Hanns Zischler — Actor (32)
Doctor Faustus (1982) [Movie] TMDB IMDb WikiData
Doktor Faustus
director: Franz Seitz Junior actor: Jon Finch / André Heller
other title: Doktor Faustus
A musician beds down a prostitute he knows is diseased in order to gain inspiration, an act he later believes to have been a tacit pact with Satan
Before Your Eyes - Vietnam (1982) [Movie] TMDB IMDb
Etwas wird sichtbar
director: Harun Farocki actor: Bruno Ganz / Inga Humpe
other title: Etwas wird sichtbar
Before Your Eyes – Vietnam (1982) is an unconventional essay film by Harun Farocki that interrogates the visual and ideological legacy of the Vietnam War. Blending staged scenes, archival footage, photographs, and philosophical dialogue, the film follows various characters — including an American soldier captured by North Vietnamese villagers — as they reflect on violence, memory, and image-making. Set partly in West Berlin and partly in reconstructed spaces representing Vietnam, the film avoids traditional dramatic narrative in favor of a fragmented montage of voices, documents, and reenactments. Interweaving love stories, political debate, and historical commentary, Farocki creates a critical reflection on how war is represented, seen, and imagined, both in cinema and in public consciousness. The result is a complex meditation on images as weapons and instruments of perception.
About Narration (2025) [Movie] TMDB IMDb
Erzählen
director: Harun Farocki / Ingemo Engström actor: Avinho Barbeitov / Ingemo Engström
other title: Erzählen / Raconter
Interdisciplinary studies put into practice is a plane on which HaF's interests and mine coincide. Ideas of fictional research projects in films emerge very early on, or of film as research device, allowing people from different disciplines to come together and discover something, to pursue a line of thought, or just be adventurous. These ideas correspond to a tendency we both have of accumulating knowledge from different sciences, for example so as to bring exact sciences like medicine together with subjects which aren't directly aimed at application, such as religious studies or anthropology.
Angels of Iron (1981) [Movie] TMDB WikiData IMDb
Engel aus Eisen
director: Thomas Brasch actor: Hilmar Thate / Katharina Thalbach
other title: Engel aus Eisen / Anges de Fer
The subject of this historical drama is a splintering Berlin in the years of 1948 and 1949. Played against the backdrop of social upheaval, the characters in the drama come to epitomize the best and worst of each pole of the political sphere. A 17-year-old hoodlum by the name of Gladow works hand-in-glove with a local white-collar criminal to rob and pillage every day and night, defying capture. While he and his gang of thugs are terrorizing the people of Berlin, the Soviets are trying to make the blockade of their region of control impermeable. The future casts long shadows over the drama, as Berlin's problems take the shape of times to come.
A Woman in Flames (1983) [Movie] IMDb WikiData TMDB
Die flambierte Frau
director: Robert van Ackeren actor: Gudrun Landgrebe / Mathieu Carrière
other title: La donna in fiamme / Die flambierte Frau
Eva, an upper-class housewife, frustratedly leaves her arrogant husband and decides to enter the call girl business. She lets Yvonne, a prostitute, teach her the basics and both set out for prey together, until Eva starts an affair with Chris, who turns out to be a call boy, as well. Consequently, she moves into his penthouse, large enough for both to offer their services separately.
Motion and Emotion: The Films of Wim Wenders (1990) [Movie] TMDB IMDb
Motion and Emotion: The Films of Wim Wenders
director: Paul Joyce actor: Peter Falk / Dennis Hopper
Though very polite and British, this feature-length documentary about German filmmaker Wim Wenders offers the most penetrating insights and the best overall critique of his work that I have encountered anywhere. Paul Joyce, who directed it, has also made documentaries about Nicolas Roeg, David Cronenberg, Nagisa Oshima, and Dennis Hopper, and he knows the conventional format well enough to get the most out of it. There are good clips and interesting commentaries from the interviewed subjects, who include Wenders himself, cinematographer Robby Muller, filmmaker Sam Fuller, novelist Patricia Highsmith, musician Ry Cooder, actors Harry Dean Stanton, Peter Falk, and Hanns Zischler, and critic Kraft Wetzel, who is especially provocative. A must-see for Wenders fans, highly recommended for everyone else. –Jonathan Rosenbaum, 1989