"Next to me is Barbara Auer and I'm Christian Petzold." "Barbara plays the mother Clara and I'm the director." "We're going to talk about the film as it plays." "You'll probably tell us things that even I don't know." "I think I told you everything during production." "I was very tired the first day." "We had originally planned a different opening with the mother and daughter." "The daughter recites a poem by Heinrich Heine, The Homeward Journey." ""My heart, my heart is sad But jolly glows the May"" "It's about a lover who's suffering from a pain of the heart." "Everybody else is so happy and he's so unhappy." "Finally he wants to be shot." "It's a metaphor for the film." "Julia was meant to recite the poem to you but later it seemed like a cheap TV show." "How's that?" "Like a cheap TV show?" "Like a 19th Century novel..." "A mother and a daughter..." "But it's not clear that they're mother and daughter..." "I felt it was beautiful while she was reading but now I can't think of any other opening than this one." "For me it was too literary." "Great in the script but not on the screen." "We should jump right into the stream of life." "Now we have a girl looking at something close to the camera." "We don't know what she's looking at but she's very present whereas the poem was like "Once upon a time..."" "Yes... something performed." "This music is beautiful." "The Tim Hardin song..." "There was a bad situation with it." "Just before our release, I discovered that it was in another German movie." "Our sound man was friends with another director." "So the song went to this other director who also used it." "But I insisted on using it because, even while writing the script..." "I wrote it at a friend's in Los Angeles... the Tim Hardin song accompanied the story." "So the song's in two German films?" "I think it's sung by Sabrina Setlur." "So it's a different version?" "Well, that's OK." "It's so beautiful by the sea." "So now it's less defined than with a poem." "Julia has to be seen first outside the family." "Then we need to make the effort to understand the family." "It's easier to understand her as a teenager... her age... her problems... when she's with someone of her own age before we get all the family background." "From the start it was important that the three of you..." "Richy, you and Julia..." "stare off-screen." "Like with these two..." "They should be gazing into each other's eyes and not be interested in anything else." "It's because there's a constant paranoia in the family cell." "For them there are always signs of danger." "For her the danger is also from her parents." "The difference is that, for the parents, danger is only from outside." "The gift of a CD that she wanted with a song by Belle and Sebastian called The State I Am In." "The name of this song is the English title of the film." "I bought the CD because I liked it so much and wondered where the song was." "The German expression, Die innere Sicherheit is associated with Rasterfahndung (dragnet)" "And with the BKA in Wiesbaden (Federal Investigation Bureau)." "You can't translate this." "Others don't understand that and don't get the double meaning." ""The State I Am In" doesn't reflect the personal space..." "the space in society." "In the Belle and Sebastian song, it's the double meaning of the state I am in and the state that society is in." "That's true." "Another double meaning." "Again a scene in which the father looks back." "A satellite town..." "Portugal was a colonizing country." "A lot of people made a lot of money in the colonies." "Angola was destroyed." "They invested in construction." "On the Surfer Coast, north of Lisbon, there are many satellite towns... expensive apartments with marble floors." "Lots are empty and there's something ghostly about them." "So they're really good for a family to hide in." "What I thought about for a long time was... in what places do people define their family cell?" "From my own memory, it's the car..." "Where did you get the term "family cell"?" "Because of "underground cell."" "On the set, you made strong reference to a family cell and so we intensified it." "In the 70s, the Family was heavily criticized by the Left." "Society consists of countless cells and the family is the smallest cell." "Within the family we get shaped into a citizen through education." "It's a biological model." "Here, with reference to a former political cell this one is transformed into a family cell because they're educating someone and they're not working inside a political group any more." "The main places for the family cell are the car and the dinner table." "That's how it is in the West." " The car is part of the West." " The car?" "When you ask people where they fly away in their daydreams they reply, "in the car!"" "Kids in the back, parents in the front..." "Mom can't read the map..." "Dad's getting mad..." "In the back the kids are sick, always getting sick." "They only see the backs of their heads and there's terrible tension." "And the kids stare at the outside world as the landscapes and buildings pass by and they start to imagine other worlds." "So I imagined the car as a Faraday cage for the family and the dining table as the conference room." "And it's such a lovely ritual that we as grown-ups practice happily." "But for kids it's different." "Yes, like "may I leave the table now?"" "Most of the scenes in the film play on situations that we know so well." "And my own childhood came back to me while I was writing..." "Such phrases as "May I get up now?"" "Or "Keep your elbows down." Or "Please pass the salad."" "The dining table is a place of upbringing." "The father is an unimportant employee, work is shitty..." "But at the table he boasts about giving his boss a piece of his mind." "This family goes through all that but in a foreign world, in a no-man's land." "And they're a little smarter!" "In the dining table scene..." "Consciously!" "It was still very painful when we played the scene when she gets up and leaves." "I felt that pain because it shows how destitute the parents are." "I felt it while shooting and even now while watching." "It's the only weapon a kid has, to get up and go to her room." "Helplessness is part of childhood." "They're exposed to that because they're smaller." "But that's when a kid can fight back." "The parents in the film are not totally unpleasant." "Yes, that's what people say." "That they betrayed their daughter is part of the tragedy because she can't socialize normally and it's their fault." "Other parents have kids and you ask, "What are you doing?"" "That was also a question in the 70s and 80s:" ""Should we bring children into a world like this?"" "Should we only have children when the bank balance and living space are right?" "You wouldn't want that." "I feel that, from the very start, Clara, the mother, understands her daughter so much and so deeply." "With her questions, she more or less skips the answer." "That's true." "That's her strength in conversation and her power of interrogation." "Sometimes it's the other way." "It's power but also sensitivity that helps her understand Julia." "She remembers how it was when she was young." "She becomes a more likeable character but in certain situations she also abuses this out of fear." "It was difficult to make a family of three actors into an organism." "It's not like making one of those factory films for which the actors study their parts one day before filming and the lines are laid down and nothing else happens." "During rehearsals you quickly became an organic cell." "We didn't have much time." "We had some rehearsal days." "You talked a lot to us." "Only so that you could grow together as a family." "And it worked out." "With other actors you would've done something different." "For us it was good and you kept doing it throughout." "Like with children you always told us stories." "Renoir called this an "Italian Rehearsal."" "Actors bring a lot of skills with their body memory." "If you only talk about the script, they'll just work with their skills but if you tell stories and don't instruct them on how to play then the body memory loosens up and the actors