Hannes (Günther Maria Halmer), the tyrannical head of the family, is turning 70. His second wife (Michaela May) has invited the sons from his first marriage (Lars Eidinger, Marc Hosemann, Barnaby Metschurat) and their partners (Jördis Triebel, Daniel Krauss, Nele Mueller-Stöfen) and even his ex-wife (Hannelore Elsner) to a reconciliation party. At first, nobody could have guessed that the lavish Berlin family home would become a place of truth and catastrophe. A scandal erupts at the party as old wounds are reopened.
The family.
Probably the most important and formative thing in all our lives. The most important thing of all – but also annoying, difficult, exhausting, demanding, torn, sometimes funny, surprising, energy-sapping, changeable, beautiful, annoying and much more.
But almost never boring.
The family shapes all people. Everyone has had at least one, and often many, family experiences. The family also represents the basic structure of society. It is – still – the decisive small building block for the way people live together. It forms the most important framework for all our life experiences.
The idea of using a family celebration that ends in escalation as the framework for a narrative is not new. The dynamics of such celebrations, in which the past and the present come together, have been described and experienced in many different ways, including in the everyday stories of a wide variety of families and their celebrations, whether at Christmas or on
birthdays.
However, we were fascinated by the complexity of the specific family conflicts in this film “Family Feast”. The prevailing dynamics here are determined by power and dependency relationships and the celebration of the patriarch’s birthday exposes old and new wounds.
In our highly productive partnership with Caroline von Senden and ZDF, we developed a shared vision of a special, very intimate family portrait. Under the direction of Lars Kraume, the story has found a particularly sensitive and subtle realization. The narrative is special and unique and at the same time universally valid in comparison with all of our family experiences.
Nina Haun’s outstanding cast of wonderful actors, who brought the family vividly to life with their enormous enthusiasm and outstanding talent, was indispensable. By showing fractures and contradictions, all nine actors filled the family members with
life and provided insights into the complex characters. Leonard Cohen wrote: “There is a crack in everything. That’s how the light gets in. ” – this also applies to the family in this film and the art of its actors in a way that is both profound and entertaining.