Die Linkshandige Frau С‚рёс‚р»рѕрірё Рјр°с’р°сђсѓрєрё Today
Directed by Peter Handke, starring Edith Clever and Bruno Ganz.
: The story begins abruptly when Marianne (Edith Clever) tells her husband, Bruno (Bruno Ganz), that she wants to be left alone. The film then painstakingly observes her navigating this new solitude with her young son in a suburb of Paris. Edith Clever delivers a "haunting" and "moving" performance as a woman seeking a life that is entirely her own, even as she grapples with the resulting loneliness. Directed by Peter Handke, starring Edith Clever and
is an exercise in extreme cinematic minimalism and "slow cinema". It is an intellectually rigorous psychological exploration of a woman's sudden need for radical independence, though its deliberate pacing and detached tone mean it is certainly not for everyone. Directed by Peter Handke
Directed by Peter Handke, starring Edith Clever and Bruno Ganz.
: The story begins abruptly when Marianne (Edith Clever) tells her husband, Bruno (Bruno Ganz), that she wants to be left alone. The film then painstakingly observes her navigating this new solitude with her young son in a suburb of Paris. Edith Clever delivers a "haunting" and "moving" performance as a woman seeking a life that is entirely her own, even as she grapples with the resulting loneliness.
is an exercise in extreme cinematic minimalism and "slow cinema". It is an intellectually rigorous psychological exploration of a woman's sudden need for radical independence, though its deliberate pacing and detached tone mean it is certainly not for everyone.