Songs of the Earth

6 movies

Experimental film series by Klaus Wyborny

1Grace, Things (Song of the Earth Part 5)

Grace, Things (Song of the Earth Part 5)

1985

The fifth of five parts of Klaus Wyborny's "Lieder der Erde" / "Song of the Earth" cycle of films, whose theme is "the emergence of modern European civilization." The series comprises five large parts, which are in turn divided into various selections or short films.

2At the Edge of Darkness (Song of the Earth Part 1)

At the Edge of Darkness (Song of the Earth Part 1)

1985

This is the first of five parts of Klaus Wyborny's "Lieder der Erde" / "Song of the Earth" cycle of films, whose theme is "the emergence of modern European civilization."

3

Abandoned; Lost; Lonely, Cold (Song of the Earth Part 3)

1992

Third part of a cycle of five films titled SONGS OF THE EARTH, whose theme is the emergence of European civilization.

4

From the Age of Recklessness (Song of the Earth Part 4)

19948.0

The fourth of five parts of Klaus Wyborny's "Lieder der Erde" / "Song of the Earth" cycle of films, whose theme is "the emergence of modern European civilization." The series comprises five large parts, which are in turn divided into various selections or short films.

5

Another World (Song of the Earth Part 2)

20045.0

The second of five parts of Klaus Wyborny's "Lieder der Erde" / "Song of the Earth" cycle of films, whose theme is "the emergence of modern European civilization." The series comprises five large parts, which are in turn divided into various selections or short films.

6Studies for the Decay of the West

Studies for the Decay of the West

20107.0

Wyborny’s latest flicker film concentrates on factories, industrial wastelands, waterways, cityscapes, and the bits in between, and has an uncanny emotional resonance. It is “serene, in the manner of ants”—to quote the title of the second section—but it is also elegiac and melancholy. Like two other old cranks (Godard and Straub), the director stays true to ideas about filmic composition gestated over many years and thereby provides a glimpse of a utopian cinema.