This document provides an analysis of German filmmaker Wim Wenders and his exploration of vision and religious themes in his films. It discusses how Wenders began as a painter focused on capturing visible reality but realized films could reveal deeper truths not seen. His films Paris Texas and Wings of Desire are examined for how they achieve a "religious aesthetic" through their portrayal of relationships and implying spiritual awareness without overt religious symbols. Wenders' own spiritual journey from rejecting his Catholic upbringing to eventually returning to Christianity is also summarized.
This document provides an analysis of German filmmaker Wim Wenders and his exploration of vision and religious themes in his films. It discusses how Wenders began as a painter focused on capturing visible reality but realized films could reveal deeper truths not seen. His films Paris Texas and Wings of Desire are examined for how they achieve a "religious aesthetic" through their portrayal of relationships and implying spiritual awareness without overt religious symbols. Wenders' own spiritual journey from rejecting his Catholic upbringing to eventually returning to Christianity is also summarized.
This document provides an analysis of German filmmaker Wim Wenders and his exploration of vision and religious themes in his films. It discusses how Wenders began as a painter focused on capturing visible reality but realized films could reveal deeper truths not seen. His films Paris Texas and Wings of Desire are examined for how they achieve a "religious aesthetic" through their portrayal of relationships and implying spiritual awareness without overt religious symbols. Wenders' own spiritual journey from rejecting his Catholic upbringing to eventually returning to Christianity is also summarized.
This document provides an analysis of German filmmaker Wim Wenders and his exploration of vision and religious themes in his films. It discusses how Wenders began as a painter focused on capturing visible reality but realized films could reveal deeper truths not seen. His films Paris Texas and Wings of Desire are examined for how they achieve a "religious aesthetic" through their portrayal of relationships and implying spiritual awareness without overt religious symbols. Wenders' own spiritual journey from rejecting his Catholic upbringing to eventually returning to Christianity is also summarized.
Wim Wenders We understand the outside of things, we think we have them: the Lord puts his things in sub-dened, suggestive shapes, yielding no satisfactory meaning to the mere intellect, but unfolding themselves to the conscience and the heart. 1 Ambiguity is sometimes an uncomfortable place. But, as George MacDonalds words above suggest, sometimes a divine interaction makes an imprint on the heart, where the mind ceases to recognise the meaning. At times, lm achieves the same ambiguity: while there may be no set interpretation of the message, the image itself makes an imprint on the soul. In this essay I will argue that in the lms of Wim Wenders, what we see reveals the truth, even more than what we understand. Wenders asks his viewers to look, to see things as they really are, and thereby to nd the truth. As his friend and collaborator Scott Derrickson explains, He wont tell you what to feel, so when you watch his lms, you have to think about what you are seeing [. . . ] you have to interact with the lm. Hollywood movies manipulate your emotions, but his lms give you freedom to respond without coaxing. 2 And it is this power to respond that allows Wenders images to be aesthetic achievements while at the same time moving beyond the immediacy of Kierkegaardian aesthetics. As Wenders explains: [Films] can reveal something that you cant actually see. When I started out, because I started out as a painter, I strictly believed in the visible, and [. . . ] that was it. [But] in the course of making movies, I realised that something I hadnt actually seen in front of my camera was then there in the movie. 3 The Images of Wim Wenders 177 FAITH IN FI LM Wenders began his lm career as a reviewer in Munich in the 1970s, after bouts as a student of medicine, philosophy, and painting. As a child of post-war West Germany and one of the leading lmmakers in the neue deutsche Kino, Wenders work has been recognised throughout the world in the secular media, but his lms have largely been overlooked by those studying Christianity and global lm. Besides featuring in Jeffrey Overstreets Through a Screen Darkly and David Jaspers The Sacred Desert, as well as the important interviews given to fellow lmmaker and friend Scott Derrickson, mentions of his lms have been brief or altogether missing from an ever-expanding theology and lm literature. As far as I am aware, even journal articles recognising religious elements in his lms are scarce. 