Marmorera (film)

Marmorera

Swiss movie poster
Directed by Markus Fischer
Produced by Jörg Bundschuh
Markus Fischer
Josefa Haas
Written by Markus Fischer
Dominik Bernet
Starring Eva Dewaele
Anatole Taubman
Corin Curschellas
Mavie Hörbiger
Ursina Lardi
Mathias Gnädinger
Music by Peter Scherer
Cinematography Jörg Schmidt-Reitwein
Edited by Bernhard Lehner
Production
companies
Snakefilm GmbH, Kick Film GmbH, Schweizer Radio und Fernsehen SRF, ARTE[1]
Distributed by Rialto Film AG[1]
Release dates
25 January 2007[2]
Running time
95 min
Language German
Swiss German
Rumantsch

Marmorera is a 2007 Swiss film. It tells the fictitious story of the small Alpine village Marmorera, the identity of its inhabitants and a mysterious woman. The mystery film was filmed and produced in Switzerland.

Plot (excerpt)

Simon Cavegn's grandmother, mother and father were born in Marmorera. Cavegn and his wife Paula spend their honeymoon at the place of his family's origin. Taking some selfies, the newlyweds notice that a fisherman disappears on the Lai da Marmorera, the reservoir of the Marmorera dam. At the same time, a young woman is lying in the fisherman's boat. Cavegn believes that he has rescued the mysterious woman, but when emergency services arrive, the young woman seems to be dead. During the transfer to the hospital in Savognin, the red-haired woman "awakes", and some mysterious events occur in the following days. The confused young woman without identity and language is taken to the Burghölzli psychiatric clinic in Zürich where she soon becomes a puzzling figure of much concern for psychiatrists of the Burghölzli sanatorium in Zürich-Weinegg. Simon Cavegn becomes her psychiatrist in charge, calls the unknown woman Julia, and starts to discover the dark secret of Marmorera.

Cavegn was born and raised in Zürich. His parents died in a car accident. Soon Cavegn suspects that this patient will be much more than another medical problem to solve. Is Julia perhaps dangerous, or is she merely an interesting example of an extraordinary mind? Or is Julia actually a curse from a bygone era, which the residents of Marmorera have carefully tried to hide? Cavegn seems to be the only one to whom Julia spoke; she tells him a kind of visions that are related to the future deaths of people from Marmorera. However, on the videos that were taken in the course of the therapy, there is no sound, and even Julia is physically not able to speak. For Simon's wife Paula, Julia is soon a dangerous rival, although the unusual patient is always quiet and modest – as long as she is allowed to use a bathtub whenever she wants.

In the meantime, at the Marmorera village that was re-erected at the road to the Julier Pass in 1954, bizarre deaths accumulate, and Simon finds increasingly clear connections between these "accidents", his patient and the flooded mountain village at the base of the dam. Cavegn tries to talk about his observations with the chief psychiatrist, with his wife and with his friend, and he also contacts Motta, the attorney in charge who is investigating the increasing number of casualties. In Marmorera, myth and reality meet, and the remaining few inhabitants are convinced that the rumors about a curse are not just fairy tales. The inscription "Resistance" at the facade of a house in the new Marmorera village remembers that not all residents had agreed to sell their village and their country to the Zürich electricity company before the dam was built. Cavegn tries to prevent further casualties. Even the city of Zürich could be threatened by the curse of Marmorea because it draws its power supply from the power plant at the Marmorera reservoir. Cavegn fails in his endeavour.

Cast

Awards

Critical response

The German movie website film.de described the film as a moody and visually stunning horror thriller from Switzerland.[4]

Home media

The film was released under the title Marmorera - Der Fluch der Nixe in the DVD format (RC2) on 15 May 2008. The home release included language versions in German and Swiss German in Dolby Digital 5.1, and subtitles in English, French and German.[5]

Soundtrack

On occasion of the Festival del Film Locarno, the SUISA Foundation awarded Peter Scherer for the best film music. The members of the jury praised the musical quality of Scherer's composition and commended the outstanding performance of the Swiss Youth Symphony Orchestra for its commitment and its excellent interpretation.[3] The soundtrack by Scherer is also available as download.

Background

Zürich needed electrical power, and so – unceremoniously, despite the resistance of the population – the village Marmomera sunk in a dam reservoir in 1954. The village was rebuilt and its inhabitants resettled. Wide parts of the Alpine village of Marmorera and the surrounding valley were flooded for the dam project. Marmorera is a ghost story about the mystery of identity of individuals and a village that disappeared beneath the waters of a reservoir. It is a story about the identity of a young woman without name, origin and language skills, and the identity of a young psychiatrist who takes care of this young woman and gradually realises that his own identity is based on the soil of this mysterious lake, and on the identity of the growing number of dead people, who were all taken from their home village Marmorera.

Production

Based on the historical facts, the fictitious mystery film was produced at the original locations,[6] as well as in Savognin, in the Weinegg district of Zürich, on the Limmat River near Technopark Zürich, at the Limmatquai promenade, and on the Münsterbrücke river crossing towards Münsterhof.

The Swiss synchronised swimming team Limmat-Nixen was also involved in the production, "starring" Julia, the mysterious woman, in the last sequences of the film.

The script was published by Dominik Bernet as a paperback on 1 March 2008.[7]

Literature

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Marmorera". swissfilms.ch. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  2. "Marmorera (2007)". outnow.ch. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  3. 1 2 "Filmfestival Locarno: Soundtrack von "Marmorera" prämiert" (in German). suisa.ch. 2007-08-15. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  4. "Marmorera Film" (in German). film.de. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  5. "Marmorera - Der Fluch der Nixe" (in German). Ex Libris (bookshop). Retrieved 2015-09-03.
  6. Rolf Breiner. "Stausee-Spuk made in Switzerland" (in German). cineman.ch. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  7. "Marmorera - Dominik Bernet". Ex Libris (bookshop). Retrieved 2015-09-03.

External links

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