
1990
In an experimentally compiled film review, Danielle Jaeggi, Paule Baillargeon and Claudia von Alemann reflect on their work as filmmakers and life as mothers. Just as the title is based on Michel Leiris' book of poems Bright Nights and Many a Dark Day, the film has its own poetry, which is also evident in shots of everyday activities, such as hands washing dishes. “Just the hair or the relationship of the hands to each other or gestures, and then words come in between and film clips that we talk about, and we were amazed to find that the women we portray in the films always have a lot of trouble with theirs Identity, their search for something, for lost people or lost things. “They are usually looking for something that has been lost, forgotten or gone,” said Claudia von Alemann in the 1992 interview conducted by Renate Fischetti, A Pioneer of Female Film Language. An essay about desire, doubt, contradictions. (fib)

Claudia von Alemann

Madeleine Bernstorff

Danielle Jaeggi

The Hugo's Brain

Because We Have Each Other

Brainwashed: Sex-Camera-Power

Beyond Ratings

In These Pages

The Judge

$avvy

A Film for Discussion

Reason for Seeing: Correspondence I

Bart LaRue's The Ark of Noah

I Am an Ox, I Am a Horse, I Am a Man, I Am a Woman

The cats, the sea, and everything in between.

Exergo

Prüdes Hollywood - Laster, Lust und Leidenschaft im Film

Contras' City

Welcome to my Darkside: Women in Horror

Diagnosed: Overdramatic

Corpo Presente

Sisters

The Good, The Bad, and the Beautiful