The Parallel Street (1962) Poster

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10/10
Die Parallelstrasse / The Parallel Street (1962, Ferdinand Khittl)
Gloede_The_Saint7 March 2012
The number 188 appears, then the screen goes completely black. We hear noises and words spoken in many tongues. Then as suddenly as it all began we find ourselves in a poorly lit room, photographed in black and white, where a clerk stationed at his desk tells five men, seemingly researching documents that this is the end of the first session. Soon, after the credits are done rolling, we're told that this is the end of "Part 2".

The clerk is our only direct link into an logical comprehension of what is appearing before our eyes. In the early minutes of the film he confesses to us his sorrow over how the five men cannot comprehend the documents are mirrors of their own existence. He comments on their futile efforts to make sense of what's before them. How they have made a meaningless chart and made rules that comes to nothing. He notes that they will fail, like all before them, and that at the end of the last 90 minute session their lives will end.

And after this introduction "part 3" may commence as the five men goes through document 189, 190, and so on in the hope of reaching the last document 310 before their time is up. The documents themselves are segments filmed in color covering parts of the world, the human mindset, human constructions, etc. usually with an attached set of information the clerk reads out. We are now to follow the men try to make sense of what's put before them and the discussions they have between them. Their tone is calm, and relatively collected.

Whether or not the exercise is an allegory of life and the human existence can be debated, I felt this was the most comprehensible solution, but this is about so much more than simple answers. I cannot underline many enough times what a unique experience this is. It harbors an obscure sense of poetic beauty, that much like the documents explored are slightly out of our comprehension. Be it an astute beauty of life, a melancholy feeling of being lost or simply the joy of watching and partaking in such an astonishing artistic creation/experience, this movie manages to cover so much emotion, and perhaps even information, without ever really revealing its core or giving us something we can easily grasp and categorize.

The fact that it consciously incorporates into our minds that this is the last part of a larger picture was also something I could not easily shake, and it stayed on my mind throughout. First I thought it was a negative, a form of unnecessary confusion, but now, in retrospect, I view it differently. It not only creates a craving for more, but it creates a sense of claustrophobia, and in a lesser sense bewilderment. With the exception of one re-evaluated document you see none of the 187 first documents, and the exercise itself is a mystery, we know nothing about the surrounding situation and reasoning behind what we see. I found this to create an incredibly strong experience for me. The Parallel Street is a film I will never forget.
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10/10
Somnambulant life Warning: Spoilers
What can one make of Die Parallelstrasse / The Parallel Street? What to make of Ferdinand Khittl, how can one make a feature like this and then not make another?

The film stays with a group of five men sat in a room at night in lamp-lit darkness puzzling over a series of documents and images. Their task is to understand the documents, understand their unifying theme, understand who prepared the documents. Erasure awaits them should they fail this task; they have three nights to complete it. A weary yet sympathetic clerk watches over them, supplying them with supplementary information and advice where required.

The viewer sees sequences of industrial film overlaid with cryptic and sometimes perverse or surreal narratives. Devil's Island becomes a religious shrine, executions by guillotine devotional offerings, an abattoir a birthing house.

The film documents are often extravagantly beautiful and set in exotic locations. The text is sensual and can transport one, for example referring to the fragrance of rice ballooning out of a vessel once the cover is lifted, mentioned whilst such a transaction is occurring on a river in the Tropics; or to how the Devil's Island guillotine slices the air.

The film is heavily allegorical, perhaps bitterly so. The men are somnambulists, blindly following baseless conventions, focusing on irrelevant minutiae, bickering, endlessly deliberating without coming to any action or conclusion, mentally blocked. Life itself as three nights.

Camus once commented that his existential protagonist Mersault is the only Christ that modern society deserves; in the same spirit I think that Die Parallelstrasse is the only Bible that modern society deserves.

At the time of writing the film is available on the Edition Filmmuseum DVD label.
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2/10
Unappealing and boring
Horst_In_Translation17 November 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"Die Parallelstrasse" or "The Parallel Street" is a West German German-language film from the early 1960s and this one will have its 45th anniversary next year. The director is Czech filmmaker Ferdinand Khittl and he worked on the script with Bodo Blüthner here, not the only occasion when the two collaborated. The movie stays comfortably under the 90-minute mark and is in my opinion a perfect example of how weak the 1960s were in Germany in terms of filmmaking before Wenders, Herzog, Fassbinder took over in what could maybe be considered the finest decade of German film history. I personally see absolutely nothing appealing at all in this work. The atmospheric contrast between the black-and-white scenes and the colorful footage from different continents and cultures did not work at all in terms of story-telling. It all seemed very incoherent in my opinion. And neither the characters nor the acting were on a level that could at least come close to making up for all the deficits in here. I am not familiar with any of the cast members, but this is probably also because some of them appeared in not many other films, if at all. This was Khittl's last work as a filmmaker (and his only full feature film) and I cannot say I am disappointed about this at all. If there is any reason to check out this movie, then it may be to try to cure your insomnia. Stay far far away.
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