Event series
May 2026
Film Series Elfi Mikesch
Film Series|A Focus on her Work as Director
Together with Club des Femmes, we invite you to discover the artistry and imagination of an outstanding filmmaker and artist whose introduction to the UK is long overdue.
Photographer, camera woman, film director and much more - Elfi Mikesch has assumed many different roles throughout her now more than 60-year-long career and gifted us with a truly unique oeuvre that has strongly influenced feminist and queer cinema. As one of Germany’s most distinguished cinematographers, she has worked with Rosa von Praunheim, Monika Treut, Friederike Pezold, Heinz Emigholz, Cynthia Beatt and Teresa Villaverde. Of her wonderful work with Werner Schroeter, three works - The Rose King, Deux and Malina - can still be seen as part of the ICA’s Schroeter retrospective (until 12 April 2026).
Alongside these collaborations, she has created an astounding body of her own films, often directing, filming and editing them herself. This has given her the freedom to move fluidly between experimental, documentary and fictional forms. Her approach is playful and intimate, her imagery poetic and often stunningly beautiful. Her recurring themes include memory, desire and the subtle undercurrents of life. In her documentary work she meets people with curiosity, tenderness and a collaborative spirit, resulting in highly original encounters that challenge conventional views of those living at the margins.
Elfi Mikesch is 85 and has just received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the German Film Critics Association at the Berlinale. She remains full of energy and ideas for new projects. In this series, we will look back on her extraordinary work while also looking forward to more to come.
The programme will include Mikesch’s experimental documentaries I Often Think of Hawaii (1978) and What Shall We Do Without Death (1980), the queer, feminist cult classic Seduction: The Cruel Woman (1985) co-directed with Monika Treut (with a very young Udo Kier), the avant-garde feature Macumba (1981), featuring Werner Schroeter’s star Magdalena Montezuma, the autobiographically inspired feature Marocain (1989) and the more recent narrative feature Fever (2014), which revisits the themes of Marocain. Throughout the programme we will also be showing the shorts Execution. Study of Mary, The Blue Distance and The Breakfast of the Hyaena.
We will also have the opportunity for an online conversation with Elfi Mikesch on 13 May (tbc).
Please return the full programme after Easter.
Presented in collaboration with Club des Femmes.
With thanks to the Deutsche Kinemathek, Berlin, Salzgeber, as well as to Frieder Schlaich and Viviana Kammel at Filmgalerie 451 in Berlin.
Photographer, camera woman, film director and much more - Elfi Mikesch has assumed many different roles throughout her now more than 60-year-long career and gifted us with a truly unique oeuvre that has strongly influenced feminist and queer cinema. As one of Germany’s most distinguished cinematographers, she has worked with Rosa von Praunheim, Monika Treut, Friederike Pezold, Heinz Emigholz, Cynthia Beatt and Teresa Villaverde. Of her wonderful work with Werner Schroeter, three works - The Rose King, Deux and Malina - can still be seen as part of the ICA’s Schroeter retrospective (until 12 April 2026).
Alongside these collaborations, she has created an astounding body of her own films, often directing, filming and editing them herself. This has given her the freedom to move fluidly between experimental, documentary and fictional forms. Her approach is playful and intimate, her imagery poetic and often stunningly beautiful. Her recurring themes include memory, desire and the subtle undercurrents of life. In her documentary work she meets people with curiosity, tenderness and a collaborative spirit, resulting in highly original encounters that challenge conventional views of those living at the margins.
Elfi Mikesch is 85 and has just received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the German Film Critics Association at the Berlinale. She remains full of energy and ideas for new projects. In this series, we will look back on her extraordinary work while also looking forward to more to come.
The programme will include Mikesch’s experimental documentaries I Often Think of Hawaii (1978) and What Shall We Do Without Death (1980), the queer, feminist cult classic Seduction: The Cruel Woman (1985) co-directed with Monika Treut (with a very young Udo Kier), the avant-garde feature Macumba (1981), featuring Werner Schroeter’s star Magdalena Montezuma, the autobiographically inspired feature Marocain (1989) and the more recent narrative feature Fever (2014), which revisits the themes of Marocain. Throughout the programme we will also be showing the shorts Execution. Study of Mary, The Blue Distance and The Breakfast of the Hyaena.
We will also have the opportunity for an online conversation with Elfi Mikesch on 13 May (tbc).
Please return the full programme after Easter.
Presented in collaboration with Club des Femmes.
With thanks to the Deutsche Kinemathek, Berlin, Salzgeber, as well as to Frieder Schlaich and Viviana Kammel at Filmgalerie 451 in Berlin.
Events
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Elfi Mikesch: I Often Think of Hawaii + The Hyaena's Breakfast
Film | Goethe-Kino (Cinema Screening)
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Goethe-Institut London, London
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