231:. Henceforth he is restricted to working as a gravedigger in a cemetery and lecturing his students secretly. After three years he is tired of this double life and risks starting a new one. He does not do this secretly, instead he makes a theatrical departure from the Czechoslovakian police-state. He invites his students to the funeral of a dead man whom he does not know himself and who gets a huge grave-stone with the inscription 'Hrdlicka'. He holds a final secret seminar in his flat which, naturally, is observed. He gives away his philosophy books. He says goodbye to his mother, who still thinks he has not grown up, and to his wife and son who he has already left long ago, And he wishes his ex-colleague and arch-enemy well, knowing that he will not forget him.
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kinds of different and extravagant people, who all seem just as stranded as he himself: an
Austrian violin fanatic, a German-Jewish lady and the melancholic and wise Russian Ljubja, who owns a brothel and employs girls from all over the world. With all of these companions in misfortune he celebrates the festivities of home, picnics full of longing and enchantment. And again and again Navrátil plays flying-to-Prague with the airport barber. He has himself lathered and shaven to the rhythm of the flight calls.
356:, had been expelled from his home country. He told Knilli about how he once travelled to a shooting from Vienna to Helsinki and was the only passenger who had to stay seated in the plane during its stopover in Prague. There he met a Czech cleaning lady to whom he told his story before the flight continued and he saw „his“ city a last time from far above.
363:, whose co-authorship had long been concealed for political reasons by the alias Vera Has. A typical trademark of Weiß‘ is the abstinence of any ideology and the universally human point of view. Throughout his career, Weiß had been closely studying the developments in Czechoslovakian cinema, particularly the work of Jan Nemec and his film
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is like a stream of consciousness, which has to suck the audience into its confidence. The vivid story is forced open. Externally unusual perspectives, views, tours d'horizon, rise up, reality is suspended in favour of the supernatural. There is no interest in simply focusing-in for minutes on end on
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Navrátil leaves Prague without any difficulty and starts a new life at an airport somewhere in the West. This new life also consists of a double identity. During the day, he is a baggage-man at the airport and on the evenings and days-off he flies back home in this fantasy. There, he encounters all
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Thus begins a game of signs and images. Knilli explained her approach in an interview at the time of the film’s release: ‘Follow Me‘ is reduced to internals. I have looked for variations at a visual level for the interior condition. (...) I am inclined to consider things from a certain distance. I
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At dawn he is picked up by the state police and deported to the West by plane. The authorities' final message before his departure is: "Listen carefully. You were not in Prague. No one saw you. You will forget and we will forget that you exist". The jet leaves Prague. Navrátil returns to the West,
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Follow Me was shot in 1988 and completed in 1989. The lead actor Pavel
Landovský had been a member of the Wiener Burgtheater and starred in many cinema and television films following his emigration to Austria. Knilli had met him in 1983 when she was working as an assistant director for the Czech
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But after five years abroad he flies back to Prague once again to say farewell finally to his home country. With a load of airport falcons and an ingeniously implemented birdmask he manages to jump behind the Iron
Curtain. He visits the same places again. The house he lived in, Hrdlicka's grave,
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which he does not find. Instead he meets a young
Russian Red Army Soldier with whom he spends the whole night drinking Vodka and discussing – since neither of them speaks the language of the opposite, they communicate with hands and feet.
196:. It was her second feature film, following her feature film debut with Lieber Karl released in 1984. Follow Me was entered as the official German contribution into the competition of the
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distinguishes itself through its vast abstinence of linear narration. Instead, the various states of consciousness are visualised through a diversity of formal stylistic devices.
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observe for a long time, and I only work on something which I have observed when I am not embroiled in feelings. I hate mawkishness."
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the finished image, but additional demands are made of the fantasy. What she has to say is at least as poetical as it is political.“
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Maria Knilli had been concerned with emigrants since 1983. The impetus to this project had been her encounter with the Czech actor
399:: „The script is one of the best I had read in years. It’s full of poetry, a poetry of images, a poetry of human relationships.“
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Pavel Navrátil, who had been teaching philosophy at Prague university, loses his professorship after the
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While shooting this film in
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Marina Vlady, in: 24 Images/Seconde, Fayard, Paris 2005, p. 300
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Maria Knilli, in: Hans-Dieter Seidel, FAZ, 28 December 1989
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who starred together with
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The script was written by Maria Knilli together with the
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who, having been one of the initiators of the petition
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437:"16th Moscow International Film Festival (1989)"
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365:A Report on the Party and Guests
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361:Ulrich Weiß
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315:as Emigrant
309:as Emigrant
303:as Emigrant
217:Ulrich Weiß
215:-filmmaker
202:Berlin Wall
161:104 minutes
67:Produced by
59:Ulrich Weiß
45:Directed by
527:1989 films
521:Categories
423:References
376:filmmaker
354:Charter 77
339:Production
289:Hans Jakob
285:as Soldier
190:drama film
144:1989-11-02
55:Written by
507:Follow Me
412:Follow Me
408:Follow Me
397:Follow Me
279:as Judith
185:Follow Me
100:Edited by
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16:1989 film
297:as Kafka
283:Mark Zak
273:as Milos
261:as Ljuba
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451:2 March
371:Filming
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