produce something new." "There's an instinctive way to play and that can be broadened but less effectively while this other thing is magic." "With these stories the acting becomes more independent." "With these stories the acting becomes more independent." "It just happens." "You don't think about how to play or what next to say." "That becomes very clear already in the dining table scene when it looks like you've already spent 15 years together." "We'd already spent weeks together." "It's always interesting to look at but you can't tell there's a gap." "The very first scene we shot isn't in the film." "There's nothing from the first day." "I've also used little from the first day on my more recent films." "I think that with most films... actors have other commitments, playing a country doctor, say." "They show up for 3 days then go on to another film and then to some RTL junk." "The director is left all alone with his script and his notes." "And it's the first day of shooting and everyone brings a certain style, a body presence, gestures..." "But they don't have anything in common." "Later when the film is done..." "I can tell with films in the cinema which scenes were shot first." "Can you see it here?" "The scenes at the monument?" "Indeed." "The family's unsettled and that's why the scene's not there." "Not because the acting was bad but because each of you were isolated and you don't feel that you've been together for 15 years." "I remember." "There was an emptiness on the first day." "Three trailers one behind the other and everyone going back to theirs from the catering wagon." "There's a loneliness when I think of it." "The only thing that kept it all together is that the cameraman and the director were ready and able to focus on scenes that were controllable." "They usually turn out technically OK because they're easy to play." "What is has to grow and become organic is, of course, the ensemble." "The ensemble brings so much from outside and has a huge uncertainty that..." "That was the last scene..." "in the whole film." "That was the last scene..." "We did the Portuguese part at the end which was the right decision." "The last scenes were shot first because the family's togetherness diminishes as the film progresses." "Yes, they're becoming estranged." "They're splitting up." "Each has become isolated, even though they're so close." "This fits in as the scenes where the family is splitting up were shot at the beginning when the actors didn't have as much empathy for each other." "We needed several takes with this Portuguese actress because Richy kept laughing at her because she had such a fast step." "She almost hit a Love Parade level in beats per minute... but later it was fine." "You can learn about filming guns from American movies." "Guns aren't filmed properly in German films." "This is a German film but guns aren't found much in Germany." "My father didn't have one and we don't." "We only know them from American movies." "When German actors hold a gun they look like German actors who have seen an American film with Tim Roth waving a gun around." "When they shoot, they bend back because of the recoil because of having seen that stuff." "The image with passports in a plastic bag is that of a German gun." "So that's still OK:" "About at the limit..." "I looked at pictures of the gun that was found in Stammheim and I set it up similarly." "Which gun?" "The one..." "The suicide gun." " Baader's?" " Yes, Baader's." "That gun was lying there like in a German still life." "A plastic bag and a passport and banknotes..." "A plastic bag reminds me of traveling." "You put stuff in a plastic bag before going on the road." "Germans always buried their guns." "After the War, the SS wrapped them in rubber and buried them in a forest." "That was the end of German guns." "So in Germany guns have to be wrapped up." "But Americans carry them on their backs or under their shoulders." "When I make a film with action sequences... when there are fights or beatings..." "I don't prepare them... because..." "Richy's somebody who knows about that and who does it well because he's experienced and you don't have to explain." "You've got a good memory." "This was the third time that I've worked with Richy Müller and I know that I can ask him to direct the action scenes because he has such an physical intensity." "And, of course, he loves directing." "And driving cars." "He's really good at that!" "I thought that you..." "Oh, I love it." "It was wonderful!" "In fact, it was much faster than it looks now." "At least so it seemed." "We drove fast along there and since it's a wide angle..." " And it wasn't barricaded." " That's right." "I think you can tell if an actor enjoys what he is doing whether it's shooting a gun or driving or smoking." "I don't mean that he has to laugh but you must be sure that he knows how to smoke or how to drive and I could tell that you enjoyed driving down narrow streets at 250 km per hour!" "More or less..." "That's typical:" "You can't tell how cold it was." "That annoys me." " It looks so beautiful." " It looks quite hot." "But it was really cold." "The Portuguese know how cold it is." "But we Germans..." "like with the American guns cliché... we associate blue skies with bathing suits." "Now Richy takes this yellow sweatshirt." "It has this horrible print on." "We'll see it again later." " The costume designer, Anette Guther..." " That was a very strange day." "Yes, we'll talk about that later." "We had a family feud that day." "It was 3 days from the end of shooting." "Yes, not long before the end and something erupted." "The scene wasn't written as aggressively as that." "We planned to shoot the argument in the car with many more set-ups and right before you were fighting so badly that the car almost exploded." "The doors flew open and everybody went off in different directions." " You had to bring us all back..." " Using the strongest moral pressure." " You had to bring us all back..." " Using the strongest moral pressure." "Despite our professionalism, we were all scattered about." "Julia was sitting at the gas station." "I was in the make-up trailer." "Richy was fumbling around with some car." "That's always his escape." "And I went to find a mirror!" "Not really..." "That's where I feel secure." "It seemed to me that this great, loud fight you had was devastating for the crew." "We had an almost family bond unaggressive and without power status..." "They were really devastated." "When you only have three actors in a film it's like a small ensemble theater piece." "It was very family-like and we felt very safe." "But it was like a bomb was ticking, a family bomb and then it exploded." "I think that's what we were just talking about." "As you'd become an organic family in this scene there's a process of detachment." "You flew apart because you knew that in 3 days you'd be separating." "It was good too." "It's always like that." "A short time from the end:" "Some conflict." "On one hand, you're glad to be free of the others and of the role." "On the other hand, it's painful not to have that anymore." "I noticed that I was close to helplessness... helplessness in front of Julia and also as Clara in front of her character, Jeanne." "I've rarely felt as helpless as when you came to the trailer and said" ""Hey, you're adults, actors and professionals."" "That was very strong in this film." "Despite the fact that I played a very clear and strict character" "I've rarely felt so helpless." "In the script as well, the situation is one of terrible helplessness." "They don't have any chance, no chance at all." "They try everything they can within a very tight framework." "But it's only so much." "That's the problem." "It was good that the family's narrow path wasn't manageable off-camera any more." " Now we have film music..." " Shouldn't this be the Rhine?" "That's a problem with German film funding." "If you get funding but want to set it in Strasbourg you have to use the Elbe for the Rhine." "The producer even wanted to bike along the other side of the Elbe with a baguette so as to symbolize France." "I remember some joke like that." "Earlier we had