Interested more by the film's story than by staging a reconstitution, Thomas Ostermeier focuses on the fall of Maria Braun's ideals when faced with men whose ego is often proportional to how much money they have in the bank.
During World War II, Maria and Hermann get married in a town hall that has recently been bombed. The next day, Hermann is sent back to the front. Once the war is over, Maria, waiting for him to return, is told that he is dead. At the same time as she learns the rules of the black market, Maria learns those of the commerce of love. While working as a waitress in a bar, she begins a relationship with Bill, a black G.I. One night, as they're walking home, they find Hermann waiting for them. In the ensuing confusion, Maria strikes Bill with a bottle, killing him. Hermann takes the blame for the crime and is imprisoned. After the great feminine icons of Henrik Ibsen's plays, Thomas Ostermeier finds in Fassbinder's Maria Braun another victim of social and economic rules. This time, the action takes place in postwar Germany, during the transition towards the Federal Republic. Interested more by the film's story than by staging a reconstitution, Thomas Ostermeier focuses on the fall of Maria Braun's ideals when faced with men whose ego is often proportional to how much money they have in the bank. He highlights this opposition right from the start, even with his casting choices: surrounded by men, Maria Braun is isolated not only as a woman, but also as an idealist hoping for a better world. Like Fassbinder, Ostermeier subverts expectations with this story of a naïve young woman who becomes a tough, rich merchant: rather than a moral tale about a type of women, the play is the portrait of an exceptional personality whose fate is nonetheless ineluctably determined by her environment.
Born in 1945, Rainer Werner Fassbinder died in 1982, aged 37, having directed forty films, some of them adaptations of his own plays. The Marriage of Maria Braun, released in 1979, is the first film in his “BRD Trilogy,” followed by Lola in 1981, and Veronika Voss, which won the Golden Bear at the Berlin International Film Festival in 1982. Fassbinder's work focuses on the evolution of European societies after 1950, the new economic systems that arose in postwar Europe, and the influence they had on human relationships.
Direction Thomas Ostermeier Scenario Peter Märthesheimer et Pea Fröhlich Scenography Nina Wetzel Costumes Nina Wetzel et Ulrike Gutbrod Dramaturgy Julia Lochte, Florian Borchmeyer Music Nils Ostendorf Video Sébastien Dupouey
With Thomas Bading Le fonctionnaire de la mairie, Papi Berger, Bronski, L'interprète, Karl Oswald et Le notaire Robert Beyer La mère, Le docteur, Le juge, Senkenberg, Le garde, L'avocat et Le serveur Moritz Gottwald L'infirmière de la Croix-Rouge, Le trafiquant du marché noir, Bill, Willi, Le contrôleur, L'homme d'affaires américain, Madame Ehmke, Le serveur et Wetzel Ursina Lardi Maria Braun Sebastian Schwarz Hermann Braun, Betti, Le soldat américain, Le journaliste et Le serveur
Production
Production Münchner Kammerspiele, Schaubühne Berlin