By James Bowman on 4.9.07 @ 12:02AM
What happens to a people who've lost the will to reproduce?
"Posters were being put up in cities and towns across Germany
yesterday," reported the Times of London the other week,
"urging women to make use of the Baby-Klappe, with the slogan
'Before babies land in the rubbish bin...'" The Baby-Klappe is a
hatch installed in German hospitals to allow women to deposit
unwanted babies anonymously. It is hoped that it will halt a spate
of at least 23 child murders so far this year. Typical is Susanne
H. from Baiersdorf in Bavaria who strangled her newborn baby
daughter and put the body in her freezer because, she said, her
boyfriend "threatened to throw me out if I concealed another
pregnancy from him." German fertility rates, like those across
Europe, suggest that there is also a larger, cultural sense in
which children are not wanted there.
Fortuitously, along comes Andreas Dresen's Summer in
Berlin (Sommer vorm Balkon) to give us some insight
into the state of the sexual culture where people seem to have lost
the will to reproduce. Not, I hasten to add, that that is the
film's purpose. It's really a female buddy picture before it is
anything else, in which the friendship between Nike (Nadja Uhl) and
Katrin (Inka Friedrich) is threatened when they compete for the
attentions of Ronald (Andreas Schmidt). But the overwhelming sense
of this movie is of hopelessness and limited options. Katrin is
nearing 40, the divorced mother of 12-year-old Max (Vincent
Redetzki), and she can't find a job. The film opens with a sadly
comic look at the fierce competition and criticism she faces at the
interview for even such lowly employment as a department store
window-dresser. Her real passion is painting, but she can't sell
any of that work either.
Nike has a poorly paid job as a home-help for old people who are
too feeble or demented to feed or clothe themselves properly. Or at
all. She tends to befriend her clients and give them extra
attention, but she is coming under pressure from her bosses in the
welfare bureaucracy for spending longer with them than the state
prescribes. The shortage of decent men must be even more dire than
that of decent jobs, since these two highly attractive women are
reduced to jealousy, anger and spitefulness over the worthless
Ronald -- an utterly unprepossessing truck-driver with wives and
children scattered all over Germany. You could easily suppose that
one of them might be Susanne H. from Baiersdorf.
Mr. Dresen, working from a script by Wolfgang Kohlhaase,
approaches this grim subject matter with an unfailingly light
touch. In this he is aided by a complementary subplot in which poor
Max becomes the rival of his more worldly-wise friend, Rico
(Maximilian Moritz), for the favors of the little flirt, Charly
(Lil Oggesen). At age 12, it seems, the sexual economy is reversed.
It is females rather than males who are in greater demand. Also
cutting across the general tendency towards loneliness and
emotional aridity is the bittersweet presence of the old folks --
and their memories. Tiny, enfeebled Helene (Christel Peters) sings
a love song from her youth, accompanying herself on an accordion as
big as she is; ga-ga Oskar (Kurt Radeke) tries to give Nike some of
his dead wife's clothes -- and, when she tries them on to show him
how much too big they are for her, a tear comes to his eye.
A more ironic reminder of the days when love was not just a word
-- or an impossible dream -- is the dreadful racket of unfailingly
bright, cheery and empty-headed Europop which dominates the
sound-track. It perfectly sums up the cheapness and nastiness to
which the lives chronicled here have descended. Yet the film
remains curiously detached from the melancholy reality in which it
traffics, as if it was somehow God or fate which had determined
that this was how the world must be and not a series of choices
made by the generation which succeeded that of Helene and Oskar --
and which invented Europop, among other unfortunate things.
Visible from Nike's balcony, from which the film takes its
German title, is a corner drugstore. Nike and Katrin drink wine on
the balcony and giggle and make prank phone-calls to the kindly and
obviously decent pharmacist (Veit Schubert), who takes a shy
interest in Katrin and Max. Never does it occur to either
desperate, lonely woman to see a romantic possibility in
him. Like the film itself, that is, they seem to acquiesce
in the meanness and sterility of their sexual, moral and emotional
environment. Nike says she can't even imagine being with someone
forever. She (or Katrin) has read that "the brain produces a sexual
transmitter [and] after a while it's gone." Well, in the view of
the film too, "That's life." In the end, friendship may survive but
love and romance remain remote and perhaps rather frightening
curiosities -- outmoded and too big to fit its heroines, like
Oskar's wife's clothes. It is all very sad to watch.
topics:
Environment