Documentaries Documentary films specifically about the Berlin Wall include: •
The Tunnel (December 1962), an NBC News Special documentary film. •
The Road to the Wall (1962), a documentary film. •
Something to Do with the Wall (1991), a documentary about the fall of the Berlin Wall by
Ross McElwee and Marilyn Levine, originally conceived as a commemoration of the 25th anniversary of its construction. •
Rabbit à la Berlin (2009), a documentary film, directed by Bartek Konopka, told from the point of view of a group of wild rabbits that inhabited the zone between the two walls. •
The American Sector (2020), a documentary by Courtney Stephens and Pacho Velez that tracks down the wall segments located in the U.S.
Feature films Fictional films featuring the Berlin Wall have included: •
Escape from East Berlin (1962), American-West German film inspired by story of 29 East Germans that tunneled under the wall •
The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1965), a Cold War classic set on both sides of The Wall, from the
eponymous book by John le Carré, directed by
Martin Ritt. •
The Boy and the Ball and the Hole in the Wall (1965), Spanish-Mexican co-production. •
Funeral in Berlin (1966), a spy movie starring
Michael Caine, directed by
Guy Hamilton. •
Casino Royale (1967), a film featuring a segment centred on a house apparently bisected by the Wall. •
The Wicked Dreams of Paula Schultz (1968), a Cold War spy farce about an Olympic athlete who defects, directed by
George Marshall. •
Berlin Tunnel 21 (1981), a made-for-TV movie about a former American officer leading an attempt to build a tunnel underneath The Wall as a rescue route. •
Night Crossing (1982), a British-American drama film starring
John Hurt,
Jane Alexander, and
Beau Bridges, based on the true story of the Strelzyk and Wetzel families, who on 16 September 1979, attempted to escape from East Germany to West Germany in a homemade hot air balloon, during the days of the Inner German border-era. •
The Innocent (1993), a film about the joint
CIA/
MI6 operation to build a tunnel under East Berlin in the 1950s, directed by
John Schlesinger. •
Sonnenallee (1999), a German comedy film about life in East Berlin in the late 1970s, directed by
Leander Haußmann. •
The Tunnel (2001), a dramatization of a collaborative tunnel under the Wall, filmed by
Roland Suso Richter. •
Good Bye Lenin! (2003), film set during German unification that depicts the fall of the Wall through archive footage •
Open The Wall (2014), featuring a dramatized story of the East-German border guard who was the first to let East Berliners cross the border to West Berlin on
9 November 1989. •
Bridge of Spies (2015), featuring a dramatized subplot about
Frederic Pryor, in which an American economics graduate student visits his German girlfriend in
East Berlin just as the Berlin Wall is being built. He tries to bring her back into West Berlin but is stopped by
Stasi agents and arrested as a spy.
Literature Some novels specifically about the Berlin Wall include: •
John le Carré,
The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1963), classic Cold War
spy fiction. •
Len Deighton,
Berlin Game (1983), classic Cold War
spy fiction • T.H.E. Hill,
The Day Before the Berlin Wall: Could We Have Stopped It? – An Alternate History of Cold War Espionage, 2010 – based on a legend told in Berlin in the 1970s. • John Marks'
The Wall (1999) in which an American spy defects to the East just hours before the Wall falls. • Marcia Preston's
West of the Wall (2007, published as ''Trudy's Promise'' in North America), in which the heroine, left behind in East Berlin, waits for news of her husband after he makes his escape over the Berlin Wall. •
Peter Schneider's
The Wall Jumper, (1984; German:
Der Mauerspringer, 1982), the Wall plays a central role in this novel set in Berlin of the 1980s.
Music Music related to the Berlin Wall includes: •
Stationary Traveller (1984), a concept album by
Camel that takes the theme of families and friends split up by the building of the Berlin Wall. • "
West of the Wall", a 1962 top 40 hit by
Toni Fisher, which tells the tale of two lovers separated by the newly built Berlin Wall. • "
Holidays in the Sun", a song by the English
punk rock band
Sex Pistols which prominently mentions the Wall, specifically singer
Johnny Rotten's fantasy of digging a tunnel under it. •
David Bowie's "
Heroes" (1977), inspired by the image of a couple kissing at the Berlin Wall (in reality, the couple was his producer
Tony Visconti and backup singer
Antonia Maaß). The song (which, along with the
album of the same name, was recorded in Berlin), makes lyrical references to the kissing couple, and to the "Wall of Shame" ("the shame was on the other side"). Upon Bowie's death, the
Federal Foreign Office paid homage to Bowie on Twitter:see also
above • "" (1984), a song by the Dutch pop band , about the differences between East and West Berlin during the period of the Berlin Wall. • "Chippin' Away" (1990), a song by Tom Fedora, performed by
Crosby, Stills & Nash on the Berlin Wall, which appeared on
Graham Nash's solo album
Innocent Eyes (1986). • "Berliners", a song by
Roy Harper from his 1990 album
Once (lyrics include "They built a wall, boys, it stayed up for thirty years"). The song uses a BBC news broadcast describing the fall of the wall. • "
Hedwig and the Angry Inch," a
rock opera whose genderqueer protagonist Hedwig Robinson was born in East Berlin and later, living in the United States, describes herself as "the new Berlin Wall" standing between "East and West, slavery and freedom, man and woman, top and bottom." As a result, she says, people are moved to "decorate" her with "blood, graffiti and spit." (1998) • The music video for
Liza Fox's song "Free" (2013) contains video clips of the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Visual art Artworks related to the Berlin Wall include: '' (1996) by
Veryl Goodnight, a statue depicting horses leaping over actual pieces of the Berlin Wall • In 1982, the West-German artist ''
created about 500 artworks along the former border strip around West Berlin as part of his work series Border Injuries''. On one of his actions he tore down a large part of the Wall, installed a prepared foil of 3x2m in it, and finished the painting there before the border soldiers on patrol could detect him. This performance was recorded on video. His actions are well-documented both in newspapers from that time and in recent scientific publications. •
The Day the Wall Came Down, 1996 and 1998 sculptures by
Veryl Goodnight, which depict five horses leaping over actual pieces of the Berlin Wall.
Games Video games related to the Berlin Wall include: •
The Berlin Wall (1991), a video game. •
Ostalgie: The Berlin Wall (2018), video game by Kremlingames, where the player, playing as the leader of the GDR from 1989 to 1991, can take down the Berlin Wall themselves or as a result of events in the game, or keep the wall intact as long as the country exists. •
Call of Duty: Black Ops (2010), appears as a multiplayer level in the First Strike DLC. •
Call of Duty: Black Ops Cold War (2020), the Berlin Wall appears when the player crosses into East Berlin from a CIA safehouse. == See also ==