On a film set there are two things missing, the film material and the director. So the actors and actresses as well as the crew try to make the best out of the situation. When the director a... Read allOn a film set there are two things missing, the film material and the director. So the actors and actresses as well as the crew try to make the best out of the situation. When the director arrives the material is still missing and so they still wait and try to make the best out o... Read allOn a film set there are two things missing, the film material and the director. So the actors and actresses as well as the crew try to make the best out of the situation. When the director arrives the material is still missing and so they still wait and try to make the best out of the situation. When the material finally arrives all folks involved into the film find t... Read all
- Director
- Writer
- Stars
- Eddie
- (as Eddi Constantine)
- Babs, Produktionssekretärin
- (as Margarete von Trotta)
- Billi, Maskenbildnerin
- (as Monika Teuber)
- Mike, Kameramann
- (as Gianni di Luigi)
- Deiters, Fotograf
- (as Werner Schröter)
- Oberbeleuchter
- (as Rudolf-Waldemar Brem)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
In terms of the storytelling, I was thrown off at first by Beyond a Holy Whore. It's not really very uniformly put together, and makes 8 1/2 look about as lucid as a Hollywood Golden Age picture by comparison. It's not really dreamlike, but it's got a sad, perverse streak of rotten existentialism going on (or maybe what Fassbinder thinks it is). So, from time to time, it is a little choppy, as one scene goes into the next without much of a sense of where the story is. But after a while I got into the modus operandi; this is by design a story of this man, Jeff, and his producer, Sascha, along with various groupies, gay folk, disgruntled actors, going along with a flow that never seems to be taking any charge. What becomes clear, in segments that occasionally have comedy to them (I just started laughing at one bit where Jeff was losing it and crying hysterically while directing a scene) and sometimes have a lonesomeness as via the characters, is that film-making can be a rotten enterprise when the creative well runs dry.
But it's not just about creativity or lack of inspiration for Fassbinder; it's also a kind of mood that he sets which is important, of going through a similar self-imposed brutality that the director wants depicted in the film within the film. As far as "director self-commentary" pictures go, it's not one of the best ever made. But it is an interesting picture all the same, one that grows on the viewer accepting of its loose form and sad notes - not to mention fine points of irony like the sweet Leonard Cohen songs playing over the decay at the bar.
The film starts with the verbal recanting of a Goofy cartoon. This is possibly the most linear part of the entire film's narrative but that's not an insult. The rest of the film shows fragments of how the characters interact on many different levels. The movie also shows the power relations and how these shift throughout the film's duration.
The film crew resemble a Germanic version of the trope of superstars Warhol used to use. With waiting comes emotions ranging from an utter lack of enthusiasm through to explosive rage about proceedings not starting when they should or crew members not doing what they should when filming does actually begin.
This film was based on Fassbinder's experiences of making the film Whity. It must have been hell for him judging by the events depicted here.
If you're looking for a film with a linear narrative, a 'start, middle and end', if you will, this isn't for you. But if you're looking to be swept away by Fassbinder into a film that is more of an experience, then you'll love this.
The maestro's Bavarian-slob ripoff of Warhol's Factory is keenly lampooned in this oh-so-languid art-movie take on TWO WEEKS IN ANOTHER TOWN. Fassbinder plays a grubby and wildly sadistic producer holed up in a half-swanky, half-tatty seaside hotel with half a movie in the can and no finishing funds. That's the Beckettian setup for a lobby full of achingly sexy and heroin-esque Fassbinder heroines, pretty boys getting their feelings hurt, drinks swallowed and thrown, and a lot of people getting yelled at in public. If that sounds like par for a familiar course, the difference is that here it's all played for yuks--but with such an exquisite deadpan you can practically hear R.W.F. smothering his guffaws behind the camera.
Did you know
- TriviaAmong Bob Dylan's favorite films
- Quotes
Journalist: What kind of movie is it?
Jeff, Regisseur: It's a film about brutality. What else would one make a movie about?
- Crazy creditsBefore the credits the following can be found: 'Ich sage Ihnen, dass ich oft sterbensmuede bin, das Menschliche darzustellen ohne am Menschlichen teilzuhaben. - Thomas Mann' (I tell you that I am often deadly tired to represent human kind without to participate in human kind.)
- ConnectionsFeatured in Rainer Werner Fassbinder, 1977 (1977)
- SoundtracksLet's Go Get Stoned
Written and Performed by Ray Charles
- How long is Beware of a Holy Whore?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Warnung vor einer heiligen Nutte
- Filming locations
- Hotel Bellevue Syrene, Sorrento, Naples, Campania, Italy(Terraces, interiors)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- DEM 1,100,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $8,144
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $11,623
- Feb 16, 2003
- Gross worldwide
- $9,115
- Runtime
- 1h 43m(103 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1