Eight Miles High (film)

Eight Miles High (original title: Das wilde Leben, lit. The Wild Life) is a 2007 German biographical motion picture, set in the 1960s and depicting the "wild life" of Uschi Obermaier, a West German sex symbol and icon of the era.

Eight Miles High
Theatrical release poster
Directed byAchim Bornhak
Written byDagmar Benke
Achim Bornhak
C. P. Hant
Olaf Kraemer
Produced byRalph Brosche
StarringNatalia Avelon
CinematographyBenjamin Dernbecher
Edited byPeter Przygodda
Distributed byWarner Bros. Pictures
Release date
  • 1 February 2007 (2007-02-01)
Running time
114 minutes
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman
Box office$957,744[1]

Plot

edit

Obermaier enjoyed sexual freedom at the legendary Kommune 1 in Berlin after being with the krautrock band Bröselpilze. In the Kommune, she becomes friendly with Rainer Langhans. The young woman from Munich gains employment as a model, and becomes a sex symbol and youth icon. Now a cover girl in Playboy magazine, she meets rock stars such as Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, while Italian film producer, Carlo Ponti, offers her a ten-year contract, but she declines: her freedom is more important than a contract.

During her intensive relationship with Keith Richards, she begins to recognize the dark side of the shiny glamour world she lives in: the isolation of the stars, and the groupie-populated milieux of anonymous hotel rooms — this is not her idea of life.

She finds new freedom in a relationship with the adventurer Dieter Bockhorn (David Scheller). They fall in love and go on a six-year road trip around the world. Later, Bockhorn dies in a motorcycle accident in Mexico.

Cast

edit

Production crew

edit

Filming locations

edit
  • Berlin, Hamburg, Munich, and Bavaria in Germany
  • Goa, Jaipur, and Rajasthan in India

Soundtrack

edit

Ville Valo and Natalia Avelon recorded a cover version of the Nancy Sinatra/Lee Hazlewood song Summer Wine for the soundtrack. A music video was also shot, featuring Valo and Avelon with the real Uschi Obermaier.

References

edit
  1. ^ "Eight Miles High (2007)". Box Office Mojo. IMDb. Retrieved 12 October 2024.
edit