Hudekamp - a homeland film

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Movie
Original title Hudekamp - a homeland film
Country of production Germany
original language German
Publishing year 2012
length 65 minutes
Age rating FSK 6
Rod
Director Pia Lenz,
Christian von Brockhausen
script Pia Lenz
Christian von Brockhausen
production NDR television
camera Pia Lenz
Christian von Brockhausen
cut Pia Lenz
Christian von Brockhausen
occupation
  • Klaus Noll, Ibo Azisi and others

Hudekamp - ein Heimatfilm is a German documentary film from 2012 by Pia Lenz and Christian von Brockhausen. The editor was Barbara Denz.

The film was broadcast for the first time on NDR television in November 2012 and won the German Television Prize 2013 in the documentation category and the German Social Prize .

The film is about living and letting live in Lübeck's social district Hudekamp , which is presented on the basis of several episodes.

action

Reviews

Rene Martens from the taz praised “... [the directors] have captured impressions of one of the most unusual friendships that one has seen on television for a long time. The rickety Sebastian, who apparently hardly eats himself, cooks for a 71-year-old who actually needs care, he also supports her in other ways. ”[…] Furthermore, it is shown how two 'helpless' people“ look after each other ”in the opinion of the caretaker. He sits in a kind of control room and is the master of a bizarre system of 20 surveillance cameras, incidentally not the only control system: “A Nazi living in the house has installed his own video surveillance for his apartment.” Martens also said: “Experts are coming to 'Hudekamp - A homeland film 'does not speak, but, apart from a teacher, only residents. The duo of authors do not flaunt them, they leave them their dignity. "

On documentary info one could read, “The film tells very visually about departure, resignation and anger, but also about friendship, love and fighters (against their will). 'Hudekamp - Ein Heimatfilm' [is] the journey into the pushed away everyday life of the much-cited parallel society that [exists] like this or similar everywhere in Germany. The confrontation with life situations that one can hardly imagine in the well-protected German affluent society, [may] shock, [it] shows yet again how humanity and community are never completely lost. "

The filmab! Magazine confirmed to Pia-Luisa Lenz and Christian von Brockhausen that they would show “sobering honest truth” in their documentary Hudekamp - A Heimatfilm . The "oppressive atmosphere" "changes to the audience in a matter of seconds". It went on to say: “Thrilling close-ups and varied cuts keep your eyes glued to the screen. And because of the statements of the residents that make you cry, scream and shake your head. Simultaneously. Anyone who enters the cinema with the expectation of finding glimmers of hope in the midst of gray sadness will be disappointed. A new perspective on the familiar. Comments or evaluations by outsiders are completely dispensed with. So is it a look at the edge of society? More like a snapshot of your own, small cosmos. "

Awards

Individual evidence

  1. René Martens: Taking care of each other. The daily newspaper, December 4, 2012, accessed on December 14, 2016 .