Please note that this video contains only the accessible version with audio description and subtitles for the hearing impaired. You can also find the video with the original audio track on arsenal 3.
The life of the oldest amusement park in the world is reflected in the parallel technical and media developments of filmmaking – kaleidoscopically visualized by way of flying camera movements set to texts by Elfriede Jelinek, Josef von Sternberg, Erich Kästner, and Elias Canetti. Within the world of illusion, which connects the ferris wheel to modern attractions that launch visitors out of an ejection seat, there are moments of intimacy: While young men test their strength at the “Watschenmann”, a dancing woman forgets everything around her. Cinema, a space of contemplation, of course began as a fairground attraction. The history of Vienna’s Prater theme park and the work of Ulrike Ottinger have something in common: The world becomes a stage and the stage the world. She reports on show booths and illusion machines, but in doing so also says something about her films. Against the backdrop of dreams of travel and encyclopedic curiosity, but also colonialist imagination, Prater brings the world into its hall of mirrors.
The digital restoration of PRATER was made possible through the film heritage support program (FFE) financed by the Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media, the states of Germany, and the German Federal Film Board (FFA).
Please note that this video contains only the accessible version with audio description and subtitles for the hearing impaired. You can also find the video with the original audio track on arsenal 3.
The life of the oldest amusement park in the world is reflected in the parallel technical and media developments of filmmaking – kaleidoscopically visualized by way of flying camera movements set to texts by Elfriede Jelinek, Josef von Sternberg, Erich Kästner, and Elias Canetti. Within the world of illusion, which connects the ferris wheel to modern attractions that launch visitors out of an ejection seat, there are moments of intimacy: While young men test their strength at the “Watschenmann”, a dancing woman forgets everything around her. Cinema, a space of contemplation, of course began as a fairground attraction. The history of Vienna’s Prater theme park and the work of Ulrike Ottinger have something in common: The world becomes a stage and the stage the world. She reports on show booths and illusion machines, but in doing so also says something about her films. Against the backdrop of dreams of travel and encyclopedic curiosity, but also colonialist imagination, Prater brings the world into its hall of mirrors.
The digital restoration of PRATER was made possible through the film heritage support program (FFE) financed by the Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media, the states of Germany, and the German Federal Film Board (FFA).