Grill Point

Grill Point is a 2002 German drama film directed by Andreas Dresen. Its original German title is Halbe Treppe, which means "Halfway up the Stairs" in English, and was the real-life name of the snack bar shown in the film.

Grill Point
Directed byAndreas Dresen
Produced byPeter Rommel
Written byAndreas Dresen
StarringSteffi Kühnert
Gabriela Maria Schmeide
Thorsten Merten
Axel Prahl
Music by17 Hippies
CinematographyMichael Hammon
Edited byJörg Hauschild
Distributed byUniversal
Release date
  • 3 October 2002 (2002-10-03)
Running time
111 minutes
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman

Grill Point was heavily influenced by the Dogme 95 manifest (although it does not follow all the Dogme rules; it uses some music not performed in-scene, the director is credited, and it is presented in widescreen format). It was shot almost entirely on location in the eastern German city of Frankfurt (Oder) using handheld digital video cameras. Its performance was improvised.

Plot

Uwe, owner of a snack bar, and his wife Ellen, who works in a perfume store, are friends with Katrin, who works in a trucking agency, and her husband Chris, a radio DJ. Neither marriage is holding together well; soon, Chris begins an affair with Ellen. When Katrin discovers this, they try, and fail to solve the problem as a foursome; when this fails, the two couples respond to the situation in different ways.

Cast

Only four professional actors were used in the film.

  • Axel Prahl as Uwe Kukowski
  • Steffi Kühnert as Ellen Kukowski
  • Thorsten Merten as Chris Düring
  • Gabriela Maria Schmeide as Katrin Düring

The band 17 Hippies who wrote and performed the music appear throughout the film as "the musicians".

Reception

gollark: > but I don't care about human rights of people who don't care about human rights of other peopleGreat, so you picked that *subjective* judgement, okay.
gollark: Other primates are pretty social and whatnot, even some birds have tool use, I've heard that the main advantage we has is just good transfer learning capability.
gollark: Many animals can do many of the things human can.
gollark: Nobody is very sure where that line is.
gollark: And you're probably fiddling with definitions somewhat to make that point, depending on what people you mean exactly.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.