Jutta Winkelmann, die Zwillingsschwester von Gisela Getty. Kassel 1967.
Wer sich über die beiden Schwestern informieren möchte, findet in der Inhaltsangabe zum Film "Schneeweißrosenrot" näheres. Der Film, ausgezeichnet mit dem Grimme-Preis, wurde gedreht von Rainer Langhans und Christa Ritter.
>>Holly Golightly, the so capricious and sad girl out of Truman Capote's "Breakfast at Tiffany's" could have been the inspiration for both of them: Jutta and Gisela, the twin sisters from Kassel who in the late 60's emerged to conquer the world.. Something of Andy Warhol's cult girls is inside of them and also even a bit of the German "Frauleinwunder". They desert their men and go to Rome. There they sample the Dulcea vita, as late flower children or as early punks. They meet the young millionaire heir Paul Getty III and become life's-play-companion with him. For them, this boy who resembles a Botticelli angel, represents the rich man which they had once imagined. The three of them developed scenarios on how to get fast money to pay for their drug consummation, for the great child-like dream of freedom, for the anarchical dream of happiness: How much would grandpa Getty pay for his kidnapped grandson? But the direction quickly derails for the young man and the two 'gold-diggers'. Getty's ear is cut off during the spectacular real kidnapping.
Langhans/Ritter have combined wonderful older material with recent interviews conducted with famous acquaintances of the twins. Mostly they try to explain the specialness of Jutta and Gisela's twin existence, although it appears as if they are really exploring what eternal femininity is.
The twins mostly play with each other and for the camera- and it's good this way. They are totally direct in their playfulness, very close to life. They sometimes make it clear how wonderful melodrama is in film and how terrible in real-life. The "girl" represents the incalculable in stability, the rebellion from the old fashioned, the game in life, the hope in all disappointment. The unity of opposites is mostly the key to Jutta and Gisela, how the smiling and the crying eye is fused into the mask of the there muse. And both of them are fighters , in this film they prove that Andy Warhol was right in the sixties, about the fifteen minutes of stardom.
Lichtbilder - Holger Sauer 11. Mai 2008, 12:54
ich bin beeindruckt!lg holger
Pelue 9. Oktober 2005, 11:25
Schade, ich hab das Voting nicht mitbekommen. Von mir hätte das Foto ein Pro bekommen ... LG MartinStephan Tijink 9. Oktober 2005, 9:17 Voting-Anmerkung
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proJHK-Foto 9. Oktober 2005, 9:17 Voting-Anmerkung
schönes portrait!!PRO!
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ProStephan Tijink 9. Oktober 2005, 9:17 Voting-Anmerkung
proUwe Thon 9. Oktober 2005, 9:17 Voting-Anmerkung
da hätte selbst der woici mal pro sagen können :-))))(klaus, schöner fundusfund!!!)
Elke II 9. Oktober 2005, 9:17 Voting-Anmerkung
proK.-P. Schneider 9. Oktober 2005, 9:17 Voting-Anmerkung
Sanftes Portrait! PROJHK-Foto 9. Oktober 2005, 9:17 Voting-Anmerkung
schönes portrait!!PRO!
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+++ pro +++Sonja Witter 9. Oktober 2005, 9:17 Voting-Anmerkung
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P R OR
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Uwe Thon 9. Oktober 2005, 9:17 Voting-Anmerkung
da hätte selbst der woici mal pro sagen können :-))))(klaus, schöner fundusfund!!!)