Through the Schotten Passage, an underground train and tram station in Vienna that is only linked to the outside world by a large oval opening, thousands of people travel every day. Pfaundler, a Viennese director who now lives in Taiwan, chose this place as the arena for his film, original in its form and substance, about people's deeper motivations. He allows several people, in no hurry on their way to a familiar destination, to stop time briefly with daydreams about possible encounters and attempts to make more authentic contact with their true selves.
The director begins this film with a striking upbeat as he says that he really wanted to travel to the coast with his cast and crew, but that the budget didn't allow it. The wide horizon to be found there remains an unrealised dream hanging above the characters, among them a flower seller, a teacher and an old man. As an antidote, Pfaundler portrays some of their fantasies and allows their monologue intérieur to betray the extremely personal grounds for their desires. While seventy percent of Schottentor is set in a public space, these reflections, combined with the liberated exchange between reality and imagination, provide a striking intimacy. At the same time, his leaps in formal style create a reflective, mild distance.




Director
Caspar Pfaundler
Premiere
World premiere
Country of production
Austria
Year
2009
Festival Edition
IFFR 2009
Length
123'
Medium
35mm
Language
German
Producer
Peter Roehsler
Production Company
Nanook Film
Sales
Nanook Film
Screenplay
Caspar Pfaundler
Cinematography
Peter Roehsler
Editor
Caspar Pfaundler
Production Design
Michael Drexler
Cast
Gerti Drassl
Director
Caspar Pfaundler
Premiere
World premiere
Country of production
Austria
Year
2009
Festival Edition
IFFR 2009
Length
123'
Medium
35mm
Language
German
Producer
Peter Roehsler
Production Company
Nanook Film
Sales
Nanook Film
Screenplay
Caspar Pfaundler
Cinematography
Peter Roehsler
Editor
Caspar Pfaundler
Production Design
Michael Drexler
Cast
Gerti Drassl