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Monday, October 3, 2011

#423. Wings of Desire (1987)


Directed By: Wim Wenders

Starring: Bruno Ganz, Solveig Dommartin, Otto Sander




Tag line: "There are angels on the streets of Berlin"

Trivia:  Filming the actual Berlin Wall was prohibited, so a replica of the wall twice had to be built close to the original. The first fake wall warped in the rain because the contractor cheated the producers and built it from wood






Life certainly has its problems. Aside from the everyday hassles of traffic jams and mounting bills, there are the more intense issues we must occasionally deal with, such as relationships, illnesses, even the prospect of our own mortality. 

Like many people, I try, on occasion, to escape these problems, and my particular path to freedom happens to be the cinema. But for Damiel (Bruno Ganz), an Angel sent to earth to observe mankind in Wim Wenders’ Wings of Desire, human life, whether filled with pain or pleasure, is beautiful to behold, and he longs to experience it. 

While we’re busy trying to dodge life, Damiel is looking for a way in! 

He and his partner Cassiel (Otto Sander) spend their days and nights watching over the citizens of Berlin. As an Angel, Damiel is neither seen nor heard, which allows him to move freely throughout the city, intermingling with others as he eavesdrops on their conversations and observes their actions. 

One day, Damiel visits the circus, where he spots a tightrope walker named Marion (Solveig Dommartin). He instantly falls in love with her, and decides to do what very few Angels before him have done; become human. Even though such a change will cost him eternal life, Damiel is convinced the potential joys are well worth the sacrifice. 

Wings of Desire looks at humanity from the point of view of an outsider, someone who knows our ways and customs only through observation, and though it means the end of life everlasting for him, we identify with Damiel's desire to become mortal. Much of the credit for this must be given to Bruno Ganz, who brings a child-like innocence to Damiel, a being who sees beauty where others might find pain. In a key scene, as he and Cassiel are sitting around comparing notes at the end of the day, Damiel finally reveals his deepest wishes to his partner. “To be excited not only by the mind”, he says with a smile, “but at last by a meal” He longs to experience what it’s like to feel, to smell, to “guess without always knowing”. 

Coupled with Ganz’s performance is Wenders’ exploration of the city of Berlin, presented in a wholly detached manner, as if we, like Damiel, were seeing it from the outside. Produced at a time when the Berlin Wall was still standing, Wings of Desire brings us to this monument of political division on a number of occasions, and while the citizens of Berlin are kept on either side of it, Damiel and his kind travel freely through both sections. In fact, there are moments we're not sure which side of the wall he's on, and ultimately it doesn't matter. As Damiel and Cassiel have learned, people on both sides are basically the same. 

Through these characters - in this city - Wenders has given us the opportunity to detach ourselves from the world we know, to exist on the outside instead of within. We too are observing, and can see what is is about mankind that Damiel finds so appealing.







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