4 This has come as a surprise to me, as I had always considered him to be, thematically, one of the more overtly religious contemporary European directors. As I elaborate upon in this essay, what I consider makes him a religious lmmaker is his dedication to seeing something spiritual by means of the image by revealing something that you cant actually see to the conscience and the heart, hence demonstrating a new way for lm to be an alternative language for religious understanding. Wenders own relationship to Christianity similarly lacks written examination. In essays collected in his books The Act of Seeing and The Logic of Images, his agnostic viewpoint is obvious. But as he explains in a 2004 interview, his disdain for the Catholic faith of his parents was a path that only took him back to Christianity: I went as far away from the Catholic Church as possible, I thought that all churches were the same. The Catholic Church had made some tremendous mistakes, and I had taken these mistakes too personally. For twenty years I never attended church anywhere. [. . . ] For twenty years, being on the road itself became the topic [of my lms and life], as the destination was so uncertain. Looking back, I was like a pilgrim who didnt believe in the marked path anymore, but still believed that being on the road had to lead somewhere as long as I was relentless about it. 5 This relentless search eventually led him back to the church but this time the Presbyterian Church in the early 1990s. Maybe it is no surprise that the themes and structures have remained the same; it is only the very prominent bent toward reconciliation that has changed. However, because of the great thematic consistency and the intangible religious qualities of 178 STUDIES IN WORLD CHRISTIANITY his road movies, I have chosen to focus on two of his lms fromthe 1980s, Paris Texas (1984) and Wings of Desire (1987), and their contribution to Wenders religious aesthetics. Each makes a powerful case in spite of his agnostic position at the time. Thomas Martin denes the category of religious aesthetics as follows: Religious consciousness is the sense of relatedness that the human has with the others of the world as all are rooted in a common greater whole. [. . . ] Awareness of the mystery and awesomeness of all existences, of all beings, of all the expressions of life forces does not necessarily lead to a sense of their radical interrelatedness but is a prerequisite for this extraordinary sense of reality. 6 Wenders lms full this prerequisite by depicting the inherent relation- ships of things through the form and image of his mis-en-scne, composition, and cinematography, implying religious awareness without providing the viewer with clearly metaphorical or representational religion. The nature of these physical, visual relationships on the screen, and their ability to depict something beyond vision, is the area of my exploration. THE BLURRING OF VISION The motif of seeing has been both the catalyst and the cataract for Wenders throughout his career. While he began his profession as an image- maker initially a painter, prior to becoming a lmmaker 7 essentially to recreate vision, or the act of seeing, Wenders soon lost faith in the truth of the images themselves, disconnected from narrative vision. The tendency towards image-preserving in Wenders early lms leads lm critic Alexander Graf to call Wenders cinema a documentary cinema, because the cinema-image is ideally suited to the documentation of the visual world, the illusion of actual presence. 8 But the troubling proliferation of image-making in the 1980s, spurred on by easy access to video technology and television, became cause for Wenders to doubt the truth of images, considering these constantly changing, manufactured images to be a violation of the trust he had previously placed in them. It is this paradox that creates Wenders problem of vision, which he continues to explore both thematically and visually in his lms. Through examining Wenders own lm reviews of the late 1960s and essays of the early 1970s, and comparing them to more recent interviews and published speeches and essays, the progression of this problem and the different ways he chooses to address it should become clear. The Images of Wim Wenders 179 Schooled by the sweeping landscapes of the American West in Anthony Mann and John Fords classic Westerns, Wenders began making lms for the express purpose of capturing life seeing something, and seeing it only. His task was to record time, changing the relationship of the viewer to the present. Thus, he set his camera up and captured the moment, as if it were a painting in time. 9 But this way of seeing soon gave way to the deeper philosophical ideas of vision that Wenders had adopted from those early Westerns, as he began to reect more on what had inuenced him. He loved the lms with an openness that allowed the viewer to continue noticing details, where the images dont come complete with their interpretations. 