Language
- German
- Producer
- Gerald Igor Hauzenberger
- Production Company
- Golden Girls Filmproduktion & Filmservices
- Sales
- Golden Girls Filmproduktion & Filmservices
- Screenplay
- Gerald Igor Hauzenberger
- Cinematography
- Dominik Spritzendorfer, Marco Zimprich
- Editor
- Michael Palm, Gerald Igor Hauzenberger
- Sound Design
- Dominik Spritzendorfer, Nina Slatosch, Martin Zinggl