The Chronicle of Anna Magdalena Bach

The Chronicle of Anna Magdalena Bach

Region 1 DVD cover
Directed by Jean-Marie Straub
Danièle Huillet
Produced by Gian Vittorio Baldi
Written by Jean-Marie Straub
Danièle Huillet
Starring Gustav Leonhardt
Christiane Lang
Music by Johann Sebastian Bach
Cinematography Giovanni Canfarelli Modica
Saverio Diamante
Ugo Piccone
Edited by Danièle Huillet
Jean-Marie Straub
Release date
June, 1968 (Berlin Film Festival premiere)
Running time
94 minutes
Country West Germany
Language German

The Chronicle of Anna Magdalena Bach (German: Chronik der Anna Magdalena Bach) is a 1968 film by the French filmmaking duo of Jean-Marie Straub and Danièle Huillet. It was their first full-length feature film, and reportedly took a decade to finance. The film stars renowned harpsichordist Gustav Leonhardt as Johann Sebastian Bach and Christiane Lang as Anna Magdalena Bach. The orchestral music was performed by Concentus Musicus and conducted by Nikolaus Harnoncourt. It is the first of several Straub-Huillet films to be based on works of classical music. The film was entered into the 18th Berlin International Film Festival.[1]

Though, as on all of their films, Straub and Huillet contributed to the film equally, Straub is the officially credited director. Despite its austere, rigorous style, it is considered to be Straub and Huillet's most "mainstream" film.

Cast

Style and content

The Chronicle of Anna Magdalena Bach consists of excerpts from Johann Sebastian Bach's works, presented in chronological order and linked by a fictional journal written by his second wife, Anna Magdalena Bach. Each work is typically presented in a single, often immobile take, with the musicians performing in the locations where many of the works were premiered, dressed in period costumes.

Works excerpted in the film, in order of appearance, are:

References

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