the first film music." "That's also something you can't do for TV:" "Drop the music score." "10 days ago, I was in a hotel with an open-air cinema next door." "They showed this stupid film, BLOW." "I only could hear it." "I couldn't see it because of the angle." "Without a word of a lie: 90 minutes of constant score." "Unbearable!" "Each note was so obvious." "I decided from the start that we would only have source music." "That is, the music that people hear." "For example, Tim Hardin on the juke box and only a tiny, tiny little theme that is linked to the ghostly and eternal wandering." "You hear it now for the first time." "23 minutes of film without music." "That's an achievement!" "You can hear the locations, the trees, the wind, the gestures." "Everything comes from the actors and the props they are using with no music added later." "For this story that's important anyway." "You shouldn't be able to drift off." "You can only breathe with it when it's this pure." "There are some films where it's great to have music and you can immerse yourself but that doesn't work here." "You must be able to hear it." "Nowadays we're swamped." "Every cab has a fucking radio station on." "In every elevator or supermarket there's music." "Everything is accompanied by music." "Mankind should take a music break." "I agree." "The music we hear here is very concentrated." "I love this..." "this crowd of women." "I must say something about the sweatshirt." "Can you believe how hard it was to make a horrible sweatshirt?" "Anette Guther, the costume designer..." "We thought about The Kelly Family." "It's disgusting to go around with The Kelly Family but that didn't work out for legal reasons." "We tried out a lot and then there was this surfing bee." "We had 11 sweatshirts because of all the action scenes." "Later the sound man bought them." "We watched the Euro Championship game against England wearing those sweat shirts!" "Great!" "At home?" "At his house, sitting around in those sweatshirts." "We looked like a group of half-witted fans." "I was a little nervous about the migrants being chased by the police." " That it would be comical?" " Yes, a bit." "It's definitely a moment of fun." "In the theater people chuckle." "It's a very narrow path." "You shouldn't ridicule." "It shouldn't be slapstick." "Even so, when they chase someone, the police always look ridiculous." " That's how it is." " And so they should." "Funnily enough, a policeman told us..." "a real policeman... that 3 days prior they had arrested 42 Albanian women at this very site." "They ran into that field." "That assured me that slapstick actually exists." "This character, the lawyer..." "I always imagined that he was a weak personality, even in the earlier days." "In a political group he would be weak, almost an opportunist." "And opportunists in the end always use old boys' wisdom." "Such as "Do you want to get her circumcised?"" "He's like the majority." "Most people are not as aware as these two any more." "What they believe in doesn't work out." "Not at all." "Just a few lines..." "I think this is great." "Clara and Hans just need three or four sharp lines to describe their situation." "Chit chat isn't necessary." "But he goes on and on." "It's really good in that scene." "Now we come to the next t-shirt." "What's the opposite of a surfing bee?" "What kind of t-shirt should it be?" "What I like in French films is that you can tolerate what they're wearing 30 years later." "They don't have those pop codes on their bodies with a half-life of one summer season." "If you see a German film one year on you'd think it's 100 years old because the jeans are shitty or the trainers unbearable." "So we had to find something that, in 10 or 15 years... will still have a certain sensuality." "The girl that shows up now, Katharina Schüttler." "There's an e-shopping site and they make t-shirts with mystic old names on them like George Best or Maradona." "Hardly anybody knows who they are." "George Best... a 15 year old?" " Who's George Best?" " A pop soccer player." "He was Irish but played in England." "He was like Günter Netzer later in Germany." "He drove this white convertible covered with lipstick kisses from his female fans." "He was the first non-working-class soccer player very delicate, with music, sideburns, long hair who played "pop" soccer." "He was a hedonist, not Prussian-disciplined." " In the 70s?" " Yes, the 70s." "There's a film you should see, SOCCER AS NEVER BEFORE." "18 cameras film him for 90 minutes." "You see him running around the pitch like a ghost." "He gets the ball 3 times and scores twice." "Avery strange film by Hellmuth Costard." "So we have 2 t-shirts facing each other." "That's what I like." "If you have 35 days of shooting like we did you have time to visit the locations, stay for a while, talk to the actors." "You make discoveries like this mirror." "You can leave the two people blurry for a while in the mirror." "Entering this other world..." "They're in another world, albeit in the same room." "She enters the world that she's longing for." "And now the mother disconnects her from it." "I like this a lot." "It's something you discover." "It's not planned." "You need time for discovery." "Production in Germany doesn't make that possible." "We had 35 days of shooting?" "That's why you guys exploded at the gas station after 32 days." "That's completely fine!" "You could've wrecked your hotel rooms like rock stars!" " But it was OK." " That would've been expensive." " But it was OK." " That would've been expensive." "What was important was how to film the family in the car." "There are these trailers:" "The car sits on the trailer and the camera and lights can be set up from any angle." "But I wanted the camera inside the cell." "And not outside." " It's always inside?" " Always." "Didn't you shoot something from outside but then cut it?" "Only once with a trailer." "It was a huge 35mm camera." "We had to go through the windows while seeming to be inside the car, so we used the trailer." "But we never shot through the front or side windows." "That's true." "I prefer it with the camera inside." "Car rides are strange anyway." "In the 50s, they couldn't film car rides and they did it in the studio." "The car was parked and they moved the background." "The actor then handles the steering wheel unnaturally because he's simulating." "We still have this aesthetic today." "The car is pulled along on a trailer the camera shoots through the front window and inside they're talking as if they're driving against a wall." "The driving isn't sensual." "I wanted real driving." "The rhythm of driving and side glances at the others." "That's completely different, for sure." "The hotel room, another hotel room." " Wasn't there one we didn't use?" " Yes, where you ate hamburgers." "I reduced it all afterwards not because the movie would've been 9 hours long but because of the pressure from inside the family." "You have to follow that and not use all the footage." "It doesn't matter." "I'd already forgotten." "But, when watching it, it hurts to miss scenes." "You get attached to all the scenes." "This poem is so nice." "Where does it come from?" "I made it up." "Such a poet!" "You kept your own but not Heine's!" "This is so nice." "I think that, if Clara had lived a normal life she'd have sent her daughter to a Jesuit college." "She would've had a super education." "She would even have had her daughter baptized to get her into an elitist school." "She teaches her so precisely..." "the pronunciation." "She does that inside her own frame of reference." "Only very few people can do that." "She knows so much and also feels this joy of teaching." "It's probably a little stressful to have a mother like her." "I'd have to kick her in the ass once in a while!" "At this point in the story the family is slowly getting torn out of its triangle." "There's one watching the others." "A slight mistrust." "Is she asleep?" "What are they talking about?" "The paranoia from outside the family is now starting to infect them from the inside like a virus." " What are they doing?" " It starts with Jeanne." "And later with her parents