10 Wenders own lms followthis logic, by employing an open structure that allows the images (as well as the narrative) to be interpreted by each audience member, just as events in life. This natural act of seeing and of replicating that for his audience is what rst interested him in making lms. Wenders reected, The great thing about seeing for me is what distinguishes it from thinking, namely that it doesnt entail having an opinion. In thinking, every thought also contains an opinion. [. . . ] There are no opinions in seeing; in seeing you can come to a view of another person, an object, the world, that doesnt imply an opinion, where you just confront the thing or person, take it on board, perceive it. I like the word insight. It suggests you can have truth and understanding just from seeing. [. . . ] For me, seeing is immersing myself in the world, while thinking is distancing myself from it. 11 And in this way of seeing, the audience members are left to rely on their emotions, associations, and image-consciousness to provide the message, for latent in his vision of the world is an understanding of the divine truth within it. Wenders belief in images to reveal truth mirrors St. Pauls attitude towards the visible, in that Ever since the creation of the world [Gods] eternal power and divine nature, invisible though they are, have been understood and seen through the things he has made. 12 While this careful way of preserving images disinterestedly and truthfully was the only way Wenders could see to make lms with integrity, he also considered story-telling a tremendous problem for his images by forcing themto conformto a pattern of manipulation. He argued that images had the right to stand on their own and that story functioned as a vampire, stealing the true life from the images. 13 He considered the journey of making a lm that of a day-by-day exploration, not an 180 STUDIES IN WORLD CHRISTIANITY exploitation of predetermined values or ideas. Graf compares Wenders way of capturing only tiny fragments of life and existence with Pasolinis kino in natura, a conviction that the cinema should mirror reality by showing real bits and pieces of life instead of trying to complete a circle or t a dramatic pattern. 14 What gives this thesis credulity is that in so capturing fragments of existence with truthful images, the director also captures truth in the plot, a situation we call life, and this is what provides meaning to each individual viewer. In the early eighties, after Wenders rst international success, The American Friend (1977), Francis Ford Coppola chose Wenders to direct Hammett (1982), his rst Hollywood feature. The process, which Wenders considered completely contrived and unnatural, caused him to react against the monster of story by making The State of Things (1982) during a break in the shooting of Hammett. This European art-house lm about a directors struggle with the story, developed on the set while being shot, was a way to help Wenders deal with his ongoing ght to protect the image from story. Whether in spite of or because of The State of Things, he reached a turning point in his career as he came to realise that his future as a lmmaker was wrapped up in story-telling. His ultimate realisation was that peoples primary requirement is that some kind of coherence be provided. Stories give people the feeling that there is meaning, that there is ultimately an order lurking behind the incredible confusion of appearances and phenomena that surrounds them. This order is what people require more than anything else; yes, I would almost say that the notion of order or story is connected with the godhead. 15 The realisation that story could and, most fundamentally, does function on a spiritual level led Wenders in a new direction, cinematically. He discovered that what is true of people and their need for stories is also true of himself: everything I want to tell cannot be narrated without stories. 16 And so his stories, instead of blood-sucking vampires, became the lifeblood of the images. Along with this new faith in narrative as an essential component in his lmmaking, Wenders eventually began to trust images less and less. This began a series of lms in the eighties that explored the idea of untruthful images in lm, television, and media. In his two documentary notebook- lms, Tokyo-Ga (1985) and Notebook on Cities and Clothes (1989), both shot in the rapidly-evolving centre of technology, Tokyo, the disparity The Images of Wim Wenders 181 between truth and image is addressed most directly. In Notebook on Cities and Clothes, he narrates: Everything changes. And fast. Images above all change faster and faster, and they have been multiplying at a hellish rate ever since the explosion that unleashed the electronic images; the very images which are now replacing photography. [. . . ] With photography and then lm it began to get complicated: the original was a negative, without a print it did not exist, just the opposite; [. . . ] each copy was the original. But now, with the electronic image and soon the digital, there is no more negative and no more positive. The very notion of the original is obsolete. 