Distribution On 10 April 1963, the eve of 18th Anniversary of Buchenwald's Self-Liberation, the film had its premiere in East Berlin's Colosseum Cinema. It was released in 24 copies in East Germany, and sold 806,915 tickets in the first year. By 1976, it had been viewed by 1.5 million people in cinemas, a number which rose to 2.5 million until 1994. In addition, 35mm reel copies were supplied to the
National People's Army, the League of People's Friendship and to other public organizations. By that time, the film had already been exported to all the European countries, as well as to Canada, the United States, India, Japan, China, the
Democratic Republic of Vietnam, Ethiopia, Mozambique and Guinea.
DFF first broadcast it on television in September 1966 and re-ran it five times during the 1970s.
Awards before the screening of
Naked Among Wolves in the Moscow Film Festival.|280px
Naked Among Wolves won a Silver Prize in the
3rd Moscow International Film Festival, in July 1963. Although the
Communist Party of the USSR instructed the Soviet members of the jury to award the Grand Prix to the East German entry,
Naked Among Wolves narrowly lost it to
Federico Fellini's
8½; allegedly, during the thirty-six-hour debate of the jury before the choosing of the winner, members
Stanley Kramer,
Jean Marais and
Sergio Amidei threatened to leave if Beyer received the prize rather than Fellini. Polish member Jan Rybkowski described
Naked Among Wolves as a "glossing over of reality." On 6 October 1963, Apitz, Beyer, cinematographer Günter Marczinkowsky and art director
Alfred Hirschmeier received the
National Prize of East Germany, 1st degree, for their work. On 14 March 1964, actors Erik S. Klein, Herbert Köfer, Wolfram Handel and Gerry Wolf were all awarded the
Heinrich Greif Prize, 1st class, in recognition of their appearance in
Naked Among Wolves. The Evangelical Film Guild of
Frankfurt am Main chose
Naked Among Wolves as Best Film of the Month for March 1968. The West German Wiesbaden-based
National Review of Cinema and Media granted it the assessment "Valuable", its second-highest rating for motion pictures.
Critical response A day after the premiere,
Horst Knietzsch wrote in the
Socialist Unity Party's newspaper
Neues Deutschland that "with
Naked Among Wolves, the filmmakers of our country have fulfilled a national duty. For the first time in German cinema, the human greatness, the courage, the revolutionary fervor and the international solidarity of the political prisoners in the Fascist concentration camps are displayed and set as the main theme of a motion picture... This film will go down in the history of German Socialist cinema." In a column published in East Berlin's
Die Weltbühne magazine, Peter Edel noted that while it continued the tradition of DEFA anti-Fascist films like
Marriage in the Shadows and
Five Cartridges,
Naked Among Wolves was the first such to be set in a concentration camp. He called it "the culmination of DEFA's cinematic work on this subject." Helmut Ulrich wrote in
Neue Zeit: "Young people - not only they, but they above all - must see this film." Former Buchenwald inmate and Commandant of the
Felix Dzerzhinsky Guards Regiment,
Major General Heinz Gronau, who viewed the film in a special screening for survivors before the premiere, told
Neues Deutschland that he approved of the manner in which "the proletarian internationalism was emphasized." The critic of the West German
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, who watched the picture in a closed screening held during the
13th Berlin International Film Festival, wrote that "it has a wide scope, and fails to cover it all... It does not reach the level of DEFA works like
Man of Straw or
The Murderers Are Among Us, but is still an honest, well-made picture." Karl Feuerer from the
Hamburg-based
Die andere Zeitung wrote in 1964: "As long as the
Brown past is not overcome... And people such as
Globke and
Bütefisch cling to their positions of power... Such pictures are required." In 1968, after it was released in the Federal Republic, Hellmut Haffner from Hamburg's
Sonntagblatt commented that "today, it may take five years until a film from Germany arrives in Germany."
Die Welt critic
Friedrich Luft commented: "The exclusive appearance of the communists in the best roles... Makes the film all too partisan. Thus, one remains skeptical of its important moral message more than one would wish. It is a pity that a DEFA film has to be taken in this manner, especially in this case." The critic of the Greek newspaper
Ethnos complained that the film presented "a nice, well-tended Buchenwald, where only the disobedient and the communists are punished severely." The reviewer of
Ta Nea commented: "All the 'terrible things' we see in the studio version are not even a pale imitation of Buchenwald's reality... Of course the film was made by Germans, but does it give them the right to talk about the noose without mentioning the victims?"
Penelope Gilliatt, who reviewed the film for
The Observer, commented that it was "an artistic micro-cosmos of the German situation from an East German perspective... Well photographed and better than it might have been."
Philip Oakes of
The Sunday Telegraph opined that
Naked Among Wolves was "rough, gory and realistic, but above all meant to serve as entertainment", that it contained "propaganda" and was "a violent variation of
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs." The
New York Times reviewer
Bosley Crowther wrote on 19 April 1967: "Another torturing recollection of the horrors of the camps... is rendered a bit less torturing by a fresh and hopeful theme in
Naked Among Wolves."
