Susanne SachßeDESCRIPTION A Russian premiere of Ulrike's Brain, first screened at the 67 th Berlin International Film Festival. A retro sci-fi with elements of a kitsch B movie, Ulrike's Brain is a spoof of 1960s’ and 1970s’ films about mad scientists preserving brains of famous people, such as They Saved Hitler’s Brain (1968) and The Brain That Would Not Die (1972). A sequel of sorts to The Raspberry Reich (2004), which has gained a cult following, Ulrike's Brain also stars a Berliner Ensemble’s Susanne Sachsse, who has worked with Robert Wilson and Heiner Müller. In the new film, Sachsse’s Doctor Julia Feifer is studying the brain of Ulrike Meinhof—a founding member of the radical left terrorist organisation Red Army Faction, who was found hanged in her prison cell. Slowly, Ulrike’s brain comes to life and starts to manipulate Feifer into spearheading a new feminist revolution. Ulrike's Brain Director Bruce LaBruce. Parallel zum Kongress (Die Untoten, Kampnagel,Mai 2011) probte der kanadische Regisseur Bruce LaBruce auf Kampnagel Szenen für seinen neuen Film. Ulrike’s Brain ein Film von Bruce LaBruce mit Susanne Sachße, Gertrude Stammheim. Inhaltsangabe: 'Ulrike's Brain' basiert auf der wahren Geschichte über das in. In Anspielung auf B-Movies der 1960er-Jahre wie They Saved Hitler’s Brain und The Brain That Would Not Die erzählt Ulrike’s Brain die Geschichte von Doktor Julia. In Anspielung auf B-Movies der 1960er-Jahre wie They Saved Hitler’s Brain und The Brain That Would Not Die erzählt Ulrike’s Brain die Geschichte von. Florian TöbeGermany, Canada, 2017. Bruce LaBruce rehearses «ULRIKE'S BRAIN» Parallel to the congress the Canadian director Bruce LaBruce rehearsed scenes for a new film in an adjacent hall. This provided us with a unique opportunity to watch the discussions, thought processes and the states of exhaustion emerging from the conceptual dialogues needed for creating a drastic visual world before they, projected onto the big screen, affect us as insight, shock and seduction. “Ulrike’s Brain” was a five-hour live event, made of working on scenes, the viewing of raw material and film screenings which conference participants could attend. “Ulrike’s Brain” is based on a true story. Following the death of the leading figures of the RAF, Ulrike Meinhof, Andreas Baader, Gudrun Ensslin and Jan-Carl Raspe, in Stammheim prison in 1976/77, the neuropathologist and forensic scientist Dr. Jürgen Peiffer from the University of Tübingen performed autopsies on their brains.
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February 2019
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