when they find out..." "When Jeanne meets people of her own age suddenly the world her parents created starts crumbling." "That's why the film had to start with contact with a person of her age." "From the very beginning you see the family from the outside." "I like this image a lot... because, with all the mistrust, after 15 years they're still able to relax and come together." "Otherwise they wouldn't have made it." "These shots are very short and getting shorter as the film goes on." "Here's the next fight over clothing." ""Over-conformity attracts attention too." That was one of Julia's favorite lines." "I remember that it wasn't that easy for our costume designer to find the right clothes." "When we had that costume try-out with what looked like a used clothing collection she had to work hard." "At the same time it's always very difficult to find cheap stuff." "The problem with you was that everything looks good on you." "What I'm wearing never looked cheap." "I think she dyed that coat but it was all from that collection." "I think she dyed that coat but it was all from that collection." "We tried different stuff on you." "It always looked good." "It always looks so great on me." "That day was the Hanse-Marathon in Hamburg." "Remember?" "Fortunately we were in the south in the industrial area." "We searched a lot for that intersection." "And it was a Sunday and totally quiet." "My idea was that they travel on the Autobahn in their white Volvo like pathogens in a body's blood vessels." "Die innere Sicherheit also means something like "state hygiene."" "The state must be secure and nothing from inside or out should endanger it." "Like with bodily health." "In biology classes there was always a pathogen." "Then the body's own defensive system encircles the pathogen and fights it." "That was, for me, the image." "The white car is encircled by black cars... which just want to get rid of it." "At the same time it has this ghostly touch:" "They create this situation themselves through their paranoia." "We ended up calling this "the paranoia intersection."" "Again it was important to stay with them in the car having only one shot from the outside to show the surroundings." "Everything else has to be sensed inside the car." "Everything else has to be sensed inside the car." "That claustrophobic moment again!" "We now have reference to Moby Dick." "How did you come to use it?" "Is it a favorite of yours?" "Funnily, it's one of my favorite books and it was one of Baader's as well." "In the Red Army Faction (RAF), they used pseudonyms, all from Moby Dick." "Moby Dick is about a white whale and a ship." "The ship represents a society of confidants fighting against Leviathan, the Monster of the Seas." "And in Sir Thomas More's Utopia... a utopian world novel from the Middle Ages the state is called Leviathan..." "devouring the individual." "I think that was the metaphor Baader was interested in." "Now they're talking about Moby Dick." "By that time I only knew the pedagogically-abridged version." "What's missing?" "Like with Karl May, there are cheap editions where descriptions are missing." "Kids would be bored, they think." "More action." "Only dialogue and conversation." "No descriptions of landscapes." "The publisher is talking about the wonderful start in Moby D/ck how people are drawn to the sea." "This is important since the film starts at the sea and follows along rivers and ends..." " It doesn't end at the water." " The field is shown like an ocean." "There was a different version..." "The first draft you had me read had water and a boat..." "Yes." "The first draft ended at the sea." "Right." "There should always have been a link to water." "They're shipwrecked..." "That was my intention." "There's a philosophical essay by Hans Blumenberg about the Left in which he writes, "if the Left's boat of terminology" ""got wrecked on the rocks, then they would manage to build" ""a new load-carrying boat from the drifting debris."" "The film is about what remains of the Left." "Will this family manage to make a life from the debris?" "I've been talking about this in interviews." "I don't think I ever told you guys." "I don't think so." "There are factions." "To come back to the fight at the gas station it was here on the 10th or 11th day of production..." "Between the 10th and 15th." "The family had already grown together so much that when Günther Maria Halmer arrived" "Richy and Julia didn't even sit down with him for lunch." "You were the only one." "We had a long and pleasant conversation." "There was some time before the next set-up after lunch." "There were definitely 2 factions." "Unambiguously." "Julia first showed some interest in somebody new but then turned her back on him." "Pretty brutal!" "Maybe half a day later..." "Halmer understood that very well." "He's very smart." "I found it soothing when someone new joined us." "I enjoyed it." "You touched him in a completely different way." "When you pull him away from the conflict with the jealous husband and the mistrustful daughter she, like all kids, is afraid that her parents could split up..." "A possible ex-lover or lover:" "That's dangerous." "And, of course, they sense it." "It's terrible for Clara that this publisher Klaus makes a claim of fatherhood." "There's no similarity between the two of them, he says." "I like that with books." "In this case it's my writing..." "With two sentences a whole topic can open up, without any explanation." "By saying that they don't look alike he tells us that you and he were had been sleeping together." "Yes, she was with him before Hans." "It's very intimate." "This was another reason for Gü to build up this trust, next to the mutual sympathy we felt." "As an actor, you don't get much time for such things..." "A short moment during a lunch break..." "Again in the car, shooting the implosion from inside, not from outside." "One jumps out and then the other." "And she gets out as well." "Outside they come together again a little bit." "The camera stays in the car for quite a while not only because it's the daughter's point of view but because it's where the family can still be together." "When they move in different directions outside the car, it's all over." "This is when I got angry for the first time." "And I got frustrated." "Because we ran out of material in a scene that you played very intensely." "In a scene that you played very intensely." "Yes." "It was the crying scene." "You had to concentrate on it and it worked out right on the first take." "Then we ran out of material and had to do it again." "I could have cried." "The second time it went OK but it wasn't the same." "You have to concentrate so much." "It starts hours before..." "What he's doing here is checking whether the lights in the house are controlled by a timer." "That came from a crime story by one of my favorite authors, Richard Stark." "He wrote the novels for POINT BLANK and THE OUTFIT" "He has a very rich and practical knowledge of the American criminal." "Is it practical to know how to do that?" "I read a novel of his and it's explained precisely how to equip a getaway car:" "A VW Beetle with a Ford Mustang motor." "In order to avoid attracting attention to the Beetle and because the sound of a boxer motor is different from that of a Mustang it has to be fitted it with mufflers." "That takes 12 pages." "It's breathtaking!" "It's as beautiful to read as the bank robbery itself." "I think cinema has to be involved in the details of daily life." "This house is unbelievable." "Sorry for interrupting you." "Tell me about the house." "How long were we shooting there?" " Avery long time." " At least a week." "It has its own magic or secret." "It seems that a family with 6 kids lived there once." "3 girls and 3 boys..." "And there was a girls and a boys wing." "They were very wealthy and you could see it everywhere." "But it didn't exist anymore like the family didn't exist anymore." "A different generation." "That was 20 years ago and the kids are adults now." "It had something sad and depressing... scattered." "It's like with our small family." "It was a very strange atmosphere." "When we were looking for