Fox And His Friends
Criterion Collection (1975)
Drama, Queer Themes/Interest, Romance
In Collection
#747
8*
Seen ItYes
(10/18/2018 Home)
720917530826
IMDB   7.7
123 mins Germany / German
DVD  Region 1
Peter Chatel Eugen Thiess
Rainer Werner Fassbinder Franz Biberkopf
Karlheinz Böhm Max
Adrian Hoven Wolf Thiess, Eugen's father
Christiane Maybach Hedwig
Harry Baer Philip
Hans Zander Barman Springer
Kurt Raab Wodka-Peter
Rudolf Lenz Attorney Dr. Siebenkäss
Karl Scheydt Klaus
Peter Kern Florist 'Fatty' Schmidt
Karl-Heinz Staudenmeyer Krapp
Walter Sedlmayr Car dealer
Bruce Low Doctor
Marquard Bohm American Soldier
Brigitte Mira Shopkeeper #2
Evelyn Künneke Secretary at Travel Agency
Barbara Valentin Max's wife
Elma Karlowa Shopkeeper #1
Ingrid Caven Singer in bar
Lilo Pempeit Neighbour
Ulla Jacobsson Eugen's mother
Adrian Hoven Wolf Thiess / Eugen's father
Hark Bohm Policeman Müller
Katherina Buchhammer Madame Antoinette
El Hedi ben Salem Salem the Moroccan
Director/Choreographer
Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Producer Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Writer/Composer Rainer Werner Fassbinder (screenplay)
Christian Hohoff
Rainer Werner Fassbinder
Cinematography Michael Ballhaus
Music Peer Raben


Fox, a former circus performer, wins the lottery of DM 500,000 and can now have the life and things that he has always wanted. While he wants to climb up the social ladder, it isn't without turmoil, and being torn between his old working class roots, and the shiny new facade of middle class consciousness.
Edition Details
Original Title Faustrecht der Freiheit
Release Date 2002
No. of Discs/Tapes 1
Personal Details
Purchase Date 10/7/2018
Location Personal Library
Owner Deitz
Store EBay
Links +3/4 Review: Roger Ebert (by Ebert himself, February 16, 1979 )
Faustrecht der Freiheit at Core for Movies
TheMovieDb.org
IMDB

Notes
Fassbinder himself takes the leading role, playing a naive and slightly dense, young working-class man who wins the state lottery and soon finds himself - and his lottery winnings - embraced in Munich's gay circles· Poignant, I loved it· Perhaps my favorite Fassbinder film, even though Fassbinder, like many directors, seems not to know how to end the film without adopting a gay themed film cliche.