Saturday, January 22, 2011

German Movie Screening: Die Fremde

Die deutsche Sphäre will be screening the German film Die Fremde (When We Leave) [2009], a drama directed by Feo Aladag, next week. This film was also selected to be shown at the 14th German Film Festival Singapore 2010. (Sypnosis is found below the poster.)

Date: 27 January 2011, Thursday
Time: 7:30 - 9:30 PM
Venue: NUS Central Library Theatrette 1

The movie will be screened with English subtitles so you won't have to worry about not understanding what is being said! This event is open to members of the NUS Students' German Language Society only, but members are welcome to bring their friends along as well. See you there!






"Stop dreaming!" says the mother to her twenty-five-year-old daughter Umay when she and her young son Cem appear at the door of her parents' Berlin apartment. Umay has run away from an unhappy marriage in Istanbul and has returned to Berlin because she wants to lead her own life again. She knows that she's expecting a lot from her parents and siblings but she hopes that their loving relationship will mean more to them than the pressure of social conventions.

But before long she realises that her family cannot simply ignore their deep-seated traditions and the situation could well break them. When the family decides to restore the family's reputation by returning Cem to his father, Umay once again begs for their help - but ends up breaking with them for good. Umay falls in love with Stipe and she and Cem begin a new life. Umay tries to mend the relationship with her family, but doesn't realise that it's too late for reconciliation.

Feo Aladag: "Many German citizens of Turkish descent are - understandably - at odds with their identity. In Germany they feel Turkish and unwanted, and in Turkey they feel like Germans. Even in this section of society adultery is an exception - the worst catastrophe. In my opinion, one of the reasons for the current return to traditional values, particularly within a younger generation, is social exclusion by the majority society. Die Fremde is not meant to be a representative portrait of a social group, nor is it a manual for life. Rather, the film seeks to bring to light one possibility, which, in this story, contains the real sense of hope."
(Sypnosis taken from here.)

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