Screened as part of NZIFF 2021

Mr Bachmann and His Class 2021

Herr Bachmann und seine Klasse

Directed by Maria Speth Portraits

The inspiring story of one teacher making a difference in the lives of migrant children in rural Germany, Maria Speth’s absorbing documentary took the Silver Bear at Berlin 2021.

Nov 13
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Light House Cinema Cuba

Nov 21
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Light House Cinema Cuba

Germany In German with English subtitles
217 minutes DCP

Director, Producer, Editor

With

Dieter Bachmann

Screenplay

Maria Speth
,
Reinhold Vorschneider

Cinematography

Reinhold Vorschneider

Sound design

Niklas Kammertöns

Sound mixer

Adrian Baumeister

Festivals

Berlin 2021

Awards

Jury Prize, Berlin International Film Festival 2021

Elsewhere

Presented in association with

Goethe Institut

Dieter Bachmann teaches music and maths, and whatever else might be required, in the small German town of Stadtallendorf. Although the photogenic, bucolic setting seems like a throwback to simpler times, his class is anything but. The children are all from immigrant families who have settled here to work in the local factory. They come from all over: Turkey, Morocco, Bulgaria, Kazakhstan, Brazil, Russia, Sardinia. Some have fled persecution or destitution; some have almost no German. Nevertheless, Mr Bachmann slowly and patiently forges a bond with each student through understanding, engagement and validation. And the dumb, timeless power of “Smoke on the Water”.

Director Maria Speth won the Silver Bear at the 2021 Berlin Film Festival for this absorbing observational documentary in the style of Frederick Wiseman and Nicolas Philibert (this film could be seen as a sequel, of sorts, to Philibert’s exquisite documentary, To Be and To Have NZIFF 2002). The film is absorbing, rich and subtle. The nuances of shifting relationships are allowed to breathe as we move through the seasons of a year, and the history of the town, with its long-term reliance of migrant labour (including forced labour during the Nazi regime), gradually emerges to provide a historical context for the current generations. This is an assured, inspiring portrait of a micro-community forged from unlikely components and of the dedicated professional who made it happen: in the words of a parent, “a good, emotional teacher”. — Andrew Langridge