AUSSTEIGEN (GETTING OUT) IMPOSSIBLE—MONTAGE AND LIFE SCENARIOS IN ANDRES VEIEL’S FILM BLACK BOX BRD

Authors

  • Anja Katharina Seiler

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17742/IMAGE.TGVC.5-2.2

Abstract

Andres Veiel’s 2001 documentary film, Black Box BRD, links the biography of Alfred Herrhausen, RAF victim, with one of the 3rdgeneration RAF terrorists, Wolfgang Grams. In my paper, I trace how the film’s aesthetics introduce an image montage of two life scenarios by establishing both parallels and contrast, and therefore, following Susan Haywards definition “creates a third meaning” (112). I examine how the film establishes an aesthetic concept of Aussteigen (getting out)—along of the alive, visible bodies—the contemporary interviewees, and dead, invisible bodies—of Herrhausen and Grams.

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Published

2014-10-03

How to Cite

Seiler, A. K. (2014). AUSSTEIGEN (GETTING OUT) IMPOSSIBLE—MONTAGE AND LIFE SCENARIOS IN ANDRES VEIEL’S FILM BLACK BOX BRD. Imaginations: Journal of Cross-Cultural Image Studies, 5(2), 7–28. https://doi.org/10.17742/IMAGE.TGVC.5-2.2