Fabian Going to the Dogs
German Film Week 2021

Sep 30, 2021 | 07:00 pm
Salle Montaigne, Institut Français Beirut


Synopsis

Based on Erich Kästner’s deeply sad, autobiographical "Fabian".
Berlin, 1931. A milieu between sublets and the underworld, where brothels are artists’ studios, Nazis are yelling abuse in the streets and Babelsberg is dreaming of producing "psychological cinema". Life is surging, society is fermenting and corroding. As long as he still has a job, Jakob Fabian, who has a doctorate in German studies, writes advertising copy during the day and frequents the city’s more outlandish establishments with Stephan Labude at night. While his friend – who later confesses to having failed "in the subjects of life and profession" – is a go-getter when it comes to communism and sex, Fabian remains sober and distant. Without really believing in it, he is waiting for the “victory of decency”. His love for Cornelia is the only thing that makes him question his ironic fatalism. She becomes a ray of hope in his crumbling existence.
Source: 71. Internationale Filmfestspiele Berlin (Catalogue)

Scene "Fabian Going to the Dogs"
Fabian Going to the Dogs | © Film du Losange
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