Product Details
Heimat [DVD] [1984]

Heimat [DVD] [1984]
Heimat

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #51267 in DVD
  • Released on: 2004-10-25
  • Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Box set, PAL
  • Original language: German
  • Subtitled in: English
  • Number of discs: 6
  • Running time: 924 minutes

Editorial Reviews

DVD Description
Originally broadcast on UK TV in 1984, director Edgar Reitz's epic 'Heimat - A Chronicle of Germany' remains a landmark in film-making history today.

Presented in deluxe collectors edition (with a specially designed replica hardback book binding that holds 6 discs) this winner of the International Critics' prize in Venice in 1984, runs almost 16 hours, was shot over 2 years, features 28 leading performers, has 140 speaking roles and includes 5,000 non-professional actors.

Synopsis
A living timeline branching across 64 years of German history commencing with the first world war, this compelling chronicle immerses viewers in the lives and lineage of small-town family the Simons like a steadily unfolding novel. Avoiding the tendency towards a simplified, good vs. evil account of history, Heimat, roughly translated as "homeland," captures the coexistence of ordinary Germans in times of profound atrocities and radical socio-political transformation. The film's confrontational view of Germany's past has prompted introspection from audiences around the world, and the acknowledgement of past crimes against humanity as a shared scar that touches all of human history. Two years in the making, this epic series features 140 speaking roles and 5000 non-professional actors.


Customer Reviews

Fantastic!5
'Heimat' must be one of the best series ever made. The story is so believable and realistic, you really can imagine how life may have been in the fictitious village of Schabbach, in the 'Hunsrueck' area of Germany.

The story deals with a number of very difficult issues (World War Two in particular) with great sensitivity, but makes no attempt to 'whitewash' the past. From a historical perspective, the series provides a fascinating insight into the way life must have changed for ordinary people in rural Germany during the twentieth century.

An interesting feature of the series is the use of both colour film and monochrome which takes a while to get used to. The result, however, is very effective, although there are some black and white scenes where colour would be welcome, as the landscape is beautiful and the monochrome fails to do it justice.

It is good news that the DVD is to be released in its original German with English subtitles, as the language used by the inhabitants of the village is mostly the local dialect which, for those who understand it, adds further authenticity to the story.

I am looking forward to seeing this series on DVD. It has been a long wait (it was first shown on British television during the mid 1980's, and may have been repeated once, but not recently). It makes compelling viewing for anyone who enjoys a series which is both thought-provoking and well acted, unlike the ubiquitous soap operas shown on TV these days.

Heimat 1, for the Heart and the Head5
If I could take one movie to my desert island, this would be it - from the first scene I was entranced.

I played my DVDs through immediately they arrived, even though the showing on BBC 4 had only just finished. I shall replay them once every year as a special event.

Heimat 1 is the story of three generations of three families connected through tradition, at least to start with, and intermarriage. It is set against the background of two World Wars and several crucial technological and socio-economic changes. To a fictional rural village, Schabbach, in the Hunstruck, which has probably been much the same for two or three hundred years, comes photography, radio, telephone, a highway, consumer credit and factory farming. At the beginning the Simons' slate and timber farmhouse is full of people, extended family and neighbours. At the end Maria, the mother, dies alone. In contrast Katharina, the grandmother and blacksmith's wife, lives her traditional life and dies surrounded by her extended family - a perfect fit.

But it wasn't all roses back then. Katharina's younger brother, Glasisch, returns from World War 1 with a skin disease caused by exposure to gas. "Get your scabby fingers away from me" is all his lot, and, although he's central in almost everything that goes on in the village, he's also an outsider and therefore makes the ideal narrator for the film, a detached observer.

There are other literary-type devices, such as the untimely death of Otto, Maria's lover in middle age. He was just too good for the world.

