In 1960, Kluge (1932, Halberstadt, Germany) co-directed his first short film with Peter Schamoni entitled Brutality in Stone, a poetic montage film reflecting on the notion that the past lives on in architectural ruins; that the ruined structures of the Nazi period in particular bear silent witness to the atrocities committed.
This film is important for a number of reasons: Brutality in Stone marks the beginning of a process in which German film makers of the 1960s and 1970s began to overturn the apparent amnesia German cinema had demonstrated during the 1950s in regard to the Nazi period. In addition, the film was premièred at the annual Oberhausen short film festival in February 1961. The festival was significant because it functioned as a forum for young and experimental film makers attempting to develop modes of cinematic practice outside the rigid, commercial framework of the industrial system - modelled on Hollywood - that had been set up with the assistance of the American occupying forces in the immediate post-war period. A year after the première of Brutality in Stone at the Oberhausen festival, Kluge was one of the authors and signatories of the 'Oberhausen Manifesto', a document that outlined the imperatives of bringing a new kind of German cinema into being. (Michelle Langford, Senses of Cinema)
- Directors
- Alexander Kluge, Peter Schamoni
- Country of production
- Germany
- Year
- 1961
- Festival Edition
- IFFR 2009
- Length
- 12'
- Medium
- 16mm
- International title
- Brutality in Stone
- Language
- German
- Producers
- Alexander Kluge, Peter Schamoni, Dieter Lemmel, Wolf Wirth
- Sales
- Peter Schamoni
- Cinematography
- Wolf Wirth
- Editor
- Heidi Genée