Cinema in Weimar culture did not shy away from controversial topics, but dealt with them explicitly.
Diary of a Lost Girl (1929) directed by
Georg Wilhelm Pabst and starring
Louise Brooks, deals with a young woman who is thrown out of her home after having an illegitimate child, and is then forced to become a prostitute to survive. This trend of dealing frankly with provocative material in cinema began immediately after the end of the War. In 1919,
Richard Oswald directed and released two films, that met with press controversy and action from police vice investigators and government censors.
Prostitution dealt with women forced into "
white slavery", while
Different from the Others dealt with a
homosexual man's conflict between his sexuality and social expectations. By the end of the decade, similar material met with little, if any opposition when it was released in Berlin theatres.
William Dieterle's
Sex in Chains (1928), and Pabst's ''
Pandora's Box'' (1929) deal with
homosexuality among men and women, respectively, and were not censored.
Homosexuality was also present more tangentially in other films from the period. The following significant films about 1920s Berlin show the metropolis between 1920 and 1933: •
Dr. Mabuse the Gambler, 1922 – first (silent) film about the character
Doctor Mabuse from the novels of
Norbert Jacques, by
Fritz Lang •
The Last Laugh, 1924 – the aging doorman at a Berlin hotel is demoted to washroom attendant but gets the last laugh, by
F.W. Murnau •
Slums of Berlin (
Die Verrufenen), 1925 – an engineer in Berlin is released from prison, but his father throws him out, his fiancée left him and there is no chance to find work. Directed by
Gerhard Lamprecht. •
Die letzte Droschke von Berlin, 1926 – showing the life of an old
coachman in Berlin still driving the
droshky during the time when the
automobile arises. Directed by
Carl Boese. •
Die Stadt der Millionen, 1927 – first full-length documentary and experimental movie on Berlin, its people and their attitude towards life. Directed by
Adolf Trotz. •
Berlin: Symphony of a Metropolis, 1927 –
expressionist documentary film of 1920s Berlin by
Walter Ruttmann •
Refuge (
Zuflucht), 1928 – a lonely and tired man comes home after several years abroad, lives with a market-woman in Berlin and starts working for the
Berlin U-Bahn. Directed by
Carl Froelich. •
Asphalt, 1929 – the Berlin underworld touches a policeman's life,
Film Noir classic by
Joe May • ''
Mother Krause's Journey to Happiness'', 1929 – depicts the cruelty of poverty in
Wedding district and
Communism as a rescuing force that reaches a mother and a child too late. Directed by
Phil Jutzi. •
People on Sunday, 1930 –
Avant-garde look at daily life in Berlin, screenplay by
Billy Wilder and
Curt Siodmak •
Symphonie einer Weltstadt (
Berlin – Wie es war), 1930 – documentary view of Berlin by
Leo de Laforgue. First showed in 1950. •
Die drei von der Tankstelle, 1930 – three friends are broke, so they sell their car and open a
filling station in Berlin. The film shows the rising level of motorisation in Germany. Directed by
Wilhelm Thiele. •
Cyankali, 1930 – a poor female office employee in Berlin gets pregnant, but
abortion is not allowed in the
Weimar Republic. So she goes to a
quack doctor who applies toxic
potassium cyanide to her. Directed by
Hans Tintner. •
Emil and the Detectives, 1931 – the
Adventure film based on the novel
Emil and the Detectives by
Erich Kästner shows Berlin from children's point of view. Director:
Gerhard Lamprecht. •
M, 1931 – Berlin thriller by
Fritz Lang; beginnings of
film noir and the endings of
expressionism •
Berlin-Alexanderplatz, 1931 – first film adaptation of the novel
Berlin Alexanderplatz from
Alfred Döblin, directed by
Phil Jutzi •
Looking for His Murderer (
Der Mann, der seinen Mörder sucht), 1931 – a man in Berlin plunged in debt does not succeed in committing
suicide and has to hire a murderer to kill him within twelve hours. But in the same night he falls in love with a girl who wants to stop the appointed killer. Directed by
Robert Siodmak. •
Grand Hotel, 1932 – showing the life of permanent residents in a Berlin Hotel. Directed by
Edmund Goulding.
