Today the moving feature film “Second Thoughts” (German title: “Ich Ich Ich“) by director Zora Rux on the Darling Berlin label distributed by UCM.ONE opens in cinemas nationwide. The premiere took place yesterday at the KuturBrauerei in Berlin.

What would happen if you showed each other your thoughts? How much honesty can a relationship take? In her first feature film, director Zora Rux, a long-time collaborator of Swedish filmmaker Roy Andersson, tells a surrealistic-comic story about the search for the true self in poetic tableaux.

Summary

Marie (Elisa Plüss) is surprised by her boyfriend Julian (Thomas Fränzel) with a marriage proposal at his brother’s wedding in front of the assembled family. Marie has no idea how to react to this. She piles into the countryside to think about herself, her life and her relationship alone. Alone?

In her mother’s holiday home, things soon become increasingly cramped and absurd: for Marie’s thoughts suddenly take shape, her thought-people become more numerous and penetrating. They force possible baby names on her, an ex-boyfriend climbs down trees and a “lyrical me” in a sari proclaims Marie’s inner world in verse. Finally, her would-be fiancé arrives in the deceptive loneliness of the Uckermark for real and brings a whole busload of his own thought people with him…

Second Thoughts | Trailer (German with English Subs) á´´á´°

You are currently seeing a placeholder content of Youtube. To access the actual content, click on the button below. Please note that data will be passed on to third-party providers.

Further information

Comments about the movie

“In her feature film debut, Zora Rux shows a life world so alienated that it seems to belong to everyone else rather than to the protagonist’s “I”.” (FAZ)

“About the search for a “we”. In her film, Zora Rux takes the viewer into the surreal world of visualised thoughts.” (Schwäbische Zeitung)

 “Directed by Zora Rux in a way that is as original as it is masterful.” (Tagesspiegel)

“Director Zora Rux finds convincing and surprising and overwhelming moments in her feature-length debut Ich Ich. Incredible images, psychologically precise and playfully light. It’s funny and profound and exciting throughout.” (Cinema Times)

“This imaginative feature film debut is in the tradition of Swedish surrealist Roy Andersson. With poetic images, the film plumbs the search for one’s own path in life through the introspection of the main characters.” (Filmdienst)

More information about the movie: Second Thoughts

More information about the label: Darling Berlin