
Bandits
“Baby, don’t forget to catch me” – the Andreases, Tobiases and Christians of the German film critics all agreed: Katja von Garnier’s road movie was rubbish, even embarrassing, what was she thinking? The audience felt differently, especially amongst young women and girls, the film was an instant hit and Bandits turned into a feminist cult film. Emma, Luna, Angel and Marie start a rock band while in prison and escape during a performance at the police ball. Once on the run, they take an attractive male hostage and play concerts along the way. Both the fictional band and the film itself became subjects of fan’s affections.
In 2019 Netflix screened the final episode of Orange is the New Black, the American TV show about a women’s prison in the Anerican town Litchfield, which also quickly became a feminist hit. What is so fascinating about women’s prison films and why do they serve so well as feminist storytelling? Our “Focus Feminist Heritage” at the Berlin Feminist Film Week 2020 takes us right back to 1997 and acknowledges Katja von Garnier’s film Bandits as a great part of feminist herstory.
Photo credit: © Olga Film/Rieger