The Merchant of Four Seasons
1971 · Movie · 89 min. · Germany - West Germany (FRG)
Der Händler der vier Jahreszeiten (The Merchant of Four Seasons) is one of Rainer Werner Fassbinder's several "bourgeois films" that depict and critique middle-class society. The film deceptively unfolds like a standard bourgeois melodrama: there is the black sheep son, the disappointed mother, the unhappy wife, the sympathetic sister. Its protagonist, Hans (Hans Hirschmüller), deteriorates predictably: the love of his life marries another for prestige, his mother openly despises him, his wife manipulates him, he cannot run his business himself, and he drinks himself to death. Yet, these generic constructs match the middle-class ritual that emasculates and destroys men like Hans. When his loving sister defends him to his family, he hushes her. Hans has accepted his place as the pathetic character that they describe. He does not know enough to blame those around him for his emotional destruction, and (as brilliantly embodied by Hirschmüller) cannot leave them for a better life because they have already sucked up his courage and strength. Many films attack the bourgeois, but very few have the guts to show a heterosexual man as its victim. Hans' story is both different and effective. Aubry Anne D'Arminio - All Movie Guide.
Direction Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Cast Hans Hirschmüller · Irm Hermann · Hanna Schygulla · Gusti Kreisal · Kurt Raab · Klaus Löwitsch · Andrea Schober · Ingrid Caven · Karl Scheydt · Heide Simon · El Hedi ben Salem · Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Soundtrack Rocco Granata
Screenplay Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Cinematography Dietrich Lohmann
Original title Händler der vier Jahreszeiten
6.9
740 votes (FilmAffinity)
Add to lists
Share