17 He continued his analysis on the difference between the image of and the reality of something in Paris, Texas (1984) and Wings of Desire (1987), both of which I will look at in greater detail below. This served to further solidify the link between image and story to preserve truth and document life as images, for Wenders could no longer be trusted to transmit insight and truth. In an interview in the early nineties, Wenders says, Films in general nd it very easy to dazzle, can claim to show something that they actually cant. In fact, the better something looks in a lm, the more wary you ought to be: you might be being deceived. [. . . ] In the context of a narrative, it can be terribly destructive putting in a shot for its own sweet sake, instead of helping the story. 18 It seems to be at this point that Wenders has discovered the synchronicity of the lmic story: the ability to show things that are impossible to tell, achieving a narrative both beyond- words and beyond-images by the collaboration always collaboration, and co-operation of both. It is this insight with which Wenders provides us that makes his lms so important in the contemporary landscape. Now is the time when we need Wenders images so much: when the images around us are plentiful, and the artists concerned with using them to tell the truth are few. It is the great care Wenders takes in preserving the truth of images that led him to comment, Only the story [gives] credibility to each image; it [furnishes] a moral, so to speak, to my profession as an image-maker. 19 In his most successful lms, this synthesis of image and narrative reassures the audience of the divine power of stories to function truthfully and reveal something beyond. Wenders images highlight emotional and spiritual contrasts and chasms visually, as well as physically, in the spaces that mediate these differences. If an image is empty, or almost empty, and 182 STUDIES IN WORLD CHRISTIANITY sparse, it can reveal so much that it completely lls you, and the emptiness becomes everything, 20 Wenders states. The essential composition for Wenders is one that emphasises spaces. He laments the death of cinema, citing the rise of the televisions paltry close-up that has eliminated the beauty of the wide shot and cramped the freedom that viewers of the old cinema had, to live and breathe and walk alongside the characters, in the spaces. 21 For Wenders, these spaces frame a solitary, isolated individual against nothing but empty space, as in the iconic opening images of 1984s Paris, Texas in which Travis is framed against the breadth and width of the nothingness of the desert, or the spaces reveal the layers of separation and continuity that create physical space, as in his 1968 short lm, Silver City, shot from an apartment window onto the street below, or in the windows overlooking the vast emptiness of downtown Los Angeles in 2001s The Million Dollar Hotel. Thematically caught up in these spaces are Wenders own feelings about isolation and belonging, home and the German notion of Heimat 22 that so heavily provide the inspiration for his images: critics Kolker and Beiken explain, his lms attempt to establish a transnational space, unstable and full of longing for someplace else. 23 Wenders says of his characters, They are longing to belong to a different context, both physically and spiritually. [. . . ] As I look back at my movies, I think that is the story of my life right there 24 . This is the ongoing journey of the artist that David Jasper, in his meditations on the spirituality found in the uninhabitable desert, calls the wandering in the desert, staring into an abyss. 25 Thematically, this explains the lure of the images and the inability to translate them into words or thoughts that constitute the spiritual searching and discovery Wenders lms allow the audience. With this in mind, I will now turn briey to a discussion of these key questions how to nd the truth in images, what is the function of story, and where the visual and thematic journey in Wenders spaces takes us in his two most popular feature lms of the 1980s, Paris, Texas (1984) and Wings of Desire (1987). AFTER THE FOG HAS LIFTED Paris, Texas (1984) In Jaspers The Sacred Desert, he uses the image of the desert as a place in which artists, poets, theologians, prophets and mystics have gone for inspiration and cleansing. Out of a place of emptiness and drought, one can uncover solemn, sovereign truth. The desert meditation is about what it means for each of us to be the unique human being The Images of Wim Wenders 183 that I am. [. . . ] This place is where the divine as God empties itself into nite human being and where nite human being discovers its own deep participation in transcendence. 26 The main character of Paris, Texas, Travis, shares this desert experience through his journey in the lm. He rst appears on a speck of screen space amidst the rocks and plateaus of an uninhabited wasteland desert. Many critics see Travis journey through the lm as a metaphor for Wenders own journey through the abyss 27 that eventually led him to his dedication to storytelling: [t]he unobstructed vision, and the lack of any recognisable landmarks in the desert sequence establish the desert as the realm of the image 28 in the beginning of the lm, whereas the ending, a heavily-worded sequence, will signify Wenders shift into the realm of story. In the still, oppressive heat and the unobstructed space of the desert opening, Travis walks on until nally returning to some sort of civilisation: a rundown roadside gas station rest stop, where he subsequently collapses. From his denitive gait in these rst wide shots, Wenders shows us what we will only nd out later in the narrative. Kolker and Beicken explain that Travis emerges with a clear understanding of complicity, guilt, and the necessity of taking denitive action that will place him on the edge of closeness and separation. 