A lovely piece of irony occurs when Edward, the sickly son of the family, has been sent to Berlin to get his lung seen to. His mother, Katharina, is afraid he'll be seduced by a mysterious French woman who's just passed through the village. Instead, he's landed by a brothel madam who has "moved in the highest circles" but nevertheless mistakes Edward for a man of property, all down to a misunderstanding over his Hunsruck dialect.

One of the things that makes the Heimat 1 so riveting is what we aren't told. Why did Paul walk out on his beautiful young wife, Maria, and his two sons? Did Maria and his sister Pauline ever visit him in Florida as they planned late in their lives? What did Maria's revolting brother, Wilfried, die of at 57? Pauline became a business-woman, what in? Why did Paul prefer Hermann, his wife's son by another man, to either of his own boys? What was going to happen to Anton's health and Anton's business? Heimat lives on.

I also loved Nicos Mamangakis's music composed for the film. I got the impression people and/or places had their themes, but this is one for the next time. The sound quality is great.

Music is also a central theme. Hermann becomes a composer. His first work, for orchestra and tape recordings of such disparate things as chain saw and birdsong, doesn't go down at all well in the village hall. Only Glasisch is moved by it. However, at the end of the film, after his mother Maria has been buried, Hermann in chatting with an old-timer in the village cemetery and realises he's forgotten the dialect words for gooseberries, sloes and bilberries. He also discovers that the local disused mine has brilliant acoustic qualities. Out of these elements comes a tonal choral work using dialect words and performed in the mine. This is his tribute to his heimat. Paul, who has become a public benefactor donates the Simon house to the village

"Heimat" is one of those words which won't translate accurately. It means homeland and home in the sense of home and hearth. At the end of the film both Paul and Hermann recognise that in the death of Maria, the woman they both ran away from, they no longer have a home.

Poor Maria reaped the whirlwind Katharina escaped by dying in time. She spends her final years alone, carrying on the traditional crafts, such as making sloe wine that'll probably sit untouched on the shelf, and wishing her son Anton would visit her more. (The other son, Ernst, is busy persuading local people to modernise their houses and selling off the original fittings to do up pubs in Dusseldorf).

One of the things I found most touching was the ease with which people were taken in to the Simon household. Paul marries Maria and she moves in. Kath goes to visit her brother in Bochum and comes home with her niece, Lotti. Anton meets Martha in Hamburg and sends her, pregnant, to his mother to be looked after. At some stage Kath's sister, Marie-Goot, moves in. All these people appear get along quite happily and share the household chores. But when it comes to Klarchen, a former girl friend of Ernst, Maria isn't so pleased, with good reason, as it happens . . . .

If you are shilly-shallying over the price of this set, don't, buy it. It's well presented with an excellent introduction giving a synopsis of each episode, a summary of concurrent historical events, a biography of Edgar Reitz and details of how the film was made and who was in it - handy if you get muddled over the family tree.

The film is visually stunning. It's a family saga, it's socio-economic history, it's about growing up and growing old, it's more than the sum of its parts, it's life in microcosm.

PS. If this helps, I'm 57, a townie and loathe sentimentality.

Very nice to have this, even with some minor flaws.5
I purchased the Tartan edition of this rather than the German one because of the bad reputation the German edition has for the poor quality of its digital transfer. I wasn't disappointed. The quality of the digital remastering is excellent. That doesn't mean that the edition doesn't have some minor flaws. The packaging is needlessly bulky, clearly designed more for the splash on store shelves than for customers with storage space considerations. More annoyingly, the English subtitles can't be turned off, a thoughtless mastering oversight. To make matters worse, the translations are occasionally quite stupid. E.g. the title of Episode 3, "Eine Weihnacht Wie Noch Nie" is translated as "The Best Christmas Ever". It would be more accurately rendered as "A Christmas Like Never Before". This isn't a matter of simple correctness. The Christmas referred to is that of 1933 and the ambiguity of the German and the correct translation is crucial to the sense of the episode. When all is said and done, however, these are comparatively minor matters, and it is very nice to have such an excellent transfer of this remarkable work on DVD