Martha (1973)
Facts
| Directed by | Rainer Werner Fassbinder |
| Cast | Margit Carstensen, Karlheinz Böhm, Barbara Valentin, Peter Chatel, Gisela Fackeldey, Ingrid Caven, Kurt Raab and Wolfgang Schenck |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 1972 |
| DVD Release | April 13, 2004 |
| Running Time | 115 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | Unrated |
| UPC Code | 695026703822 |
| Buy this item | $17.99 at Amazon.com As of Dec 5 12:29 EST (details) 1 DVD, Fantoma, Usually ships in 24 hours, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Subtitled, NTSC Languages: German (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), English (Subtitled) Or 13 new from $11.35, 9 used from $9.79, 1 collectible from $24.98 |
Website Links
- Movie Review Query Engine - Directory of movie reviews.
- IMDb - Features plot summaries, reviews, cast lists, and theatre schedules.
- Art.com - Search for Martha posters.
Similar Movies
User Reviews
Average user review:| Arthouse or convention? |
| Excellently disturbing |
In this movie, Martha, a 31-year-old virgin marries Helmut, a wealthy engineer. From dating to marriage, Helmut completely dominates Martha and makes her do things she doesn't want to do. He makes her ride rollercoasters with him which she fears, he makes her listen to his favorite music, makes her read a book about his profession which she finds boring. He even finally orders her not to leave their house, so that she can exist exclusively for him. He has very violant sex with her, which includes bites, bruises, even when she is heavily sun-burned. He both physically, mentally, and emotionally terrorizes her.
Why does Martha, at least for most of the movie, let Helmut do this to her? This is a result of a loveless marriage between her mother and father. Both were unhappily married, disliked one another, and often expressed that onto Martha, frequently putting her down. Her father makes fun of her all the time. Her mother calls her a disgusting 31-year-old virgin and blames the father's death on her. As a result of this, Martha needs someone like Helmut to dominate her and usually finds Helmuts sadistic behavior acceptable.
Even other people in the movie are heading in the direction of unhappy loveless marriages. Her boss at the library asks her associate to marry him after Martha turns him down. Martha's sister also gets married out of pressure.
At the end, the marriage between Martha and Helmut has tragic consequences. I think the message of the movie is a criticism of society and how many people get married for the wrong reasons and end up destroying their lives.
People anywhere in the world can relate to this movie and I think people should watch it before making the final decision on popping or answering the big question.
Note: The scene where he has violant sex with her on their honeymoon is quite disturbing.
March 28, 2005
| Eery |
| See This Movie.You will never see another like it (!!!) |
THEY WILL NEVER ALLOW ANOTHER LIKE IT TO BE MADE AGAIN (!!!).
A brilliant black comedy,
On a subject never before seen in a movie or elsewhere for that
matter.
This movie is as unique as CALIGULA.
YOU'LL LAUGH TILL YOU DROP (!!!).
HILLARIOUS********
August 12, 2004
| Fassbinder is at his best in Martha. |
Martha is a librarian who watches helplessly as her father dies of heart failure on the Spanish Steps in Rome. On her way for help to the German Embassy in Rome, she passes by a man who takes special notice of her. Fassbinder emphasizes this chance meeting by using a startling 360 degree camera shot. We know instantly that this encounter will have important consequences later in the story. In fact, Martha meets the man again at a wedding reception in Germany. After a brief courtship, she marries him and begins her slow descent into a living hell.
The man she marries is Helmut Salamon, a structural engineer who immediately begins to take complete control over Martha's life. He tenders her resignation at her job, establishes her in an old fashioned mansion which Martha hates, isolates her from friends and family, and finally asks that she not go out of the house at all. Sexually he abuses her with his violent passion which includes bites that are clearly visible and painful. He tells her to stop listening to her favorite music. Ironically, she loves Lucia de Lammermoor. He gives her Orlando di Lasso to listen to, which Martha says is boring. He even demands that she read a book on structural engineering. Finally, he removes the phone from the house completing Martha's isolation. Helmut slowly drives Martha insane and enjoys watching her steady deterioration into madness.
If this plot sounds familiar, it is. Fassbinder loved going to the movies as a child and began making his own films as a teenager. He gave his own original stamp to what might have been seen as an overworked plot. With Fassbinder, we come back again to where we have been before, but see with new understanding what we previously thought we had learned.
Margit Cartensen as Martha and Karlheinz Bohm as Helmut are both excellent as is the entire cast, but it is Fassbinder, the director, who is the real star of this show. His creativity and imagination in focusing our attention on what we see give new meaning to our understanding of the power of motion pictures.
Fassbinder died youg, but his legacy in film is secure with pictures like Martha. July 29, 2004
More reviews at Amazon.com ...





