Der Auftrag Höglers | |
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Directed by | Gustav von Wangenheim |
Produced by | Kurt Hahne |
Written by | Gustav von Wangenheim |
Starring | Inge von Wangenheim |
Music by | Ernst Hermann Meyer |
Cinematography | Walter Roßkopf |
Editing by | Lena Neumann |
Studio | DEFA |
Distributed by | PROGRESS-Film Verleih |
Release date(s) | 27 January 1950 |
Running time | 93 minutes |
Country | East Germany |
Language | German |
Der Auftrag Höglers (English-language title: Hoegler's Mission)[1] is an East German drama film directed by Gustav von Wangenheim. It was released in 1950.
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Högler, the former director of a steel plant now in East Germany, is a rich and ruthless capitalist residing in West Germany. He wishes to lay his hands on the new technical innovations that were developed by Dr. Thelen, who now runs the factory after it has been nationalized. Högler tries to besmirch Thelen by organizing sabotage in the factory, threatening to kill innocent workers to destroy the scientist's reputation. Two trade union activists - the West German Maria and the East German Fritz - who know each other since they have both fought in the wartime anti-Fascist resistance, unite to thwart the capitalist's plans.
At 1949, after the foundation of both the Democratic Republic of Germany and the Federal Republic of Germany and as the existence of a Cold War between East and West became ever clearer, the East German authorities instructed DEFA's filmmakers to focus on new subjects: rather than making purely anti-Fascist films, they were now to fan anti-Western sentiment in their works. Der Auftrag Höglers was the one of the first movies made under those demands. In addition, it was also the first East German film with a style conforming to Socialist Realism, that was also required by the cultural establishment.[2]
The German Film Lexicon defined the picture as "utterly lifeless, Cold War-influenced film... but interesting as a historical document."[3]
Dagmar Schittly wrote that the movie was a typical anti-Western work of the time, "a propaganda pamphlet against the West German saboteurs."[4] Carsten Gansel and Tanja Walenski noted that it also featured a call for class unity, by presenting the ability of East and West German trade union members to cooperate.[5]
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