THE STATE OF THINGS (FILM)


'''The State of Things''' (German: '''Der Stand der Dinge''') is a 1982 road movie directed by Wim Wenders. It tells the story of a film director travelling from Portugal to Los Angeles in search of his missing producer.
The soundtrack includes original music from Jim Jarmusch, Jürgen Knieper, as well as tracks from Joe Ely, X and the Del Byzanteens.
Wenders' 1994 film ''Lisbon Story'' is partly a sequel to ''The State of Things''.

Contents
Plot
Filming
Awards
Legacy
Cast
Cameo appearances
External links

Plot


A German film crew is in Portugal to shoot a black and white remake of Roger Corman's 1955 science fiction B movie ''Day the World Ended'' about the survivors of a nuclear holocaust. The remake is titled ''The Survivors''. The production runs out of film and money and the director, Friedrich Munro (the name alludes to director legend Friedrich Murnau) played by Patrick Bauchau, who cannot reach his producer, Gordon, and so sets off to find him. The crew waits for Friedrich's return in an abandoned hotel. As they grow restless and bored, the film depicts some of their philosophical thoughts and emotional reactions, focusing on the themes of cinema, illusion and reality. Friedrich eventually manages to track the producer (Allen Garfield) in Los Angeles, who is in mortal danger because of money he owes to the Mafia and is finally shot dead.

Filming


The bulk of the film was shot in Portugal, and the last quarter of it in Los Angeles. It was made by Wim Wenders Productions and five other production companies were involved. The lead cinematographer of ''The State of Things'' was Henri Alekan, the noted photographer of Jean Cocteau's 1946 motion picture masterpiece ''Beauty and the Beast.''
Friedrich hides out with producer Gordon in the back of an RV on Sunset Strip in ''The State of Things,'' 1982

The origin of the film began during the filming of Wenders' 1981 ''Hammett'' for Francis Ford Coppola's then new American Zoetrope Studios. Coppola interrupted Wenders' production to make his own film ''One from the Heart'', and during this unexpected sabbatical, Wenders went to Portugal and discovered a film crew running out of money; they were making ''The Territory'' (1981). Wenders borrowed the entire cast and crew to make ''The State of Things''. He reportedly made a conditional deal to help with the completion of the film if the crew would agree to make a film of his own. This film turned out to be ''The State of Things''; in that film, the unexpected halt in filming due to a producer's troubles parallels Wenders' own experience with Coppola. Ironically, ''The State of Things'' is an example of the "personal film" that Coppola himself passionately believed in but did not fully realize with ''One from the Heart''.
After completing ''The State of Things'', Wenders returned to Los Angeles and completed ''Hammett''.

Awards


The film won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival of 1982. In 1983 it won the German Film Prizes in Gold for Photography and in Silver for Production.

Legacy



★ Left over film stock from ''The State of Things'' was used on the first third of Jim Jarmusch's 1984 black and white film ''Stranger Than Paradise''.

★ In 1991, Wenders later made ''Until the End of the World'', which also follows characters coping with the results of a nuclear blast. In 1994, he made ''Lisbon Story'', in which the fictitious movie director in ''The State of Things'', Friedrich Munro, reappears, having expatriated to Portugal.

Cast



Patrick Bauchau as Friedrich, the Director

Allen Garfield as Gordon, the Producer

Isabelle Weingarten as Anna

Rebecca Pauly as Joan

Jeffrey Kime as Mark

Geoffrey Carey as Robert

Camilla More as Julia

Alexandra Auder as Jane

Paul Getty Jr. as Dennis, the Writer

Viva as Kate

Samuel Fuller as Joe, the Cameraman

Roger Corman as the Lawyer

Janet Rasak as Karen

Artur Semedo as the Production Manager

Francisco Baião as the Soundman

Rob Kramer as the Camera operator

Monty Bane as Herbert

Cameo appearances



Samuel Fuller, a famous B movie director, has a cameo role as the cameraman in ''The State of Things'' who, early in the film, informs the director Friedrich that they have just run out of film stock.

Roger Corman, the director of the original 1955 B movie being remade by the filmmakers in ''The State of Things'', has a cameo role in the film as a Hollywood lawyer.

External links



Official website





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