a place where the family could hide..." " It's huge." "There's a lot of glass." " You can also see the Elbe." "This house caught my attention immediately." "It has a strange history." "It was built by a Nazi architect in the 50s." "What he learned in his studies as a Nazi architect he tried to disguise behind "pop"-stuff such as glass and concrete." "He tried to copy in Hamburg those Frank Lloyd Wright buildings from Los Angeles." "From the outside, it looks very modern." "Inside it's more or less like a Nazi youth hostel." "There was this office that was like a Führer-bunker or a Führer-podium." "The father's office and the parents' bedroom were only accessible down a long hallway." "The children's wings were far away." "It all felt like some headquarters." "It was all very Nazi-like." "It was bought by a South African art collector, who had made lots of money but with all the glass he couldn't hang all his paintings." "But with all the glass he couldn't hang all his paintings." "That's why we were able to shoot there." "It's beautiful." "That's too bad." "I'd know what to do with it:" "I'd try to revive it." "Something I've always loved in the cinema history are transitions." "Transitions are not narrative sequences." "Something has happened and someone just starts walking and you can see him walking." "There's no narration or dialogue or grand music..." "Here is some underlying score somehow..." "In this transition, all the senses suddenly open up especially here in the Elbe wetlands." "It's called "Vierlande"." "You can hear the wind and almost smell the wetlands and it's here that nature becomes part of the whole structure of the film." "This was the very first day of shooting... and you can tell that Julia... has stolen CDs before in her life." "Will they fall out?" "But they don't..." "I was quite a shoplifter in my early days." "Those elastics on anoraks are excellent." "What happens now?" "She drops the orange juice." "It happened accidentally." "I think we shot it twice without her dropping the bottle." "But this is simple." "It's great." "It just happens and it works." "You find those Socialist Party schools all around Hamburg with those little gardens." "Every school class has a little rock garden." "They create biotopes." " That's what it was like there." " And in my son's elementary school." "There's a sculpture there by an unknown artist." "I like it a lot that the film has this kind of modernity and nothing Gothic or a school that looks oppressive from the outside." "What we had in our childhood... from the turn of the last century." "How did you find out about this film?" "I saw it when I was the same age as Jeanne." "It traumatized and impressed me greatly." " At school?" " Yes, at school." "I think it's still the only film about Auschwitz." "Auschwitz is not shown but one experiences it." "The narrator's voice is so strange." " That's the German commentary." " From that time?" "You feel that's how the Nazis spoke even though he's only narrating." "The contextual commentary is by Paul Celan translated from French to German." "He wrote it in 1955." "The film went to Cannes in 1955 and the Germans left protesting that the film discredited German history." "It was a big scandal!" " They dared to do that?" " The German ambassador left." "A huge scandal!" "It wasn't seen here until the early 60s and then only in the original version." "This is an extremely important film for 1968 because it shows what the '68 movement was fighting:" "Nazi parental ideals." "For sure." "The first RAF generation did that." "The teacher makes Jeanne responsible for something she has a lot of knowledge of." "She's punished for something she carries deep inside." "It's a very cruel scene." "This teacher..." "I feel that at the end of the 70s left wing and liberal teachers were disappointed." "Today's kids are only interested in laptops, DVDs, American music..." "They weren't disappointed then." "Well, some were." "Now they're very disappointed." "They were young when they came to our schools." "But that youth vanished quickly." "He is obviously a left wing teacher." "Showing a film like that and expecting historical knowledge means that he's a disappointed left winger." "He would torture such a girl more than a right winger would." "In American movies set in big cities or in westerns" "I always liked chance meetings." "The USA is 100 times the size of Germany but still people meet as though it were a country of faith." "If you want to meet up again, it happens." "Also in French films:" "Paris is an endless desert..." "Catherine Deneuve wants to go to Paris and she's asked why." ""I want to see my lover."" ""How?" "You don't know his name or where he is."" "And she says, "Lovers always meet on the boulevards."" "That was on my mind while writing." "She loves him so much that she has to see him again." "She's walking by with plastic bags and he's called and he appears." "That's her dilemma." "She wants to see him but mustn't." "She gets closer and follows him." "She can't take that final step into his world." "It happens later in the fast food place where he's working." "By chance." "She doesn't know he's there." "Sure." "This time she'd only seen him in the backyard." "She goes inside and he follows her." "He pulls her into his world and she can't go back." "He rescues... no..." "He wants to rescue her." "There's great music, they smoke dope, it's so wonderful there..." "But she has to go back." "This is such a German ghost story." "In German myths, you find these un-dead." "They wander through the forests, like Rübezahl." "They aren't allowed to knock at the forester's door or to share the warmth of the fireplace, even if they long for it." "This is in a lot of German literature:" "The un-dead, the not-really-born." "Is it something about guilt?" "Is there guilt loaded on them?" " Usually it's something like that." " That's right." "Here the parents are guilty and as a punishment..." "But the daughter must live with it." "The film is also about love." "In all those un-dead stories, the only chance..." "There's always a kiss or something that releases..." "If somebody really loves you, you can become body and soul again." "Right." "Now she can hear you making love." " I think it was the last day." " The second time." " We did it with original sound." " We always postponed it." "I don't think you can film sex." "I think you can, but not often." "I don't know of a single sex scene that is any good." "I'd never shoot a sex scene." "DON'T LOOK NOW is cited a lot." "If you see it now, it's nonsense." "Back then I really liked it." "I haven't seen it in ages." "Nor me." "Today there's too much of this true love shit, naked bodies and boobs." "You has to find something restrained." "It's good that she doesn't watch you through a crack in the door" "Nor can she see you." "But she can hear you." "Hearing excludes her even more." "Sure." "It's a beautiful spot here..." "beautiful light." "It has something cozy but they're not really at home." "This house is so big but it's not really structured." "Oh, it has a structure, a very clear one." "The different wings..." "You can't really see it in the film." "Filming a building is difficult, like painting mountains probably." "In a film you should be able to live, to orient yourself, to stay." "That's why we have only 3 reference points:" "The kitchen table, this sofa and the room upstairs where Jeanne withdraws to and which was Heinrich's room in the dream." "There are no other points." "And that's enough." "Otherwise it's confusing." "It's a nice place where the parents are alone with her in turn." "This was again the second day, the HM day." "At HM you can enjoy yourself standing in line staring at people's necks and seeing how they're dressed and how their hair's done." "She looks at what others are wearing." "And necks are so vulnerable." "This is the scene we were talking about." "She wants to take off her stolen clothes and gets spotted by him." "At this moment, we realize that he's a big liar... that he works in a pizzeria." "It's not surprising at this point." "You know it already because of the home that she followed him