29 As clearly metaphorical as this sequence might appear to be, from Wenders own version of events, it was only later that he acknowledged this supposed turning point in his career, which seems to be marked so clearly by the character of Travis. In some way, the images to which Wenders had sensitised himself foreshadowed his own journey. While Paris, Texas was a denite turning point in his career, it was just another step along his path to reconciliation with God: In the twenty years I had been absent from church, my lms main subject was alienation, being on the road, being on some sort of pilgrimage toward understanding, or realization, or fulllment. Even though most of those characters didnt know what it was they were after, they were on the way somewhere. 30 Through the lm Travis attempts to reintegrate himself into society are marked by his space in the frame, where the compositions reveal the singleness and seriousness of Travis situation. When his brother Walt comes to Texas to pick him up, Travis refuses to sit in the front seat with Walt and instead remains separate from his brother, the messenger from civilisation, by sitting in the back seat. Even when he returns to Los Angeles with Walt, he is repeatedly seen on the outside or separated 184 STUDIES IN WORLD CHRISTIANITY from society and the other characters in the frame. He washes dishes in the kitchen, framed from the outside behind a window. In another scene, Walts wife, Ann, is making the sofa into a bed for Travis in the living room. A hallway wall between them, the frame separates Travis, who is standing in the hallway, from the living room with the sofa, Walt, and Ann. Travis is standing on the steps, facing the wall, while on the other side of it are Walt and Ann, facing away fromthe wall and towards the sofa. When Travis nally crosses to the other side of the frame into the family and community of the others, Ann and Walt immediately leave the scene. Wenders separation of Travis from others places him perpetually in the loneliness of the desert in which we rst found him. As the camera gives itself completely and wholly to its subject, as Nathaniel Dorsky suggests is the nature of devotional cinema, the audience develops an empathetic afnity to Travis, which allows them to see beyond what is on the screen directly to the heart of the object. 31 The heart of the object, the spiritual centre, surpasses the act of seeing and takes the viewer beyond vision. And this insight allows for a personal journey Travis journey a journey of solitude through the desert. For Wenders, solitude in the desert allows for a whole new way of seeing, as he explains in the foreword to his 1982 collection of photographs, Written in the West: Solitude and taking photographs are connected in an important way. If you arent alone, you can never acquire this way of seeing, this complete immersion in what you see, no longer needing to interpret, just looking. Theres a distinct kind of satisfaction that you get from looking and travelling alone, and its connected with this relation of solitude to photography. 32 The meditative solitude of which Wenders speaks permeates Travis journey as well as the audiences journey from their seats in the darkened theatre from the wilderness of separation back to repentance and, in a way, reconciliation. It is only through this rst journey of vision both Traviss and the audience that we are allowed participation in the language of forgiveness, for each image ha[s] a truth only in relation to the character of [its] story. 33 First Travis re-introduces himself to his son, who eventually grows to accept him, and then he ultimately seeks to mend the relationship between his wife and his son. Through the lm, Travis must take the long way across the desert to overcome its hardships; 34 a journey Wenders takes us on through the images of the harsh desert landscapes and the wide The Images of Wim Wenders 185 shots through which his characters move. At the beginning of his road trip with his son, Hunter, the two are framed in Traviss car beneath four merging freeway interchanges. This is the rst time Travis is framed in a two-shot: several roads meet, symbolising the blending of chaotic with resolute movement through this space, and the fact that a decision is made here that will decide the shape of the future for the protagonists. 