| In 1977,
the festival didn’t end on Sunday afternoon, but rather
went on into the evening. And that was a necessity, due to great
public demand. The festival’s organisers were pleased to
announce an increase in public interest – yet again.
| Self-confidently,
Badewitz declared that Hof no longer needed to make its claim
with big names. ‘We want to discover the new Herzogs’.
One of the most exciting events was Wolfgang Petersen’s
gay film DIE KONSEQUENZ (‘The consequence’). John
Cassavetes’ films made up the retrospective and zombie-specialist
George A. Romero provided for thrilling film nights with his
bloodthirsty spectacles. |
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Wolfgang Peterson’s
gay feature DIE KONSEQUENZ was screened at the 11th Hof
Film Festival. Still shot with Ernst Hannawald and Jürgen
Prochnow
1977 – Heinz Badewitz in the festival office with
George A. Romera who presented his cult movies NIGHT OF
THE LIVING DEAD, MARTIN and THE CRAZIES in Hof. The following
year he returned with ZOMBIE – DAWN OF THE DEAD. |
In 1978, according to the Munich-based Süddeutsche
Zeitung, ‘Hof was bursting at the seams’. The local
hotels were booked out and at the festival opening Badewitz paid
thanks for the amazing guests. Doris Dörrie, who had been
working for the festival since 1975 as an announcer, interpreter
and in guest assistance, was presented among the newcomers with
DER ERSTE WALZER (‘The first waltz’) – seven
years later she created the German romantic comedy with her hit
film MÄNNER (MEN…). But the real sensation came from
the Upper Palatinate; it was there that Josef Rödl, together
with laymen from his hometown, staged the tragedy of a person
unable of defending himself in ALBERT – WARUM? (ALBERT –
WHY?). John Carpenter celebrated his German debut with DARK STAR
and ASSAULT ON PRECINCT 13, and David Lynch, who would go on to
become even more famous, presented his experimental horror cult
movie ERASERHEAD.
Now, the
Hof Film Festival was well-established, ‘in
Germany, right up at the top’, as the Zurich-based
Weltwoche wrote, and was expanding, again: as of 1979, the
festival started on Wednesday evening. That meant more time
for repeat screenings and more slots for additional films,
whose directors, producers and distributors were pushing
to have their start in Hof.
It looked as if nothing could
go wrong. Even when the German films, for whom the festival
served as a major platform, had little to offer. But still,
films by Werner Schroeter, Rosa von Praunheim and Herbert
Achternbusch worked up audiences in 1979, and the Süddeutsche
Zeitung praised the ‘magician’s box of surprises
for cinema freaks’ and claimed that while the stream
of visitors at larger festivals was dwindling, Hof had ‘way
too many films and way too many viewers.’
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By this point, the festival had access to some DM 100,000, but
it still remained a low-budget festival. And in 1981, the maestro
of low-budget cinema was celebrated with an extensive retrospective:
Roger Corman presented nine of his films in person. 1982 saw the
German premiere of two Wim Wenders films – DER STAND DER
DINGE (THE STATE OF THINGS) and HAMMETT –, Achternbusch
was represented twice with DER DEPP (‘The twit’) and
DAS GESPENST (THE GHOST), Dominik Graf made his debut with DAS
ZWEITE GESICHT (‘Second sight’), Neil Jordan visited
from Ireland, and Jim Jarmusch brought along his 30 minutes’
version of STRANGER THAN PARADISE from the USA. It was in Hof
that Jarmusch found a backer to help him develop it into his first
feature-length film, which was then shown three years later, in
1984. That year also saw Neil Jordan travelling to Hof again (with
THE COMPANY OF WOLVES), as well as Wim Wenders (with PARIS, TEXAS),
and among the younger German directors, Oliver Herbrich strived
to distinguish himself as ‘the new Herzog’ with WODZECK.
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The quieter
films dominated, but there was also one horribly loud one:
A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET, Wes Craven’s starting signal
for the Freddie Krueger-series, had its world premiere in
Hof.
1980 – Canadian David Cronenberg,
‘the boy next door’ – here with Doris
Dörrie – comes to Hof to present his horror visions.
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