Despite the year and the title, Ali: Fear Eats the Soul has
nothing to do with Muhammad Ali (in case you were wondering.) It’s a German film from
writer/director/producer Rainer Werner Fassbinder. At the center of the movie is a marriage
between a 60ish white German woman and a 30-something Arab immigrant. The two meet by chance, get married almost by
accident, and then receive the collective condemnation from almost everybody
they know. This film avoids most of the
clichés about this either bringing them together or driving them apart. Instead, what has a bigger impact on their
relationship and marriage is that both seem lost at where they are at this
point in their lives and neither really seems to know what they want.
One day Emmi (Brigitte Mira) ducks into a café to get out of
the rain. Everyone in there just stares
at her. She asks what the strange music
is that’s playing and is told it’s Arab music.
At the prodding of his friend, a man named Ali (El Hedi ben Salem ) asks her to
dance. No one else in the bar does
anything except watch them. Emmi asks
Ali if he’d like to leave. Despite the
difference in their ages and in their backgrounds, they do.
While walking up the stairs to her apartment a neighbor
woman sees Emmi and Ali going into her place together. She immediately gossips to the other neighbor
women. After a few drinks Ali and Emmi
end up in bed. When they leave together
the next morning this just stirs up the women more. Emmi is a cleaning woman and Ali is a
mechanic, so each probably would have said they had seen some of the worst that
life has to offer. They would have been
wrong.
Emmi tries to seek Ali out again at the café, but he isn’t
there and she just gets a hostile reception from the Arab people that are in
it. When she returns to her apartment
she finds Ali waiting outside it, getting equally hateful stares from the white
women in the building. One of them
reports her to the landlord, and in a panic Emmi tells him she isn’t subletting
to Ali like he thinks; but that they are living together before getting
married. Satisfied, he goes away, but
now Emmi and Ali have to go through with the lie and make it real.
When Emmi tells her grown children they react horribly. A son-in-law (Fassbinder) violently destroys
her TV. Later, her co-workers pretend
she doesn’t even exist and the women in the building tell her that she needs to
clean up after Ali because he’s making the building dirtier. Ali isn’t faring any better. A local grocer pretends not to understand him
in order to refuse him service. An Arab
woman he knows calls Emmi an “old whore” and tries to lure him away from Emmi
and to her bed instead. Will Emmi and
Ali break up? Will they stay
together? Will the virulent hatred
continue against them from everyone they know?
Mira won Best Actress at the German Film Awards for her
portrayal of the older, lost Emmi, who despite everything falls in love with a
man everyone thinks is wrong for her. ben
Salem , who was Fassbinder’s lover at the time,
seems less polished, but you can tell that in some scenes Fassbinder must have
used his own relationship with ben Salem
and the hatred they received as material for what he put in the film. ben Salem
seems more naturally reactive in those, as if he doesn’t have to search for the
right emotions.
Mira had a very long career, stretching from just after WWII
up into the 2000s. Strangely, even
though he was much younger than her, ben Salem
died of a heart attack just two years after making this film. It is easily his best known role.
If the description of Ali: Fear Eats the Soul sounds
familiar it’s because you’ve probably seen the 1955 movie All That Heaven
Allows. Reportedly, Fassbinder was a fan
of Douglas Sirk, who directed it. In that
film older well-to-do widow Jane Wyman falls in love with her younger gardener
Rock Hudson. In this case it’s their
social classes that separate them and that brings down the condemnation of her
children upon her. Ironically, both
leading men happened to be gay in real life and at the times their movies were
made they would have received a whole other level of condemnation had it been
widely known.
Ali: Fear Eats the Soul is a good film that didn’t quite
reach great status for me. It’s probably
the most mainstream of Fassbinder’s movies and is probably a good place to
start if you’ve never seen anything he has done. If this film sounds interesting then I
recommend you give it a try.
Chip’s Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
I can endorse this one -- I liked it a lot. I thought the most interesting part was that after the neighbors started accepting the relationship Emmie started seeing Ali with a whole new set of eyes and treating him quite differently.
ReplyDeleteYes, each goes through some changes in how they think of each other.
DeleteGood not great works for me. I like a lot of what the film is about and what it tries to do. I just don't love the execution all the way through.
ReplyDeleteFor me it was that I was left feeling like I should have felt something a little more for the two of them than I did.
DeleteI liked the performances and the theme of prejudice, my rating is a little higher, the film ranks #9th in my top 10 of 1974.
ReplyDeleteI’ve not seen all of Fassbinder’s work, the guy was an absolute machine…over 40 films.
I watched the BRD Trilogy he did,which is worth a watch. The first film, The Marriage of Maria Braun (1979), was my favorite from trilogy.
A couple of others, The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant (1972),& Fox and His Friends (1975), I have heard are among his best, but I haven’t gotten to those two yet.
I watched this film, Bitter Tears, and Fox back to back to back. I liked each of them better than average. I watched Maria Braun some time later. I thought it was good, but not as good as the three films from him I had seen before. I've since seen a couple more from the They Shoot Pictures Don't They list and I didn't care for them that much. In a Year with 13 Moons just didn't sell the concept to me; It was a drama, but I couldn't take it seriously - that on a whim from a gay lover a man would get a sex change operation. Berlin Alexanderplatz is ambitious, but the first 8 hours of the TV miniseries mostly meanders. The next 5 hours are good, but then the final hour and a half is pure indulgence by Fassbinder and was a huge middle finger to the viewer who had sat there for 14.5 hours watching it.
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