Over the course of three days in 1970, June 5, 6, and 7, simply sitting
on a white bench in a Hamburg park, Thomas Bernhard delivered a powerful
monologue for Three Days (Drei Tage), filmmaker Ferry Radax's
commanding film portrait of the great Austrian writer. Radax interwove
the monologue with a variety of metaphorically resonant visual
techniques--blacking out the screen to total darkness, suggestive of the
closing of the observing eye; cuts to scenes of cameramen, lighting and
recording equipment; extreme camera distance and extreme closeup.
Bernhard had not yet written his autobiographical work Gathering
Evidence, published originally in five separate volumes between 1975
and 1982, and his childhood remembrances were a revelation. This
publication of Bernhard's monologue and stills from Radax's artful film
allows this unique portrait of Bernhard to be savored in book form.