Stroszek


1h 48m 1977
Stroszek

Brief Synopsis

In Berlin, an alcoholic joins his elderly friend and a prostitute in a determined dream to leave Germany and seek a better life in Wisconsin.

Film Details

Genre
Drama
Comedy
Foreign
Release Date
1977
Location
Berlin, West Germany; Plainfield, Wisconsin, USA

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 48m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color

Synopsis

Bruno Stroszek is released from prison and warned to stop drinking. He has few skills and fewer expectations: with a glockenspiel and an accordion, he ekes out a living as a street musician. He befriends Eva, a prostitute down on her luck. After they are harried and beaten by the thugs who have been Eva's pimps, they join Bruno's neighbor, Scheitz, an elderly eccentric, when he leaves Germany to live in Wisconsin. In that winter bound, barren prairie, Bruno works as a mechanic, Eva as a waitress. They buy a trailer. Then, bills mount, the bank threatens to repossess the trailer, Eva wants privacy, and inexorably, the promise of a new life deserts Bruno.

Film Details

Genre
Drama
Comedy
Foreign
Release Date
1977
Location
Berlin, West Germany; Plainfield, Wisconsin, USA

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 48m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color

Articles

Stroszek


Three years after the critical and art house success of The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser (1974), director Werner Herzog brought back that film's singular leading man, Bruno S., for one of the filmmaker's most eccentric films: Stroszek (1977), an unforgettable portrait of the American heartland and one of Herzog's funniest features.

The title of the film comes from the main character, a name familiar from Herzog's first feature film, Signs of Life (1968), and originating from a college friend whose academic aid to Herzog was traded for cinematic immortality. Herzog's affinity for dangerous, live-wire leading men (most notoriously embodied in Klaus Kinski) led him to seek out Bruno after seeing him in a documentary about his troubled life, Bruno the Black - One Day a Hunter Blew His Horn (1971). The rejected son of a prostitute, Bruno had spent the lion's share of his adult life in mental institutions where he nevertheless honed his skills as an artist and street musician (including his accordion, which you can see in this film). Described as "the unknown soldier of German cinema" due to his unusual credit in Herzog's audio commentary for this film, Bruno desperately wanted to play the lead in Herzog's adaptation of Woyzeck (which would be filmed in 1979 with Kinski); however, the filmmaker realized the role was beyond the capacity of his actor and crafted this project with him in mind instead. In addition to elements from Bruno's life, his mannerisms were also incorporated into the film including his unkempt appearance (complete with deliberately open fly during one street scene).

The role of Bruno's traveling companion, down-and-out prostitute Eva, was also specifically written with its performer in mind: Eva Mattes, the most experienced thespian in the cast and a veteran of Rainer Werner Fassbinder films including The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant (1972) and Effi Briest (1974). The third main character in the film, the elderly Clemens Scheitz, also bears his real name in the film and was discovered by Herzog among hundreds of index cards of potential movie extras. Herzog described Scheitz as "a crazed man who thought Bruno was smelling badly" but nevertheless brought him back here after his roles in Kaspar Hauser and Heart of Glass (1976). Scheitz passed away in 1980, shortly after his brief, eccentric turn in Herzog's remake of Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979).

The film features an ambitious slate of locations for a Herzog film, opening in Berlin (including the use of a real prison) before moving through New York and Wisconsin with a climactic detour to North Carolina. The New York shooting proved to be especially tricky, with location shots captured without permits by hiding cameras and grabbing covert shots when police weren't looking.

Though not technically a documentary, Stroszek adopts many of the techniques and the overall atmosphere familiar from Herzog's non-fiction work; not for nothing a dedication card in the opening credit give thanks to Errol Morris, Lutz Eisholz (director of the Bruno doc), and Les Blanc. The Morris citation is especially fascinating now given the ongoing friendship between the filmmakers, which included a visit to notorious serial killer Ed Gein (for an uncompleted Morris film) and the planned excavation of his mother in Plainfield, Wisconsin, to find out whether she was still there and whether Gein had dug tunnels to have access to the body. In a 2009 interview with the two directors for Believe magazine, Herzog recalled, "I said that we were going to do a film there in Plainfield, and that really upset Errol a lot. He thought I was a thief without loot. This was his country, his territory, his Plainfield, and I shot in Plainfield. I shot a film, Stroszek, which I think is forgotten and forgiven by now, and we can maintain friendship over this now." In fact, it was after the completion of shooting for Stroszek that Herzog handed an envelope of $2,000 to Morris (twice, after Morris threw it out the window the first time), which ended up funding a trip to Vernon, Florida and the trigger for Morris's legendary career as a documentarian in his own right.

