Known for Directing

Writer, actor, and German filmmaker born in Munich in 1938. He spent his childhood and youth in Bavaria, region which remains until today its major source of artistic inspiration. Their activity is very diverse: he has composed pieces for theater and radio scripts, translator, painter and sculptor. As different as his artistic activities is his work, and therefore difficult to classify. In the world of cinema, his career fits approaches independent, mostly defined by a position too personalistic, provocative, that has left a deep imprint on works eminently conceptual and avant-garde, as well as suggesting in criticism of the subjects addressed (religion, society, geographical framework in which wandering people, etc.). His films just transcend the commercial sector; It is one of the most followed by seekers of original, stories of passes in areas interested in film culture. His anarchist surrealistic films are not known to a wide audience in Germany, although one of them, Das Gespenst (The Ghost), caused a scandal in 1983 because of its alleged blasphemous content. Werner Herzog, a director of the New German Cinema, based his film Heart of Glass on a story by Achternbusch.
1988
as Herbert
1995
as Self (voice)
1974
as country boy #1
1974
as Lehrer
1984
as Passenger
1983
as Adi
1985
as Herbert
1987
1982
as Ober
1989
as Hick
1975
as Teacher
1978
as Dichter und Wilddieb
1995
as Hades
1997
as Picasso
2004
as Self
1977
as Herbert, Polizist
1998
as Hick
1979
as Komantsche Koyotendreck
1986
1982
as Der Depp