“Inventur – Metzstraße 11”
Želimir
Žilnik
In “Inventur – Metzstraße 11,” the residents of a tenement
– mostly foreigners – come in as though walking
down an outdoor staircase and introduce themselves and
their life situations to the viewers. With this minimal setting,
Z¡ilnik strips the administrative term "inventory," taking
stock or a census, of its numerical and bureaucratic
meaning. Although the position of the camera is fixed, as
in a police situation, and each person identifies themselves
by name, it is not the number of people that counts;
indeed the line of people seems to be endless. This camera
situation guarantees their individuality, because each
person takes stock of their own situation in the Federal
Republic of Germany. They decide for themselves how
long they want to speak or what they want to say in front
of the camera, also exhibiting embarrassment or pleasure
in posing before the camera. All of them are performers of
their own role. Z¡ilnik provides them with the framework
they need for it.
Z¡
ilnik shot this short film in 1975 in Munich, which is
only relevant to the extent that Metzstraße is in Germany.
He lived in the Federal Republic of Germany from
1973–76, worked as a director and pursued the same goal
with his films here as in Yugoslavia, (which he left after
being banned from working) tracking abuses and becoming
actively involved in discussions as a filmmaker. One of
his films was then censored in the FRG as well. “Inventur
– Metzstraße 11” is a film that, together with “Unter
Denkmalschutz” (1975) paradigmatically shows property
speculation in many large German cities. Formerly upper
middle class residential areas are systematically turned
into slums by being over-populated with guest worker families
that usually pay highly inflated rents. Once the
objects have been run down in this way, they can be sold
– once the tenants have been given notice – as profitable
office and condominium palaces.
Filmmaker, born 1942, lives and works in Novi-Sad.
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