35 In the climactic sequence within the peep-show parlour where Travis nds his wife, Jane, working, Wenders rst demonstrates the transformative power of sight through the composition, but also nally takes a denitive step in his journey towards a cinema of story and language. Travis sits on one side of a glass window separated from Jane, who is captured inside the demeaning parlour walls as an object to be looked upon. The lights are positioned both in Janes box and in Travis viewing area such that Travis can see Jane inside her world, but Jane is refused entrance into Travis; she can only see a reection of herself in the glass. Dorsky reects on the nature of cinema itself to create this non-reective separation, this immersion into the world of seeing, which precedes meditation and reection in the afterglow of devotional cinema: We sit in darkness and watch an illuminated world, the world of the screen. This situation is a metaphor for the nature of our own vision. In the very process of seeing, our own skull is like a dark theatre, and the world we see in front of us is in a sense a screen. [. . . ] Film, insofar as it replicates our experience of vision, presents us with the tools to touch on and elucidate that experience. Viewing a lm has tremendous mystical implications; it can be, at its best, a way of approaching and manifesting the ineffable. This respect for the ineffable is an essential aspect of devotion. 36 But as Travis rst begins to speak, he unlocks the reection that has thus far been excluded in the discovery of images it is nally only in words that recovery is to be found is Jaspers conclusion. 37 This mirrors the beginning of Wenders journey towards a cinema of narrative, as both Graf, and Kolker and Beicken recognise, without compromising the honesty of the image. [N]ot just Travis confession, but the whole lm relies, in the end, on Travis regaining the power of language that enables him to tell a story. [. . . ] Wenders suggests, through Travis monologue, that this kind of narration can co-exist with photographic images without threatening the integrity of the lm image. 38 Now, when image and language nally coalesce after Travis speech, he tells Jane to turn the lights out in her prison and focuses the light of 186 STUDIES IN WORLD CHRISTIANITY his own lamp on his face. Travis nally fully reveals himself, his sins, and all that he has been wandering and hiding from. While Travis is still physically separated from Jane by the glass, it is he who is now revealing himself in the frame of his own accord and this image reveals his own penitence, his nakedness and complete surrender, which has nally brought him to contrition. This, in turn, allows Jane to tell her own story to Travis and to complete the narrative circle. Wenders is able to afrm both the power of language to heal and the power of the image to truly see things as they are. SPACES IN LANGUAGE Wings of Desire (1987) With the dramatic nish of Paris, Texas, Wenders embarked on a whole new stage in his career marked by the use of language as providing a message and a moral for his images. From the rst words and images of Wings of Desire, the mood of the story is already in place: When the child was a child. . . begins the poem. The lofty cameras, ying above the clouds in the Berlin air, 39 glide down over the city and into an apartment building past several tenants, whose passing reections become momentarily audible arbitrary moments, thoughts that icker like sparks before dying as the camera moves to another scene and another character. When the child was a child. . . continues the poem, and the atmosphere of childlike wonder permeates the screen. The lm continues gently gliding, looking through the eyes of detached angels seeking the joy of a child in each experience while the audience rediscovers those same pleasures through the discoveries made in each shot. In this lm, Wenders seems to return again to trust in the cameras faithful gaze, allowing it to reveal a truth latent in our everyday surroundings that we usually look past, instead of through the angels, who tenderly coax people to observe the evidence of God right in front of them, whispering rumours of meaning, giving them cause for peace. 40 Wenders uses the German word Einstellung to describe this notion, that lm can be a screen mediating things both in front of and behind it. Einstellung means both a take, a shot, a position of the camera to capture something, and also the ideological stance, the take, or the approach one takes to the shot. 41 In Wings of Desire, it is the angels who are at the centre of the Einstellung, both showing the audience what happens on the surface and practising a certain approach to it that reveals the spiritual dimension of these things. The Images of Wim Wenders 187 To Wenders, there seemed no better place for re-discovery or such a need of angelic guidance to achieve it than in the haunted spaces of Berlin, a city torn apart by war, divided by walls, and hiding from its open wounds pointing back into the past. In the images of this divided city Wenders found a truth he could apply to the rest of the world: Berlin is an historical site of truth. No other city is such a meaningful image, such a PLACE OF SURVIVAL, so exemplary of our century. Berlin is divided like our world, like our time, like men and women, young and old, rich and poor, like all our experience. 