to." "Anyway he's so nice." "I almost fell in love with him." " Really?" " Yes." "He's not my generation..." "There's something backward about me." "The nice thing about the role and what Bilge makes out of it is that he was never interested in the historical side not in the RAF which was part of his role." "He was always of the moment:" "On the set... or as Heinrich himself..." "whatever was there... the kiss or "what's in your bag?"" "That's what interested him." "As an actor he was interested in the camera." "He never asked what was going to happen to the film or where I got the idea." "He didn't care." "And this, of course, is what Jeanne is searching for." "Her parents live in the past and talk of an impossible future." "She wants to be "now."" "So he's exactly the right person." "This location is like we found it just before shooting but again we searched for 3 days." "I try to find backyards, those fallow spots behind buildings." "Nicolas Born called it "The Dark Side of History."" "What you can't see..." "What I look for are different types of brickwork." "Usually there's no style or shape:" "Bricks here or concrete there." "Then there's a reinforced concrete wall." "It's all just put together anyhow and not really nice to look at." "Finding that in Hamburg..." "But the railway station in Lisbon was so beautiful color-wise." "You also did a great job with the tiles." "In the washrooms?" "The problem is that the tiles are mostly white." " Actors look like potatoes." " The washroom earlier was blue." "This one is red:" "Very nice." "Since we only found one like this we shot in both the women's and in the men's!" "The same tiles but different colors!" "Under the diving board at the pool..." "I wonder how they lived there." "That's the cabana of the villa." "That's the sauna by the cabana." "Now there's something." "One of my favorite scenes." "I noticed some plotting going on." "I'm only in the background and all blurry and I always thought that Hans wasn't happy about this." "It was something else." "I forbade Hans Fromm, the cameraman to talk to the actors about being out of focus." "If they're told that they're out of focus they thinks that they're not in the frame." "But I think that someone out of focus has a stronger presence because you're not used to that." "But I don't want the actor to know that in advance." "When Hans said, "It's out of focus,"" "I whispered to him that he should keep quiet." "It was so obvious that I felt a little strange." "I thought, "what a weird conversation,"" "but I like it a lot and now I always pay attention." "I remember what I told Richy here." "He said, "Why do I have look at all this for 3 minutes?"" "So I asked him, "What kind of trainers do you wear?"" "He said, "Adidas-ROM, white with 3 blue stripes..."" "I wouldn't even know that." "There wasn't a big variety then, maybe 5 or 6 types." "The ones with the stripes are available again." "They bring back the old models." "So I said, "Look at what trainers look like today."" "So he spent some time with those trainers which was great." "And it says something about Hans." "Some of Julia's outside world gets brought into their interior world." "And he's in control: "What's this?" "I don't know this!"" "And I thought that was totally right." "This was the first time that I had filmed a family triangle." "Until now it had always been couples and friends." "As soon as one leaves, the others must be seen once more to show that it's not the same." " She's leaving and they both stay." " It's not complete anymore." "Not like all the other dummies do by going back to a close-up or by emphasizing or by commenting..." "Did you say, "all the other dummies?"" "It annoys me to see that:" "Always the same grammar." "It annoys me to see that:" "Always the same grammar." "We're waiting again." "This is the only moment when the film leaves the family." "That's right!" "I thought long about this." "There is always otherwise at least one family member." "I thought that... as we have Clara waiting in that opening and looking out the one she's expecting can have a scene to himself." "Because he meets the hitch-hiker who reminds him of Jeanne it's a similar situation." "I think it works." "The scene stays in the mind for a while." "The audience doesn't know that, since the family isn't there." "The girl, for example, is actually quite important." "Originally we planned this..." " Are these guys are real?" " Totally real." " What are they called?" " The SEK Special Operations Unit." "What has changed in Germany is that you can now film with the police." "10 or 15 years ago it was better to have actors in uniforms." " But the new generation..." " Didn't it work out?" "Back then the police had these "chives people."" "What do you mean?" "They didn't know how to move." "They were ultra-artificial and tense." "Now they love it, I guess..." "They're all Til Schweiger types." "They have super bodies and for them life is a game." "Right away he said, "Hands up!" "On your knees, I said!"" "He said it quite fiercely." "I was very excited." "Here he talks about how you should respond during an interrogation." " She does that later..." " This is a great angle." "I like it as well." "Not showing all the face as you said earlier:" "The kids in the back and only parts of the parents." " Sorry for interrupting." " No, that's all right." "I watched a lot of films to see how people in cars are filmed." "The faces of actors are treated like value objects." "They're so expensive and you have to see all their face." "Like in bad films..." "We had a Cessna at DM 16,000 a day." "We filmed in it for 3 minutes." "A scene with 300 extras will be on screen for 20 minutes just because of the expense." "In paintings you find so many turned-away countenances which are very revealing." "It's thrilling because it's secretive." "You don't see her here, only her gesture." "Whatever's going on is told through Clara." "That's much better." "Here we took away the ending and it's just great..." "What was that?" "There was a hug that I cut out." "The whole scene climaxes with the hug." "She doesn't sit down close and there's quite a space between you." "But she's much more confiding." "Jeanne is more open with her mother at this time." "And her mother opens and starts talking about herself." "You can associate Clara instantly with books but lipstick... not really." "I think I first used lipstick in my mid-20s." " You?" " I was much older than 20." "If you don't show the moment..." "If you enter a scene late or leave it early... it's the same as not showing a countenance." "It's the same as not showing a countenance." "Something is still there, something continues to work like in those "curved scenes" narrated until the very end." "As a hiding place we chose a house that's a glass bowl which is totally wrong!" "It's absurd!" "To be visible from all sides while hiding there!" "The light plays a big role." "Not everything is lit up but they're sitting there on a platform, on a stage." "Funnily, nobody ever asked about that." "That's strange." "Why didn't they bury themselves somewhere or live in old NATO bunker where they can't be seen?" "We were discussing that the lights should actually go on and off exactly the same way." "It's strange that there's light in the kitchen." "The characters should move with the light but you blocked it." "That would have attracted attention away from the family." "That's why he turns the timer in the basement to manual." "That they are living in a glass house re-affirms their ghostliness." "It's as if nobody was interested in them." "That's the worst fate." "My thought was that right wingers live in a cave waiting to be re-awakened and that left wingers drive on highways get into speed traps and live behind glass but they don't have a body." "They're not really visible, they're transparent." "The same transparency as in this house." "Like in a car, you're always sitting in a window." "You're never closed off." "This glass cell is a much more modern and extreme cell than the classic cave." "The love scene..." "It was a very long night of shooting, I recall." "And Richy insisted on being there, watching from