The Arctic Sea Calls

In case you ever wondered what the Little Rascals (Our Gang) would look like as an East German concept, The Arctic Sea Calls (Das Eismeer ruft) answers the question. It's the story of a band of spunky kids who take it upon themselves to hike from Prague to the Bering Strait in an attempt to …

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whisper & SHOUT

For anyone whose preconceptions about life in East Germany are informed by what was taught in American schools, whisper & SHOUT (flüstern & SCHREIEN) is the film to see. Made in 1988, it follows the exploits of several East German rock bands as they travel from venue to venue. In between, the film stops to …

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Elective Affinities

Ask the average American who Johann Wolfgang von Goethe is, and you’ll either get: “He was a writer, wasn’t he?” Or: “I don’t know.” A well-read American might be familiar with Faust and The Sorrows of Young Werther, but that’s about it. In Germany, on the other hand, Goethe resides deep in the soul. He’s …

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Osceola

The shocking history of actions by the United States against Native Americans and blacks was a source of great delight to East Germany's leaders. Here was a country that boasted about its freedom and opportunities, yet continued to shut out anyone whose skin tone drifted too far from Pantone 473. With Osceola, DEFA managed to …

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Too Young for Love?

Too Young for Love? (Für die Liebe noch zu mager?) is a portrait of a girl on the cusp of womanhood. At the start of the film, our heroine Susanne (Simone von Zglinicki) is wide-eyed and still wet behind the ears. She works at a textile plant and is a model worker. Susanne has a …

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Snow White

As discussed elsewhere on this blog, fairytale films were the closest thing to a cash cow the East German film industry had to offer. Beloved by East and West Germans alike and often featuring stories in which the poor and generous triumph over the rich and greedy, the fairytale films faced fewer hurdles when they …

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Our Daily Bread

There is a stereotype in the West about the films from communist countries that they’re all about the struggles of the working class against oppression; that they’re shot in the style of socialist realism popularized by Russian directors; that they’re full of hokum about the importance of agriculture and tractors. Any regular reader of this …

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Bailing Out

The title of Bailing Out (Kaskade rückwärts) refers to a particularly tricky equestrian move where the rider, rather than performing an emergency dismount by a normal method, does a backwards somersault off the rear of the horse. The move is ably demonstrated in the film, and it is impressive, but it’s really a stunt move …

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Time of the Storks

In 1971, East Germans started lining up outside the cinemas to see a film called Time of the Storks (Zeit der Störche). It might have been in part because of its story of a love affair between two strangers, one of whom was about to get married, but it was more likely because the film …

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The Karl Liebknecht Films

In 1954 and 1955, director Kurt Maetzig made two films devoted to the life of communist pioneer Ernst Thälmann. Later, Maetzig would say he was embarrassed by the films and considered them his weakest work. Unlike most of his films, these two were not of his choosing. The authorities simply decided that it was time …

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