42 Wenders attempt at reconciliation in this broken and divided world (and thus redemption of the destroyed home/Heimat notion) through the beauty of his images affects a restoration of faith in the darkest of times. What is in front of the screen, the city itself, can only be understood through the people whose lives the angels silently witness again, the Einstellung. This is the way in which the stories of people are indelibly bound to the images of those people, if truth is to be discovered. The separation that provides the catalyst for the stories in this lm is apparent through the use of colour and black-and-white cinematography to represent the perspective of humans and that of the angels. The black- and-white demonstrated for Wenders that angels see things for their essence, for what they really are, as opposed to the distraction of ashy surfaces that colour represents. 43 The colour that humans see, however, is also manifest in the human ability to texturally, sensually experience the world for the aesthetics that God created. Therefore, while the angels can see the essence, they can only see the sensory world from a distance; they seem to highlight the unique gift of being human. Wenders notion of space is again apparent in its relation here to the very heart of the city, and the city-lm: The empty spaces allow the visitor and the people of Berlin to see through the cityscape. Not only in the sense that they can see through the space, and even see the horizon, which anyway is a pleasant experience in a city, but they can also see through these gaps in a 188 STUDIES IN WORLD CHRISTIANITY sense that they can see through time. [. . . ] Only those lms with gaps in between their imagery are telling stories, that is my conviction. 44 Utilising the spaces in framing his shots and the citys holes in his mis-en-scne allows these powerful city images to tell their stories between the gaps, as it were. The Circus Alekan, Marions troupe, performs on a plot of grass surrounded by several buildings. When their circus pulls out of town, Marion is left with literally an empty place, a large gap between the city blocks, an urban desert which parallels her own hollow emptiness outside of the companionship of the troupe, contemplated in her inner monologues heard only by the angels. Hallowed wandering ground for Homer, the old storyteller, is in the no-mans-land of Potsdamer Platz, the abandoned eld surrounding the Berlin Wall, overrun with tall grass and weeds (where the Sony Centre is today, offers Wenders in the commentary 45 ). The angels themselves walk through the twenty feet of space between the two walls separating East and West, unseen by the soldiers standing guard. Jeffrey Overstreet notes That historic barrier comes to represent not only the political divide but also the divide between angel and human, observation and engagement, restraint and indulgence. [. . . ] Yet Wenders has given us the privilege of drifting through these barriers to acknowledge just how close these people are, not only to each other, but to us as well. 46 The spaces of this city are acutely the spaces of our world, the spaces between people and the spaces to which we conne ourselves. But again, Wenders uses his restored vision, built by the engagement of image and narrative, to show in the nal scene between Marion and Damiel that these spaces can be broken down by love. ADVENTURES IN PERCEPTION In their article about his later lm, Until the End of the World (1991), S. Brent Plate and Tod Linafelt recognise that Wenders concern with image has led him to offer a way of seeing that binds vision to words and to silence, to the body and to memory. 47 It is through this complex network that Wenders has been able to continue to bind image-making to truth, and to justify his profession as a guardian of images in a world of ever-proliferating, dishonest images. Wenders realised that nding the truth in images is not just about seeing; it requires the vision to nd a story that provides both order and honesty: a story in which the spaces allow the events, as well as the audience, to ourish. As I have The Images of Wim Wenders 189 attempted to demonstrate, he seems to achieve this careful balance in Paris, Texas and Wings of Desire, as the numerous awards and critical responses easily signify. But the ethereal quality of devotion, or religious aesthetics that is at the heart of his cinema is what I have tried to illuminate particularly. And this quality of religious aesthetics is what makes Wenders an important subject for understanding lm as a global theological language. By inextricably linking story and image, separation with ways in which to return to closeness, and vision with what is beyond, Wenders has given his audiences a cinema of discovery and devotion. He does not tell us what to think but he asks us to respect what he has shown, and to ask for ourselves how to perceive it. Most of all, he asks us to participate in his stories, bringing our own experiences to the interpretation of the lm. 48 And as viewers open their hearts and their subconscious understanding to see what lies beyond the image, the openness of Wenders cinema provides a hallowed spiritual ground for reection and truth. Its strange, Wenders comments, especially for a director, to nd out that you are not the creator. You are instrumental in creating something, but even if you fancy the idea that you pulled it out of yourself, you have to acknowledge that you could not have done it alone. 