By Nathaniel Thompson
Stroszek

Stroszek

Three years after the critical and art house success of The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser (1974), director Werner Herzog brought back that film's singular leading man, Bruno S., for one of the filmmaker's most eccentric films: Stroszek (1977), an unforgettable portrait of the American heartland and one of Herzog's funniest features. The title of the film comes from the main character, a name familiar from Herzog's first feature film, Signs of Life (1968), and originating from a college friend whose academic aid to Herzog was traded for cinematic immortality. Herzog's affinity for dangerous, live-wire leading men (most notoriously embodied in Klaus Kinski) led him to seek out Bruno after seeing him in a documentary about his troubled life, Bruno the Black - One Day a Hunter Blew His Horn (1971). The rejected son of a prostitute, Bruno had spent the lion's share of his adult life in mental institutions where he nevertheless honed his skills as an artist and street musician (including his accordion, which you can see in this film). Described as "the unknown soldier of German cinema" due to his unusual credit in Herzog's audio commentary for this film, Bruno desperately wanted to play the lead in Herzog's adaptation of Woyzeck (which would be filmed in 1979 with Kinski); however, the filmmaker realized the role was beyond the capacity of his actor and crafted this project with him in mind instead. In addition to elements from Bruno's life, his mannerisms were also incorporated into the film including his unkempt appearance (complete with deliberately open fly during one street scene). The role of Bruno's traveling companion, down-and-out prostitute Eva, was also specifically written with its performer in mind: Eva Mattes, the most experienced thespian in the cast and a veteran of Rainer Werner Fassbinder films including The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant (1972) and Effi Briest (1974). The third main character in the film, the elderly Clemens Scheitz, also bears his real name in the film and was discovered by Herzog among hundreds of index cards of potential movie extras. Herzog described Scheitz as "a crazed man who thought Bruno was smelling badly" but nevertheless brought him back here after his roles in Kaspar Hauser and Heart of Glass (1976). Scheitz passed away in 1980, shortly after his brief, eccentric turn in Herzog's remake of Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979). The film features an ambitious slate of locations for a Herzog film, opening in Berlin (including the use of a real prison) before moving through New York and Wisconsin with a climactic detour to North Carolina. The New York shooting proved to be especially tricky, with location shots captured without permits by hiding cameras and grabbing covert shots when police weren't looking. Though not technically a documentary, Stroszek adopts many of the techniques and the overall atmosphere familiar from Herzog's non-fiction work; not for nothing a dedication card in the opening credit give thanks to Errol Morris, Lutz Eisholz (director of the Bruno doc), and Les Blanc. The Morris citation is especially fascinating now given the ongoing friendship between the filmmakers, which included a visit to notorious serial killer Ed Gein (for an uncompleted Morris film) and the planned excavation of his mother in Plainfield, Wisconsin, to find out whether she was still there and whether Gein had dug tunnels to have access to the body. In a 2009 interview with the two directors for Believe magazine, Herzog recalled, "I said that we were going to do a film there in Plainfield, and that really upset Errol a lot. He thought I was a thief without loot. This was his country, his territory, his Plainfield, and I shot in Plainfield. I shot a film, Stroszek, which I think is forgotten and forgiven by now, and we can maintain friendship over this now." In fact, it was after the completion of shooting for Stroszek that Herzog handed an envelope of $2,000 to Morris (twice, after Morris threw it out the window the first time), which ended up funding a trip to Vernon, Florida and the trigger for Morris's legendary career as a documentarian in his own right. By Nathaniel Thompson

Quotes

Trivia

Director Werner Herzog was originally going to film the story of Woyzeck (1979) with his star Bruno S.. However, a few days before production, he decided that story required Klaus Kinski in the starring role. He told Bruno, who responded that he had already taken vacation and a leave of absence from his job in a steel mill. As a result, Herzog wrote this film in 3 1/2 days, deliberately choosing a similar sounding title.

The scenes of Stroszek's apartment were shot in Bruno S.'s apartment. The piano, which Bruno really does call his "black friend", was bought with his salary from _Jeder fur sich und Gott gegen alle (1974)_ , and the concern over its future is real.

The story about the sheets really happened to Bruno; like much of the film, it was shot in a single take (though a section had to be edited out when Bruno passed gas loudly).

The scene of the man pulling his own tooth is based on a similar scene in _Spend It All (1971)_ , adapted with the permission of Les Blank (misspelled in the credits as "Les Blanc").

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States on Video August 5, 1997

Released in United States September 1977

Released in United States Winter January 1, 1977

Shown at Telluride Film Festival September 1977.

Began shooting November 16, 1976.

Completed shooting February 18, 1977.

Released in United States Winter January 1, 1977

Released in United States September 1977 (Shown at Telluride Film Festival September 1977.)

Released in United States on Video August 5, 1997