"Highway 40 West" (1980/81) is the first of a series of documentaries by Hartmut Bitomsky (born 1942 in Bremen) which brought him international fame. Each of these films is dedicated to both, a specific and title-giving object and its historical-critical analysis. Such as in "Highway 40 West": For a time span of 169 minutes, the film shows Bitomsky’s emblematic US-road trip with a rented car on the eponymous road number 40, crossing the country from East to West. From early travel routes of the "Native Americans" to the trails of early colonizers, this street is loaded with American history - and with the present ruins of the American dream, which Bitomsky indulgingly captures on film. He himself appears as actor/author, conducting innumerable interviews, shooting the landscape, the diners and hotels - and his sonorous narrator’s voice reviews what is seen, and tries to understand and make it understandable.
Hartmut Bitomsky
Director, Writer
Sherman's March67%
Directed by John Ford70%
Sidney70%
The Class of ‘9271%
In the Realms of the Unreal71%
John Candy: I Like Me78%
180° South72%
28 Up75%
A Plastic Ocean75%
Tricked: The Documentary61%
Above Majestic73%
Evil Influencer: The Jodi Hildebrandt Story62%
Room 23761%
Night Will Fall76%
Seduced and Abandoned62%
Nail Bomber: Manhunt65%
Public Speaking70%
Elstree 197661%
The Captains63%
Anselm – Das Rauschen der Zeit67%