49 The image provides a perfect example. As a photographer, or an image-maker, the elements are already in place. The objects in front of the camera are latent with meaning, with stories, with experience. As God has layered the world with signs of a spiritual existence and the presence of his spirit, so also is the image layered. It is only up to the viewer, led by the prodding of Gods spirit, to perceive it. Emily Manthei writes and directs lms and documentaries that are visual, contemplative, and philosophical. She lives and works in Los Angeles, California. She also holds a Masters in Theology from the University of Edinburgh and researches and writes about lm and theology. Email: emanthei@gmail.com NOTES 1. Jeffrey Overstreet, Through a Screen Darkly (Ventura: Regal Books, 2007), 57. 2. Ibid: 48. 3. Ibid: 129. 4. Plate and Linafelts article, Seeing Beyond the End of the World in Strange Days and Until the End of the World in the online Journal of Religion and Film (Vol. 7 No. 3, April 2003) is a notable exception. 5. Grace Cathedral, excerpt from The Best Christian Writing of 2004: An Interview with Wim Wenders.http://www.gracecathedral.org/enrichment/excerpts/exc_20031126.shtml 190 STUDIES IN WORLD CHRISTIANITY 6. Thomas Martin quoted in John R. May, Contemporary Theories Regarding the Interpretation of Religious Film [Excerpts] in Jolyon Mitchell and S. Brent Plate (eds), The Religion and Film Reader (New York: Routledge, 2007), 3301. 7. Wim Wenders, The Act of Seeing: Essays and Conversations, translated by Michael Hoffman (London: Faber and Faber Limited, 1997), 33. 8. Alexander Graf, The Cinema of Wim Wenders: The Celluloid Highway (London: Wallower Press, 2002), 21. 9. Wim Wenders, The Logic of Images: Essays and Conversations, translated by Michael Hofmann (London: Faber and Faber Limited, 1991), 3. 10. Ibid. 11. Wenders 1997: 46. 12. Romans 1: 20. 13. Wenders 1991: 53. 14. Graf 2002: 49. 15. Wenders 1991: 54. 16. Wim Wenders. Impossible Stories, in Roger F. Cook and Gerd Gemnden (eds), The Cinema of Wim Wenders: Image, Narrative, and the Postmodern Condition (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1997), 36. 17. Ibid: 81. 18. Ibid: 41. 19. Ibid: 97. 20. Ibid: 99. 21. Wim Wenders. High Denition, in Roger F. Cook and Gerd Gemnden (eds), The Cinema of Wim Wenders: Image, Narrative, and the Postmodern Condition (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1997), 46. 22. The more general word for homeland or nationality in German. Wenders is fascinated by the English equivalent, home, to represent both a physical place and a broader sense of belonging and association. He speaks at length about this in the chapter, Talking About Germany in Cook and Gemndens The Cinema of Wim Wenders: Image, Narrative, and the Postmodern Condition, 535. 23. Robert Phillip Kolker and Peter Beicken, The Films of Wim Wenders: Cinema as Vision and Desire (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), 36. 24. Overstreet 2007: 124. 25. David Jasper, introduction to The Sacred Desert: Religion, Literature, Art and Culture (Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2004), xii. 26. Ibid. 27. Paris, Texas was shot following the dilemma that resulted in The State of Things, Nicks Film: Lightning over Water, and Tokyo-Ga, all shot during a break in the fractured production of Hammett. Scholars refer to this period between 1981 and 1983 as Wenders darkest time, which I here call the abyss. 28. Graf 2002: 94. 29. Kolker and Beiken 1993: 120. 30. Derrickson 2004. 31. Nathaniel Dorsky. Devotional Cinema, in Jolyon Mitchell and S. Brent Plate (eds), The Religion and Film Reader (New York: Routledge, 2007), 413. 32. Wim Wenders, Written in the West (Munich: Schirmer/Mosel Verlag, 1996), 8. 33. Wenders 1991: 97. The Images of Wim Wenders 191 34. Jasper 2007: 137. 35. Graf 2002: 94. 36. Dorsky 2007: 409. 37. Jasper 2007: 137. 38. Graf 2002: 104. 39. The literal translation of the German title means The Sky over Berlin. 40. Overstreet 2007: 119. 41. Roger F. Cook and Gerd Gemnden, The Cinema of Wim Wenders: Image, Narrative, and the Postmodern Condition (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1997), 54. 42. Wenders 1991: 74. 43. Wenders speaks about this on the DVD commentary to Wings of Desire. 44. Wenders 1997: 99. 45. Martin Jesinghausens The Sky over Berlin as Transcendental Space: Wenders, Doblin and the Angel of History, in Spaces in European Cinema (Konstantarakos, 2000), offers that Potsdamer Platz is the locus of paradigmatic city space, extending beyond this city, the national situation, and even the real, taking us into the metaphysics of twentieth century history, p. 83. 46. Overstreet 2007: 119. 47. Place and Linafelt 2003. 48. Cook and Gemnden 1997: 69. 49. Wenders quoted in Overstreeet 2007: 133. DOI: 10.3366/E1354990109000483