In Germany, the forest is more than the sum of its trees: it is a myth, the backdrop of a great German theater. Looking at German cultural history, it is easy to recognize the forest as a leitmotif. And as a topos to which one returned again and again in the search for a national identity.
German culture, it is said, is rooted in the forest, at least since Germanic warriors defeated the Romans in the Varus Battle. In the Romantic period, the forest became a place of longing; it was painted, written about and sung about - and at the same time it was once again a symbol of national sovereignty. The Nazis instrumentalized it for their racist ideology - and the Heimat films of post-war German cinema for their dream image of an ideal world. The environmental movement of the 1980s fears for its national treasure during the forest death debate - and activists live in the highest treetops to save trees from clearing.
Through the centuries, the forest has always played a central role in Germany's self-image. How has this relationship changed? Because forest images, like the forests themselves, are constantly changing. With "Myth of the German Forest," filmmakers Annebeth Jacobsen and Peter Wolf take the viewer on a cultural-historical forest walk between forest solitude, forest management, forest dieback, forest ideology and forest love. The film explores the "German soul landscape forest" together with, among others, techno DJ Dominik Eulberg, forest blogger Fee Brauwers, forest owner Stephan Prinz zur Lippe and film lovers Dominik Porschen and Christoph Mathieu.
In Germany, the forest is more than the sum of its trees: it is a myth, the backdrop of a great German theater. Looking at German cultural history, it is easy to recognize the forest as a leitmotif. And as a topos to which one returned again and again in the search for a national identity.
German culture, it is said, is rooted in the forest, at least since Germanic warriors defeated the Romans in the Varus Battle. In the Romantic period, the forest became a place of longing; it was painted, written about and sung about - and at the same time it was once again a symbol of national sovereignty. The Nazis instrumentalized it for their racist ideology - and the Heimat films of post-war German cinema for their dream image of an ideal world. The environmental movement of the 1980s fears for its national treasure during the forest death debate - and activists live in the highest treetops to save trees from clearing.
Through the centuries, the forest has always played a central role in Germany's self-image. How has this relationship changed? Because forest images, like the forests themselves, are constantly changing. With "Myth of the German Forest," filmmakers Annebeth Jacobsen and Peter Wolf take the viewer on a cultural-historical forest walk between forest solitude, forest management, forest dieback, forest ideology and forest love. The film explores the "German soul landscape forest" together with, among others, techno DJ Dominik Eulberg, forest blogger Fee Brauwers, forest owner Stephan Prinz zur Lippe and film lovers Dominik Porschen and Christoph Mathieu.