In 1951, state control over the
DEFA film studio was tightened, as manifested in the creation of the DEFA commission in the
Socialist Unity Party of Germany's
Politburo. On the backrougnd of the nascent
Cold War, an emphasis was put on the creation of
anti-Western films; all six pictures released by DEFA in 1952 were dedicated to this theme. Writers Jeanne and
Kurt Stern wrote the draft of the script in early 1951, after reading a newspaper report about a protest against American military presence that took place in the West German village of
Hammelburg. The draft was submitted to DEFA on 14 March 1951. The National Film Board dubbed it "a remarkable agitational work in our campaign against re-militarization, for the unity of Germany and for peace." The final version was completed on 16 May; the writers took care not to highlight the importance of communism but rather the call for peace. A positive figure of a cleric, the village priest, was included in the plot; DEFA director-general Sepp Schwab had decided that it would be unwise to portray the church in a wholly negative light. A happy ending was added as well. In the original draft, the village was evicted. The SED considered the film as one of the most important cinematic projects produced during 1951. The party's DEFA Commission praised the script as "one of the best written this year." State Secretary of Press and Agitation
Hermann Axen had personally made many adjustments to the plot, and demanded that the Americans be presented as aggressors. Two directors who were approached by DEFA - Erwin Wilhelm Fiedler and
Falk Harnack - declined to work on the film. Eventually, the manager of the Dresden Theater, Martin Hellberg, who had no experience in the field of cinema, was selected to direct
The Condemned Village. Principal Photography began on 28 August 1951 and ended in early December. ==Reception==