Exquisitely simple and
memorably sad, this culture-clash melodrama was an international breakthrough
for prolific and provocative German writer-director Rainer Werner Fassbinder.
One of two significant films inspired by the classic Hollywood tearjerker All That Heaven Allows (1955)—the other
being Todd Haynes’ beautiful Far from
Heaven (2002)—this picture explores the relationship between a middle-aged
German woman and a young Moroccan laborer. Exploring themes of duplicity, hypocrisy,
ignorance, loneliness, prejudice, and sexuality, Fassbinder’s movie offers a
stark vision of desperate souls searching for connection in an unkind world. As
the epigraph that appears at the beginning of the movie says, with typical
Teutonic flair, “Happiness Is Not Always Fun.”
In a bar one night, Ali (El Hedi
ben Salem) hangs out with fellow Moroccan immigrants, as well as slatternly German
barmaids, because getting drunk and having sex are his only reprieves from a
life of hard work and incessant racism. He lives in Germany because he can’t
find employment in Morocco, but he’s either exploited or resented by nearly
everyone he meets in Germany. That is, until he encounters Emmi (Brigitte
Mira), a middle-aged and overweight cleaning lady who enters the bar one
evening. Sensing a kindred lost soul, Ali asks Emmi to dance, striking up a
long conversation that eventually continues in Emmi’s home—and Emmi’s bed.
Surprised but delighted by her new romance, Emmi slowly breaks the news to her
coworkers, neighbors, and relatives, all of whom shun her like she’s caught a
disease. Meanwhile, Ali moves into Emmi’s apartment and the two become engaged.
Although Ali harbors traces of his old melancholy personality, he brightens
when he sees how happy he makes Emmi. Yet Emmi realizes she can’t live without
all the people who’ve abandoned her, so domestic friction
emerges—notwithstanding Ali’s wise admonition that fear is cancerous.
Quickly
paced and shot in a minimalistic style, Ali:
Fear Eats the Soul presents its offbeat story without adornment. (For
instance, there’s virtually no music except for tunes playing on jukeboxes and
radios.) Fassbinder also gets in and out of scenes without ceremony, often
relying on fade-outs and fade-ins. The pared-down style suits the material
perfectly, keeping the focus on subtleties of performance. Mira and ben Salem
are heartbreaking in different ways, because she plays a woman trapped by her worldliness
and he plays a man inhibited by his naïveté. (Fassbinder’s affection for ben
Salem is evident in lingering nude shots of the actor.) Supporting players
incarnate various shades of intolerance effectively, with Fassbinder playing
Emmi’s thuggish son-in-law. A deeply humane film that respects its audience too
much to provide the release of a completely happy ending, Ali: Fear Eats the Soul is poetic without being pretentious, and
tragic without being treacly.
Ali: Fear Eats the Soul: GROOVY
2 comments:
Salem and Fassbinder were a couple in real life, so that explains his nude scenes.
Very unique, very sad film. Quite touching and humane. I've only seen a few of Fassbender's movies, but this is a good place to start.
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