the shadows." " No kidding?" "He was there?" " Yes, at the back." "During this scene he had tears in his eyes." "Because the two of them are what's important about..." "When I think of teenage love... all the moments before actually making love... how heavy you feel... how the arms hang down... no clue where to lie down or what to touch... almost hitting each other in the teeth..." "All that to me is love." "I didn't want to emphasize that she was losing her virginity." "You shouldn't see anything." "They hide their bodies." "I got criticized later that this scene looks like the 50s." " I don't see it that way." " Why the 50s?" "Well, no breasts and prudishness." "But it's like that and it's not prudish." "That's exactly their emotional state:" "Not to show anything, just to feel..." "Wanting just to be there, there together." "That's what Jeanne's looking for." "She doesn't want to be a ghost anymore." "That's what's shown here." "They get undressed under the cover." "I saw the film THE ICE STORM again in which Christina Ricci has a love scene like that and I was surprised at how much I unconsciously copied from that film." " It's almost identical." " I saw it but I don't remember." "All of sudden outside it's daylight." "It's over and he gets some water." "I think that's exactly right:" "To stretch the dialogue-free and the sensual moments which is what commercial TV does so intensely." "You must watch a lot of TV." "The way you speak..." "Three films a year is enough." "It's because I have kids." "When they go to bed, I'm tired out and I watch TV for half an hour." "I end up with a commercial TV movie or whatever it's called and then I know it's time to turn it off." "It's great how she uses an interrogation technique that her father taught her:" "How to deal with interrogation." "He got it from politics and she uses it for love." "I told the critic Peter Koerte..." "He also uses an interrogation technique with that light." "It's also like an interrogation." "Both know that it's interrogation but he gives up very quickly." "Compared to her, he doesn't know about it." "Once we had a project at the Film Academy for which we used Greek Junta interrogation records and adapted them in love scenes." "It worked." "Torture protocols..." "How was that?" "Did they play the love scenes or just talk?" "We used the interrogation techniques for the dialogue and just changed the situation." "Instead of, "Confess that you met Colonel Juanes yesterday!"" "We had, "Admit that you met her yesterday!"" "It worked." "The interrogation you get from jealous lovers can be found up to a certain point with the Greek Junta!" "That's where the idea to use interrogation here came from." "Afterwards Julia said, "While he took my virginity physically" ""I took his innocence using those interrogation techniques."" "He's so pure and straightforward and is completely confused when confronted with such things." "She does that because she wants to leave a mark so that he carries on thinking of her." "She doesn't want just to go like the other girls who were in this bed before her." "He has to think of her after she's gone." "That was a pretty good interpretation." "Smart!" " Maybe I made her say it." " No, it's great!" "You were talking to us one at a time." "Of course, we were all after you." "We all tried to catch you with our own issues." "That's automatic if there are only 3 actors." "I think I ran after you guys." "Sure." "But we immediately recognized who you were paying attention to." "I didn't really know..." "You were always giving us your full attention." "You dealt only with the essentials in technical matters and with others." "So we had you to ourselves." "One of my favorite scenes is coming up." "You never see approaching those that are symbols of power and control." "Such as mothers or the housekeeper in Hitchcock's REBECCA." "All of a sudden, they're there." "I never noticed my mother coming into my room." "I never heard her knock or coming down the stairs." "Suddenly she was there asking, "What are you doing?"" "Like here:" "No approach or path taken." "Instead a sharp outline and dark clothing." "I think it's great!" "We worked this out that very day." "It was described differently in the script." "The light, the darkness, the forest:" "This is a very mystical spot." "Something got cut out here." "I was waiting there before..." "What you're describing is an idea you had later." "We did shoot the mother waiting in front of the home." "It was more important that she show up out of nowhere." "That slap in the face doesn't have any sound effect." "You hit really hard." "I hit hard?" "Very hard with double hit on the ear and the cheek!" "Julia handled it very well." "I hate beating and being beaten." "But it's very good." "If it was graded it would be a straight A plus." "You don't step forward." "It comes from way back like a fencing foil." "Another interrogation." "I was so surprised because we didn't change the lighting." "There are these deeper shadows on Julia's face." "From inside of herself, she's suddenly 3 years older." "She again imagined the slap in the face from her body memory and so it gave her that maturity." "It was the slap that she'd been waiting for so as to be able to break away." "I think that's how she felt about it." "Great lines: "Can I have some water?" "This isn't an interrogation."" "With two lines everything is made clear." "In Portugal, they were sitting like that, just the other way around." "The parents are totally into themselves, not looking at each other." "This is the point at which the family falls apart." "As opposed to Portugal, where they were at least looking at each other." "I only realized that just now." "As an actor, you doesn't always have the whole film in mind." " You, as the director..." " It's great that you..." "It works because the character becomes independent inside the actor." "This is a scene I like a lot because of Richy." "This was right at the start." "I knew then that all would be fine with you guys." "It was a very difficult day." "The technical conditions were awful." "Steady rain and extreme technical problems..." "It was April or May." "It was also very cold." "Shooting was difficult." "We were using that handheld camera in order to make it more organic." "This is an extremely important and demanding scene." "Despite the conditions with 3 different set-ups and numerous takes you managed to keep up the atmosphere." "I was highly impressed!" "Also in a car scene without me there." "I was outside with headphones." " Right, you weren't with us." " Not enough space." "Richy touched me so much here." "He's so much inside the part." "It affected me so much to see him like that." "If a space is filled so intensely with the three of you in a car..." "it's like a pressure cabin." "You're dealing with giving up your daughter, total separation." "Clara gets out and joins her daughter in the back." "It's all from one position and the car turns around." " We don't see their faces again." " Did she get out in the script?" "We devised it then." "That's what I remember as well." "We always had time for that." "You don't know in advance and that makes it so good." "That's why I'm not fond of rehearsals if they're not at the final location because the location influences and impresses unbelievably." "Yes, a big influence." "Here's the family together once more, we think." "The daughter is..." "Once more Clara connects the family members." "The father has a job to do, like a breadwinner." "He draws out the bank floor plan." "The man-woman principle is there even in a revolutionary cell." "She's the one keeping it together." "She is the head." "In a 60s movie, it would've been Steve McQueen as Doc so-and-so." "THE GETAWAY." "He's the mastermind." "She goes over to the daughter." "It's like a time check." "Let's go through the whole Plan A once again." "For example, at 16:07 you're standing at the exit road B4." "Once more she's binding the family together as an emotional cell." "It's very, very good in this scene that you're not totally authentic." "I don't mean you as Barbara Auer but when Clara talks about..." "Her vision of picking a new