Analysis Martina Thiele remarked that "
Naked Among Wolves is not a holocaust film in the strict sense, but rather a 'testimony of anti-Fascism'." The picture emphasized the international solidarity of the communists, and the racial classifications in the concentration camp were largely overlooked. Daniela Berghahn wrote that, as official East German discourse about the wartime persecution of Jews was subject to a
Marxist interpretation of history, the topic was marginalized; in addition, the politics of the
Cold War and the
Arab-Israeli Conflict made the theme highly sensitive. Berghahn commented that the child was not in the center of the plot, but served as an "infantile victim" who had to be protected by the "communist heroes... Beyer's film reaffirms the official GDR conception of the Holocaust." Thiele also noted that the word 'Jew' is barely mentioned in the film or in the novel, mostly as part of antisemitic slurs used by the antagonists. Bill Niven concluded: "It is not Jews who are seen to suffer, but Germans - for a Jew. Resistance and victimhood reside with Pippig, Höfel and Krämer."
Naked Among Wolves was centered on the inner conflicts of individual persons, unlike earlier films from the 1950s about the history of the wartime resistance. Thomas Heimann remarked that "Beginning from 1960... A new generation of directors, Beyer among them, sought to redress the past in a manner somewhat less conforming to the official view of history... The emphasis was laid on the individual stories... Of the anti-Fascists." Paul Cooke and Marc Silberman wrote that
Naked Among Wolves, like all DEFA's works, "was closely aligned to the state's official historiography and reflected changes in the Party's agenda... A canonical text."; Anke Pinkert commented that "with a younger postwar audience in mind... The films of the early 1960s... Including
Naked Among Wolves... Aimed at a more realist approach to history". Thiele pointed out that one of the important aspects of the plot was that André Höfel's decision to save the child was done in contradiction to
party resolutions: "
Marcel Reich-Ranicki's explanation to the success of the novel can be also used in regards to the film - in a country in which one of the most popular songs was called
The Party is Always Right, people were thankful for a story hinged upon the disobedience of a comrade." However, the picture still conveyed conservative messages: the film's hero, Krämer, leader of the communists in Buchenwald, is contrasted with the character of August Rose, who betrays his friends. While Rose is portrayed sympathetically, he is a coward nonetheless. Rose is not identified as a communist; according to Thiele, "he is obviously implied to be a
Social-Democrat." Another figure was that of Leonid Bogorski, granted a more prominent role than in the novel: Bogorski saves the child completely on his own, a feat which he performs with others in Apitz's original; he also heads the uprising. Klaus Wischnewski, DEFA's chief dramatist, told that he was disturbed by the "stereotypical leadership role which the Soviet Bogorski occupies." Thomas Heimann remarked that Bogorski, who acts as the plot's
deus ex machina, represents the "higher authority and wisdom of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union." Another motif was the flight of the SS officers, who are all seen leaving the camp unharmed, most of them in civilian clothing which they have prepared beforehand. Many reviews of the film in East Germany stressed that the former war criminals had little to fear in the Federal Republic. Bill Niven wrote that the suggestion that the SS fled to West Germany was accentuated in the film more than in the novel, although Beyer was careful not to make explicit parallels between the camp and the FRG. Daniela Berghahn remarked that "the film's production history illustrates how the 'Jewish question' was utilized for political ends": in the early 1960s, during and after the
Eichmann Trial, the SED sought to "maximize the propaganda value in a campaign to remind the world that many former Nazis were living in West Germany." In 1964, the East Berlin-based
Berliner Zeitung am Abend located the child upon whose story the novel was based:
Stefan Jerzy Zweig, who survived Buchenwald at the age of four with his father Zacharias, with the help of two prisoner functionaries:
Robert Siewert and
Willi Bleicher. Bleicher, a former member of the
Communist Party of Germany (Opposition) and the kapo of the storage building, was the one who convinced the SS to turn a blind eye to the child. When Zweig was to be sent to Auschwitz, prisoners who were tasked with compiling the deportees' list erased his name and replaced him with Willy Blum, a sixteen-year-old
Sinto boy. Zweig moved to
Israel after liberation, and later studied in France. After he was discovered to be the 'Buchenwald child', he settled in East Germany, where he remained until 1972. Zweig received much media and the public attention in the country. Blum's fate was only disclosed after the German reunification. The self-liberation of Buchenwald, celebrated in East Germany on 11 April, held an important status in national consciousness since the late 1950s, even before the publication of the novel. As shown in the film, the communist prisoners, who had organized a secret resistance network, were purported to have risen up against the SS and liberated themselves before the arrival of the American forces. While the
Buchenwald Resistance did exist, it was not dominated solely by communists and its role in the camp's liberation, as well as its conduct in the years before, was greatly embellished for propaganda purposes. ==References==