Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Fassbinder, Rainer Werner - Thomas Elsaesser
Fassbinder, Rainer Werner - Thomas Elsaesser
THOMAS ELSAESSER
At no point during his career has Fassbinder renounced the autobiographical element in his films. His self-criticism does not affect the material but rather the manner of its presentation. The central experience—one might go so far as to call it the trauma that motivates his productivity—is emotional exploitation. His films are fictionalised, dramatised, occasionally didactic versions of what it means to live within power structures and dependencies that are all but completely internalised, and as such apparently removed from any possibility of change or development.
Repetition, reiteration therefore has a particularly important function in his work, on the thematic as well as the formal level. The films reproduce human relations 'as they are', while constantly retracing the contours of a circularity in the utopian hope of finding a way out at the weakest point…. As far as the films are concerned, they attempt to prove, with varying...
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