name and going to a normal school." "She's not lying but..." "She wants to believe it but she's also fooling herself and her daughter a bit." "It's like an order to be happy." "She knows from her own experience that for Jeanne... that a broken heart won't heal just like that." "And the only remedy is authority." "She says, "You'll have a new name!"" "And not, "My poor girl, you'll forget him."" "But "you'll have a new name, go to a new school and fall in love again."" "These aren't a mother's real feelings." "I thought it was very strong." "This is so sweet:" "Hoping the other one can't see you." "Every child knows this." " Hide and seek." " It even happens to grown-ups." "Was it difficult for them?" "Yes, because I didn't want to shoot in a blocked-off area." "There were lots of distractions with people yelling." " And a pedestrian zone nearby." " That's right." "What we have is that Julia has to force this out... this artificial criticism." "We don't yet know about the bank robbery and she has to make him disappear." "So she uses what her mother taught her:" "Elitist thinking." "Putting him down." "You're uneducated..." "a nothing..." "She hits the most vulnerable point, like Clara who always knows exactly where to aim." "He reacts physically and we have the second slap in the film." "This is my favorite gesture from his best friend." ""What did you do to my buddy?"" "For a friend it's good when he falls in love and it doesn't work out." "For a few weeks, he's got his friend back." "Girls cause a lot of disturbance." "Here a lot of people didn't recognize you, which is great." "When you come from behind we don't know who it is until you get into the car." " Bizarre." " I like this a lot." "Very few lines." "We see that his gun is still hot, burning through the plastic bag." "Is it like that?" "In my imagination it is." "I think at the time we were wondering about that." "It's impressive." "We learn that Clara is everything:" "Not only a teacher but also a doctor." "She's everything that, in normal life, we have institutions for." "It's part of her past." "It's not the first time she's done that." "Maybe their backs are full of bullet scars." "The moment that she treats him..." "Richy's scream is horrible." "The way that Julia covers her mouth in horror is not acted at all." "Even at this tense time, Clara raises the terrible question." ""What you researched was wrong." ""We were trapped because you didn't do your work properly."" "We thought a lot about the answer to the question, "How much is it?"" "Should Julia say, "DM 22,400" or "I don't know"?" ""I don't know" was the right decision." "She's so devastated that she can't even count to 3." "As in the history of cinema there are already 50 million bank robberies... telling the story only through surveillance cameras..." "When she first checks out the bank, it was like..." "That first shot from the surveillance camera comes unexpectedly." "I always try to create a sequence that looks strange at first but which is made clearer in the course of the film with a corresponding scene." "So the film stays in the memory and doesn't fade during its running time." "This looks very unfamiliar." "It already was while shooting although it was fun to do as usual." "It's strange to see them together like this." "It's strange to see them together like this." "It's good to have her point of view." "It's not objective." "The parents are wounded, finished." "It's her last attempt to leave them, like a goodbye." "The parents are together in decline and she's leaving." "Again she tries to lie, then she tells the truth." "And to him the truth is incomprehensible." "He has no clue." "I love it when he says, "What kind of hiding?"" "As they're from a different generation... we had to talk to Julia and Bilge about things that were self-evident to us in our youth but to them it was stuff from long ago." "This film was a bit like a journey into the past." "During production but for you also while writing..." "What happened in the past should still be noticeable in the present." "It should just be over." "Usually flashbacks in movies are nonsense, I think." "People were talking about it, like..." "Nobody ever says that they were members of the RAF." "What they did, one doesn't see it but everybody knows." "It's not necessary." "And the actor has to be beautiful." "What we see here shouldn't be symbolic." "It's not symbolic of what happened 25 or 27 years ago." "But what is left over is the debris from the past such as gestures, glances, sentences and diction." "That's how they make their way in the world." "That was important." "I think now she just says it." "I like his betrayal because he doesn't betray her so that he can open up a kebab booth with the reward but out of love." ""Leave your parents." "Do they control you?"" "There was a stronger version." "Didn't you have another ending?" "Didn't he even go to the police?" "It was too strong." "I didn't want to have the police show up." "And have them take over." "How can you film the BKA in Germany?" "Men in leather coats, chain-smoking..." "And the interrogation would've happened there whereas now it's kept inside the family." "Differently..." "the parents to her..." "The outside world should leave an imprint on the interior world rather than have computer monitors or cigarette-smoking policemen..." "I wouldn't even know how to do it or how it works... because it bores me so much." "When he goes to carry out his betrayal..." "I always try to show the moment of a major moral act... and a betrayal is a major moral act... in a very simple way." "Without a dialogue or..." "If there were a public phone..." "There are different kinds of betrayal." "They're not all major moral acts." "This one is!" "This one is done with the best intentions, not like some others." "But it is a moral act." "You betray yourself or someone else and there's some hesitation." "In history there are those who betray but they might not have big secrets." "If he had to put coins into a phone or use a card or pick up the receiver and say" ""Can I talk to the police?" "It's very important."" "Then this betrayal would be ridiculous to watch." "You'd have to show the whole conversation." "But with just the emergency device..." "That was added later." "Have you ever used one?" " Never." " You can find them all over." "You added it afterwards" " And that's because..." " Whoever experienced that?" "Almost nobody." "I never did." "Did you?" " I've never done it." " But they're all over." "I always wanted to throw that switch." "This is where I first saw one." "I don't even know how to do it." "Well, it's written there." "Well, we've reached the end." "That was a day full of conflicts." "This is where the fight that blew up later starts!" "A conflict that's been bottled up for 2 or 3 weeks will burst out." "Of course it will, like a lie." "It has to come out." "Funnily enough, in the rehearsal Julia refused to be touched by you..." "Not due to physical discomfort but because at the time of shooting..." "I think it was physical discomfort." "She wanted to save it for the take but it was a physical feeling." "What she does here is first to resist her mother's hug because she'd made a sacrifice." "I felt that was right." "This is what I was talking about at the paranoia intersection." "This hasn't been done much." "I'm often asked..." " The flash grenade?" " Yes... if it's done like that." "I invented this sitting at my computer writing the script." "Then I met with the SEK and they said, "Yes, that's how we do it."" "Strange." "So it's like that." "I think they also sit at their computers working out their strategies like film scripts." "We had a big issue here with Florian and Michael, the producers." "Should we have flashing lights, medics arriving a helicopter landing, a typical movie ending?" "But then the idyll is broken." "And this is a broken idyll." "It has to stay like this with the field..." "She's so lonely and we don't know what's happened to the parents." "In a way it's her re-birth." "A new beginning." "Everything around her has to be empty and neutral with only the strange distant sound of a plane or a tractor."