Berlin Replayed: Cinema and Urban Nostalgia in the Postwall Era
English
By (author): Brigitta B. Wagner
Scarred by the Second World War, divided during the Cold War, and turned into a massive construction site in the early postwall years, Berlin has dramatically reinvented itself in the new millennium. Film has served a neglected but important function in this transformation.
In Berlin Replayed, Brigitta B. Wagner shows how old and new films set in Berlin created a collective urban nostalgia for the citys best, most inclusive, and most conciliatory pasts in the face of its renewed purpose as the all-German capital. Exploring films such as Walter Ruttmanns Berlin: Symphony of a Great City, Wim Wenderss Wings of Desire, Tom Tykwers Run Lola Run, and Wolfgang Beckers Good Bye, Lenin!, the book establishes that these films dont merely feature the city but actively construct how viewers come to know different Berlins of the past and present. To illustrate how film has repeatedly remade the image of the city, Berlin Replayed focuses on four key periods: the golden 1920s, when the city was a major filmmaking center; the prewall 1950s, when Berlin had two ideologically opposed film industries; the politically transformative late 1980s and early 1990s; and the hyped start of the twenty-first century.
By showing how films have helped revive memories of the good Berlin and, by extension, the good Germany, Berlin Replayed reveals the underappreciated but powerful role film has played in the process of unifying Germanys historical experience and bridging its physical and political divisions.
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