Actress Nastassja Kinski spent years calling for the removal of a sexualized scene from Wim Wenders' film "The Wrong Move," in which she app
Not only does she appear naked but she is slapped around by an adult man. But Wenders just can not possibly be sure if this was sexualizing and exploiting a 13 year old child. It's always reassuring to hear paedophiles admit out loud that they are too imoral to be able to make a moral decision. Indeed. That is why it's so unnacceptable that the last word should be left up to him and that the law somehow can't intervene. Someone once said it's not what's illegal that is the scandal, it's what is legal that is the scandal. And here we are again. Fuck him.
The Wim Wenders Foundation announced on Wednesday that the 1975 film "Falsche Bewegung" ("The Wrong Move"), at the center of a headline-grabbing dispute between the German filmmaker and actress Nastassja Kinski, is being withdrawn from circulation for the time being.
Kinski has been trying for years to get filmmaker Wim Wenders to remove a scene from the movie. In the brief scene, her co-star Rüdiger Vogler (then over 30 years old) visits the 13-year-old in her bedroom, where she is lying on a bed wearing only panties. The man undresses down to his underwear and lies on top of her; he slaps her and then caresses her face.
"Although I didn't know much at the age of 13, I could already tell that it wasn't right," the German actress recently told the German daily Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper.
The acclaimed German director first reacted publicly to Kinski's demands in 2024, stating that he understood her "current perceptions and feelings," adding that he would not film the scene that way today.
Through his acceptance speech for the Honorary Prize for Lifetime Achievement at the German Film Awards ceremony held in Berlin on May 29, Wenders turned the dispute into a wider public debate.
In his speech, he repeated that such a scene would not be done that way today, but noted that it also raised a larger question for him: How should one deal with films that were created in a different era?
"I can't blame the 29-year-old young man I was then, 50 years ago, who made a film of his time; wanting, in a way, to capture the zeitgeist," said Wenders, who also later collaborated with Kinski as the star of his acclaimed "Paris, Texas" (1984) and in "Faraway, So Close!" (1993).
Stating that he was aware that the scene causes pain to an actress "whom I deeply admired, and still do," Wenders added that he remained hesitant to edit the film retroactively.
It is, he noted, a moral question, one that he didn't want to deal with on his own. Wenders rather called on the German Film Academy to initiate a discussion regarding his dilemma, adding that he hoped younger filmmakers would contribute to the conversation.
Asked to comment on the debate, a press spokesperson told DW that the German Film Academy didn't yet have a statement on the issue.
Should films be revised after completion?
For Wenders, altering completed films can create difficult precedents for archives, restorations and cultural history.
But several films have already been reedited after their release, whether to make them shorter for commercial success in cinemas, more suitable for certain markets or simply because the filmmaker determined it was better that way.
In his speech, Wenders referred to how Steven Spielberg regretted modifying "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial" for the 20th anniversary reissue of the sci-fi blockbuster in 2002. In the revised version, federal agents who were originally shown carrying guns were holding walkie-talkies instead.
"That was a mistake," Spielberg said at a US Time magazine forum in 2023. "I never should have done that. 'ET' is a product of its era. No film should be revised based on the lenses we now are either voluntarily or being forced to peer through." He realized that movies are "a signpost of where we were when we made them, and what the world was like."
From "Aladdin" (1992) to "Lilo & Stitch" (2002), many classic Disney movies have been edited in reissue editions or in the versions streamed on the Disney+ platform, to adapt to the sensitivities of modern audiences.
Even auteur filmmakers have revised their already released films. Ridley Scott re-cut his 1982 sci-fi hit "Blade Runner" in 2007; George Lucas made changes to his original "Star Wars" trilogy films for their 20th anniversary in 1997. Just a week after the release of "The Shining" in 1980, Stanley Kubrick ordered projectionists to cut out a scene reviewers deemed confusing out of his iconic movie.
But in the end, such cases are not comparable to the debate surrounding "The Wrong Move," since the corrections were not made at the request of a female actor who still suffers from the existence of a scene filmed when she was underage.
Wenders criticized for dodging responsibility
A majority of the critics who reacted to the Wenders' speech felt the filmmaker was simply shifting the blame by asking the German Film Academy to open a broader debate on the issue, even though he is the one who has the last word on the film. He has the power to make the decision to remove it — especially if he really acknowledges that the scene remains painful for Kinski.
"This is not a matter of censorship or cancel culture, as he implied in his speech," noted Kinski's lawyer, Christian Schertz, who has since announced that a lawsuit would be filed soon if the scene was not removed.
"The matter is between him and Nastassja Kinski, but he has avoided direct confrontation with her for years," wrote one critic in the German newspaper Tageszeitung .
Another observer noted that even though Kinski has always respectfully expressed her wish to have the images removed, in his speech, Wenders made her request sound like she was posing "a threat to the very freedom of cinema itself: the freedom of every single artist in the room. Anyone watching and listening to his words could only feel stunned," states an editorial piece in the Süddeutsche Zeitung.
Another opinion piece in German daily Welt also agreed that it "would be symbolically right to remove the scene."
By turning the issue into a public problem, Wenders "executed an absolutely clever maneuver," pointed out Annette Brauerhoch in a Deutschlandfunk interview. "With this appeal to the public and to the academy, he effectively dispersed the responsibility that rightfully lies with him, across thousands of people."
On the small soggy wet archipelago that makes up the modern day united kingdom, sunny days are a rare phenomenon. As such, the peoples of england cherish each and every one, even going so far as to write songs about them in their local music. With sunlight in such high demand, to block it deliberately is nigh unthinkable, hence their cultural confusion at the invention of the parasol.