Full Metal Village
Full Metal Village is a 2007 documentary film about the lives of the residents of a small village in the German state of Schleswig-Holstein, Wacken, in a series of interviews and visual tableaux as it prepares for the annual Wacken Open Air Festival. Taglined "Ein Heimatfilm", the director Cho Sung-Hyung explores the relationship of the 1,800 resident townsfolk and the brief annual influx of 70,000 metal music enthusiasts[1] who attend the open-air concert.
Full Metal Village | |
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Directed by | Cho Sung-Hyung |
Produced by | Helge Albers Roshanak Behesht Nedjad Konstantin Kröning |
Written by | Cho Sung-Hyung |
Starring | Uwe Trede Lore Trede Klaus H. Plähn Irma Schaack Eva Waldow |
Music by | Peyman Yazdanian |
Cinematography | Marcus Winterbauer |
Edited by | Cho Sung-Hyung |
Distributed by | Zorro Film (Germany) (Theat.) |
Release date |
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Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | Germany |
Language | German |
Notable scenes of the film are elderly villagers who confess to have 'heard' that the concert-goers worship Satan, and over-enthusiastic concert-goers headbanging to the traditional regional anthem played by a local fire department band to open the festival.
Awards
The film has so far garnered all three awards for which it has been nominated:[2] the 2007 Best Documentary at the Guild of German Art House Cinemas, the 2006 Best Documentary at the Hessian Film Award (prior to the film's theatrical release) and the 2007 Max Ophüls Award at the Max Ophüls Festival.
References
- Full Moon Productions Archived 10 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine synopsis of the film
- Awards & Nominations for Full Metal Village at the IMDB, retrieved 29 April 2008