Liebe Geschichte

Dokumentarfilm
2008
80 Min
RegieSimone Bader, Jo Schmeiser

How do women in Austria and Germany deal with their family’s Nazi past? Up until now, most­ly des­cen­dants of vic­tims and sur­vi­vors have loo­ked at the after-effects of National Socialism and the Holocaust. Now, the des­cen­dants of the per­pe­tra­tors, too, begin to exami­ne the traces of this past in their lives. They look at their family’s Nazi his­to­ries and inves­ti­ga­te how this ’nega­ti­ve heri­ta­ge‘, as Jean Amery has ter­med it, influen­ces their thoughts and actions as well as their approa­ches to love and rela­ti­onships.

In the film, the prot­ago­nists are shown in public spaces. Architecture from the 1950s, 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s and 2000s in Vienna are the loca­ti­ons for the film. They stand for the way National Socialism was dealt with in Austria and reflect the poli­ti­cal curr­ents during tho­se eras. The places cho­sen not only make refe­rence to his­to­ri­cal con­texts, they are also signi­fi­cant to the prot­ago­nists‘ per­so­nal lives. The impacts of their fami­lies and socie­ty on their lives are tied into the film’s visu­al con­cept.

The after effects of National Socialism for the per­pe­tra­tors‘ des­cen­dants have only rare­ly been the sub­ject of a film. There is litt­le works about the ways that women deal with their char­ged fami­ly histo­ry. In con­trast, a con­sidera­ble amount of inte­rest has been expres­sed inter­na­tio­nal­ly, for exam­p­le, the­re are audi­en­ces in England, Israel and the USA that are eager to dis­co­ver how des­cen­dants of the per­pe­tra­tors are con­ten­ding with their past. Love History aims to fill this void.