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The Court of Shards

Film
Film
Original Title (If different): 
Scherbengericht
Language: 
German
Other languages or subtitles: 
English
Production country: 
Germany
Running time (In minutes): 
75
Theme: 
Human Rights
Category/Format: 
Experiment
Poster: 
Production year: 
August, 2012
Film Credits
About the Director: 

Jan Eilhardt was born in the Harz Mountains in Germany. Having studied in Hamburg Film and Fine Arts (under Marina Abramovic), he then went on to work as theatre assistant to Heiner Müller at the Berliner Ensemble. Jan’s own film career took off in Berlin with several short films, which have screened in various European film festivals, galleries and also in numerous theatre productions. The Court of Shards is his first full length feature.

Film director: 
Jan Eilhardt
Producer: 
Jan Eilhardt
Screenplay: 
Jan Eilhardt
Editing: 
Verena Neumann
Film photographer: 
Benjamin Bayer, Raphael Beinder, Marjan Engel, Lukas Majka, Ulrike Thiele
Sound: 
Helen Neikes
Music: 
Jonas Berndt, Angela Cory, Manuel De, Gabriel Walsh
Cast 1: 
Caroline Fricke
Cast 2: 
Anna Böttcher
Cast 3: 
Silvi Giehle
Cast 4: 
Steffi Kühnert
Cast 5: 
Alexander Scheer
Film synopsis: 
The two friends Nora and Isabel, both disabled, try to lead normal lives. Strangely enough, it is their family, well-meaning friends and care workers who appear not to want normality at all. When Nora then decides to marry her African lover Amadou, her family does everything in its power to stop her. The foreigner's presence sets in motion a series of unfortunate events: a suicide, a bitter deal, and a forced homecoming. And the consequences have only just begun...
Budget
Budget Range: 
Between $100 000 and $10 000
Technical infos
Technical infos
Original Film Format: 
DVCAM
Format Ratio: 
4:3
Film Sound: 
Other
Festival Selection, Awards...
Festival selection, awards or citation already received and other comments... :
Already selected in a Festival?: 
Yes
Festival selections: 

Slamdance 2013

Shining Light Film Festival 2013

Festival Migrantskega Filma 2013

Film reviews: 
Author: Stefan Flach from Germany The most beautiful achievement of Jan Eilhardt's film is its apprehension- a realization that when one seeks to portray disabled and sick people in film one CANNOT pretend to fully understand. Rather than holding open a door with an affected gaze- a door the sick and disabled can open themselves- one encounters them with an empathetic helplessness. J.E. regards his characters in the manner of Jean Cocteau who demanded that his artworks above all astound and astonish him. Proceeding from this demand and fulfilling it, J.E. creates or discovers a kind of open form in which his filmic gaze, following its characters in quasi-documentary mode, endows them with a freedom that in turn radiates throughout the film. J.E. is moved, but not in the manner of a mothering do- gooder who addresses himself to the less fortunate. He is much more like an attentively observant painter who is entirely impressed and possessed by his object. Only at that stage does his painting begin, not earlier. J.E. has created an artwork that enters an unknown land, the land of the sick and disabled, without ever colonizing it. Author: Peggy Gale from Canada 5 January 2013 At first everyone seems to have a problem - paralysed limbs, epilepsy - or a dissatisfaction (the angry brother who drinks and is just out of therapy, the mother who blames the son for laziness, the care worker who is cynical and likely dishonest). Amadou simply wants to stay in Germany however he can. We begin to see the 'healthy' people are generally more unhappy than those with physical or mental problems, fearing or despising everyone who is 'different' and resentful of everyone they must interact with. Granny sees Amadou as "a great tragedy around one's neck" but in the end he is the kinder and more thoughtful one. The mother inadvertently does everything wrong, leading to a terrible (perhaps inevitable?) end for Thomas and nearly wrecking Nora too. In a way we arrive at the end with a positive resolution, Nora and Isabel friends again, an African baby bringing happiness to the two women and honour to Amadou's family. There is a future waiting. A lot of information is tucked into the interstices here, opinions and evidence of racism and (well-meaning) cruelty, but people in the long-term care home (old friends now, party hosts) seem to work well within their world. Your opening remarks about passion and positive outlook have come true.
Publicity Infos
Publicity contact: 
Eilhardt Productions - Sanna Akehurst
publicity address: 
<p>Knobelsdorffstr. 44</p> <p>14059 Berlin</p> <p>Deutschland</p>
Publicity contact email: 
Trailer availble: 
yes
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Your rating: None

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