Filmed in 1986/87 in still-divided Berlin, Wim Wenders's Wings of Desire is both a utopian fairy tale and a fascinating time capsule of that late Cold War moment.
Armour Craig Professor in Language and Literature in the Department of German at Amherst College..
Christian Rogowski is G.
Christian Rogowski guides the reader through the film's many aspects, using archival research to bring out new insights into its making and its meanings.
Wenders's groundbreaking film has been hailed as a paean to love, a rumination on the continued presence in Berlin of the troubled German history, as well as an homage to the life-affirming power of the cinematic imagination.
One falls in love with a beautiful young woman, a trapeze artist in a traveling circus, and decides to forfeit his immortality.
Together with legendary French cinematographer Henri Alekan (who had worked on Jean Cocteau's La Belle et la Bete of 1946, among many other films) and Austrian author Peter Handke (with whom he had collaborated before), Wenders created a multilayered filmic poem of dazzling complexity: the skies over Berlin are populated with angels bearing witness to its inhabitants' everyday concerns.
Filmed in 1986/87 in still-divided Berlin, Wim Wenders's Wings of Desire is both a utopian fairy tale and a fascinating time capsule of that late Cold War moment