Academy Award for Best Picture (1931–1932). •
Kuhle Wampe, 1932 – about a working-class family in Berlin in 1931 where survival is difficult during the
Great Depression. Directed by
Slatan Dudow. •
Die Umwege des schönen Karl, 1938 – a young waiter comes to Berlin in 1930 to serve at the best wine restaurant, and he tries unsuccessfully to get into the
high society. Directed by
Carl Froelich. •
Rotation, 1949 – showing the life of a working-class family in Berlin between 1920 and 1945, from the
Great Depression over the
Third Reich until the
Battle of Berlin. Directed by
Wolfgang Staudte. •
The Beaverskin (
Die Buntkarierten), 1949 – the fate of a typical working-class family in Berlin between 1883 and 1949 facing
child labour,
trade union engagement, war, depression, unemployment and the rise and fall of
Nazism. Directed by
Kurt Maetzig. •
Der eiserne Gustav, 1958 – based on
the novel by
Hans Fallada and telling the true story of horse-drawn cabman
Gustav Hartmann from
Wannsee district who drove sensationally to
Paris in 1928 to demonstrate against the rise of the motorcar taxicab. Directed by
George Hurdalek. •
Wolf unter Wölfen, 1964 – the four-part movie based on the novel
Wolf Among Wolves by
Hans Fallada describes the
Hyperinflation in the Weimar Republic in 1923 which led to widespread unemployment, homelessness, starvation and rioting in Berlin. Directed by
Hans-Joachim Kasprzik. •
Honour Among Thieves, 1966 – comedy about the panderer and crime environment in 1925 Berlin. Directed by
Wolfgang Staudte. •
Cabaret, 1972 – set in the early 1930s depicting Weimar Berlin from the writings of
Christopher Isherwood; film by
Bob Fosse • ''
Shot on Command – The Sass Brothers, Once Berlin's Big Crooks'', 1972 – Franz and Erich Sass from
Moabit district become the most famous and innovative bank robbers during 1920s Berlin. After a series of criminal acts in
Denmark they get arrested, extradited to
Nazi Germany and executed. Directed by
Rainer Wolffhardt. •
Memories of Berlin: The Twilight of Weimar Culture, 1976 – Documentary about Berlin's cultural scene during the Weimar Republic, by
Gary Conklin • ''
The Serpent's Egg'', 1977 – an unemployed
Jew in 1923 Berlin is offered a job by a professor performing medical experiments, foreshadowing
Nazi human experimentation. Directed by
Ingmar Bergman. •
Schöner Gigolo, armer Gigolo, 1978 – a
Prussian officer returns home to Berlin following the end of
World War I. Unable to find employment elsewhere, he works as a
gigolo in a
brothel run by a Baroness; by
David Hemmings. •
Despair, 1978 – against the backdrop of the Nazis' rise, a Russian émigré and chocolate magnate in Berlin goes slowly mad. Directed by
Rainer Werner Fassbinder. •
Pinselheinrich, 1979 – episodes from the life of famous Berlin illustrator
Heinrich Zille. Zille gets dismissed from his work, starts to live from his funny and socially critical drawings but uses his earnings and rising fame to help people who are poorer than him. Directed by
Hans Knötzsch. •
Berlin Alexanderplatz, 1980 – elaborate film of the novel written by
Alfred Döblin. Made for television (in many parts) by
Rainer Werner Fassbinder. •
Fabian, 1980 – in the late 1920s Berlin a copywriter observes the night life with his friend, gets unemployed during the Great Depression, but meets a new girlfriend. When his friend commits suicide and his girlfriend leaves him for a film career, he loses his livelihood. Based on the novel by
Erich Kästner and directed by
Wolf Gremm. •
Als Unku Edes Freundin war, 1981 – during the 1920s a circus driven by
Sinti comes to the outskirts of Berlin. A Sinti girl becomes the friend of a poor German boy who tries to buy a bicycle to earn money for his family as a
paperboy. Directed by
Helmut Dziuba. •
Claire Berolina, 1987 – portrait of
Claire Waldoff who became a famous
cabaret singer in 1920s Berlin and was close friends with composer
Walter Kollo, writer
Kurt Tucholsky and illustrator
Heinrich Zille. She was an important part of cultural and
lesbian life in Berlin until the
Nazi Machtergreifung ended her success. Directed by
Klaus Gendries. •
Kai aus der Kiste, 1988 – during the
hyperinflation in the Weimar Republic 1923 in Berlin a boy and his friends start a campaign of competitive advertising for an American
chewing gum brand and use the resources of the metropolis for it. Based upon the novel by
Wolf Durian and directed by
Günter Meyer. •
Hanussen, 1988 – while recovering from being wounded during
World War I, the Doctor discovers that Austrian Klaus Schneider possesses empathic powers. After the war, Schneider changes his name into
Erik Jan Hanussen and goes to Berlin to perform as a hypnotist and mind reader. When he predicts
Adolf Hitler's Machtergreifung and the
Reichstag fire, the Nazis murder him. Directed by
István Szabó. • ''
Spider's Web (Das Spinnennetz''), 1989 – based on the 1923 novel by
Joseph Roth and focused on a young opportunistic Leutnant who suffered personal and national humiliation during the downfall of the
German Empire, and now becomes increasingly active in the right-wing underground of the early 1920s Berlin. Directed by
Bernhard Wicki. •
A Letter Without Words, 1998 – reconstructing the life of a wealthy, Jewish amateur filmmaker in Berlin during the 1920s and early 1930s on the basis of authentic filmic material presented by her granddaughter. Directed by
Lisa Lewenz. •
Invincible, 2001 – the true story of a Jewish strongman in 1932 Berlin by
Werner Herzog •
Sass, 2001 – based on the true story of brothers Franz and Erich Sass from
Moabit district, who became the most famous and innovative
bank robbers during 1920s Berlin. Directed by
Carlo Rola. •
Love in Thoughts (
Was nützt die Liebe in Gedanken), 2004 – about the so-called
Steglitz student tragedy in 1927, when two young men made a
suicide pact under the influence of alcohol, music and sex, which led to a tragedy. Directed by
Achim von Borries. • '''', 2013 – a Jewish doctor and
SPD-deputy at
Reichstag faces the rising rows between
Communists and
Nazis in Berlin, the growing
antisemitism, the
Nazi Machtergreifung until the
Reichstag fire, followed by the end of the key
civil liberties in 1933. == See also ==