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- Albrecht Schuch Interview | FUNERAL FOR A DOG - Insights and Reflections
Albrecht Schuch Interview | FUNERAL FOR A DOG - Insights and Reflections
Discover Albrecht Schuch's perspective on the series 'FUNERAL FOR A DOG' as he shares insights and reflections on the storyline and characters. Dive into his experiences of watching the episodes and the emotions they evoke, including love, guilt, and subjectivity. Join the conversation with Albrecht Schuch, Friedrich, Alina, and his agent as they delve into the narrative on a larger screen in Munich and Berlin.
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Video Transcript
I came here to find a story.
What I found is much bigger.
What happened, happened out of love.
Back then it was love.
What is it today?
Guilt.
Once completely and twice, one to three.
We were now in Munich and Berlin, three episodes each.
The first three episodes were shown and I watched them both completely.
The first time I really watched all eight episodes in a row.
With Friedrich, Alina and my agent on a larger screen.
I've only watched it a third time, that's my experience so far.
So at least the first and second time I've watched it.
I'm still very much in the subjectivity.
And then I'm totally busy with it.
Ah yes, on the day of the shoot I felt like this.
At this scene we talked about this and that.
It's still hard with a feeling that prevailed on the day of the creation.
and the way she dominates the scene.
And that's what I'm trying to do,
to be able to perceive the whole work
and to say, okay, this is the film, or in this case the series.
What she does with me is very different.
She helps me to understand myself sometimes,
she makes me dream.
I can follow my imagination. I love meeting people who are experts in their field and help me to develop a character.
I like to give real reference.
It would be too boring for me to just create from myself.
I think at some point it's too vain, too redundant and too self-referential.
It can be totally horizon-extending to meet people I might not have met before,
I'm interested in what they do.
Or that I get an idea of what they do in their field.
I think it's really nice to see what his habitus is.
What kind of environment he's in, how he has to behave in the environment he's in.
So, you know, that's what makes it so special.
I don't want to use big terms, but depending on where you come from and what circumstances you grow up in,
it always has an impact on my body, on my nutrition, on my protective shield, which I can use to protect my body.
or my appearance and my diet,
it's all about my mind.
And I like to ask myself these questions.
And that probably leads to me moving away from myself,
or from my everyday life.
I can only repeat myself. Everything else would get boring at some point.
But with Daniel Mandelkern, I actually tried to give him, at least in terms of sound, a lot from me.
From my understanding, too.
I borrowed some from him.
From this story, or from this guy,
I could connect with the idea that,
from a... how shall I put it?
From being speechless,