Conclusion: German Cinema in the Age of Neoliberalism

Hester Baer
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Abstract

In a key scene toward the end of Maren Ade’s Toni Erdmann (2016), Ines (Sandra Hüller), a management consultant in Bucharest, hosts a brunch party to celebrate her birthday. An exemplary neoliberal subject, Ines knows only work and the constant quest for self-optimization; accordingly, her birthday brunch has been organized as a team-building event for her management group, whose mission to modernize a Romanian oil company through the massive outsourcing of jobs has caused strife among her colleagues. However, when the doorbell rings just as she is struggling with a wardrobe malfunction, Ines answers the door naked, and spontaneously decides only to admit guests to the party who agree to shed their clothes as well. Initially repelled by the naked party, several of her colleagues surmise that it must be part of the team-building exercise and awkwardly stand around Ines’s living room sipping wine in the nude. Toni Erdmann chronicles the attempts of Ines’s father Winfried (Peter Simonischek), a retired music teacher with a penchant for practical jokes, to puncture the glossy façade of Ines’s life, which, as he suspects, belies her insecurity, obstructed agency, and ultimate emptiness. He does this by adopting an array of wigs, prostheses, masks, and personae—notably that of the ‘life coach’ Toni Erdmann—that call attention to the performance of the self enacted by Ines and her business-world colleagues, a mode of self-fashioning whose ostensibly blank style makes it otherwise illegible as performance. At the naked brunch, Winfried arrives in his most extravagant get-up yet: clothed as a Kukeri, he wears a traditional Bulgarian costume designed to ward away evil spirits that consists of a full-body suit covered in long, dark hair, replete with a massive mask decorated in bright pompoms. His strange and troubling presence at the party, where no one can determine his identity beneath the hairy mask, further disturbs the already immensely uncomfortable guests. Awkward, unsettling, and hilarious, this scene employs slapstick comedy and visual jokes to generate an affective response among viewers that conjoins laughter with discomfort. Like Toni Erdmann as a whole, the naked brunch scene makes visible the illusion of
结论:新自由主义时代的德国电影
在玛伦·阿德的《托尼·厄德曼》(2016)结尾的一个关键场景中,布加勒斯特的管理顾问伊内斯(桑德拉·赫勒饰)举办了一场早午餐派对来庆祝她的生日。作为新自由主义的典范,伊内斯只知道工作和对自我优化的不断追求;因此,她的生日早午餐被组织为她的管理团队的团队建设活动。她的管理团队的使命是通过大规模外包工作来实现罗马尼亚石油公司的现代化,这在她的同事中引起了冲突。然而,当门铃响时,她正在为衣服故障而挣扎,她裸体去应门,并自发地决定只允许同意脱衣服的客人参加聚会。起初,她的几位同事对裸体派对感到反感,他们猜测这一定是团队建设活动的一部分,于是尴尬地站在伊内斯的客厅里,一丝不挂地喝着葡萄酒。托尼·厄德曼(Toni Erdmann)记录了伊内斯的父亲温弗里德(Winfried,彼得·西蒙尼斯切克(Peter Simonischek)饰)的尝试,他是一名退休的音乐教师,喜欢恶作剧。他怀疑,伊内斯生活的浮华掩盖了她的不安全感、受阻的能人以及最终的空虚。为了做到这一点,他采用了一系列假发、假肢、面具和人物形象——尤其是“生活教练”托尼·厄德曼(Toni erdmann)的形象——让人们注意到伊内斯和她在商界的同事们表演的自我,这种自我塑造的模式表面上是空白的,但在其他方面却难以辨认。在裸体早午餐会上,温弗里德穿着他迄今为止最奢华的装束出现了:他穿着一套传统的保加利亚服装,这套服装是为了避邪而设计的,包括一套全身覆盖着长长的黑发的服装,以及一个装饰着明亮绒球的巨大面具。他奇怪而令人不安的出现在派对上,在那里没有人能确定他的身份,在毛茸茸的面具下,进一步扰乱了已经非常不舒服的客人。尴尬、不安、滑稽,这个场景运用了闹剧喜剧和视觉笑话,在观众中产生了一种情感反应,将笑声与不适结合在一起。就像整个托尼·厄德曼一样,裸体早午餐的场景让人看到了幻觉
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