Losing Balance

Losing Balance
Directed by Felix Fuchssteiner
Produced by Katharina Schöde
Written by Felix Fuchssteiner
Katharina Schöde
Starring Elisa Schlott
Michael Lott
Petra Kleinert
Sina Tkotsch
Music by Philipp F. Klömmel
Cinematography Matthias Schellenberg
Ralf Schlotter
Edited by Nicole Kortlücke
Running time
105 minutes
Country Germany
Language German

Losing Balance is a 2009 drama film, written and directed by Felix Fuchssteiner and Katharina Schöde.

Plot

Despite a dark secret, 14-year-old Jessika (Elisa Schlott) fights to keep her broken family together. When Jessika's father (Michael Lott) loses his job, their family life becomes an impossible struggle. While her parents try to repair their already off-balance relationship and her sister Caro (Sina Tkotsch) becomes increasingly obsessed with boys, Jessika is left to her own devices. The lack of communication between the parents and their incapability to manage their off kilter situation, culminates in a horrifying event, that Jessika is forced to witness. In the face of her parents delusional denial, Jessica begins to fall into a deep self-destructive depression. To save herself from her family's dark abyss, and despite her parents continuous attempts to hold her back, Jessika decides to take her future into her own hands and takes a very courageous step….

Awards

Losing Balance was awarded the Young German Cinema Award as Best Production. In addition Elisa Schlott won the award for Best New Actress. The Young German Cinema Award is awarded by the Bavarian Broadcasting Company (BR), the Bavaria Film Production and the Hypovereins Bank and is offered to promising young filmmakers every year as part of the Munich Film Festival. The film was also awarded as Best First Feature at Biberacher Filmfestspiele and got the Award of the Student Jury.

Reception

"Powerful themes of familial trauma, of a type that soap operas gleefully exploit, are handled by Fuchssteiner with remarkable integrity, wit, realism and restraint. LOSING BALANCE defies expectation. The story is profoundly affecting but never melodramatic; moving but never mawkish; clever but never cliched."[1]

"A beautifully crafted story that provides the opportunity for insight into the particular problems of a dysfunctional family. The lead character does a wonderful job as the "peacemaker" and the dynamic between the sisters and the contrast of their characters was incredibly convincing. It is a very touching film. Realistic, yet heartbreaking and hopeful in the end."[1]

References

  1. 1 2 Cambridge Film Festival Daily
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