Ernst Thälmann (film)

Ernst Thälmann

A poster of Son of his Class near the Central Station of Leipzig, 1954.
Directed by Kurt Maetzig
Produced by Adolf Fischer
Written by Willi Bredel, Michael Tschesno-Hell
Starring Günther Simon
Music by Wilhelm Neef
Cinematography Karl Plintzner
Editing by Lena Neumann
Studio DEFA
Distributed by PROGRESS-Film Verleih
Release date(s) Sohn seiner Klasse:March 9, 1954 (1954-03-09) (GDR)
Führer seiner Klasse:October 7, 1955 (1955-10-07) (GDR)
Running time Sohn seiner Klasse: 127 minutes
Führer seiner Klasse: 140 minutes
Country German Democratic Republic
Language German
Budget 10,000,000 East German Mark[1]

Ernst Thälmann is an East German film in two parts about the life of the German Communist leader Ernst Thälmann, directed by Kurt Maetzig and starring Günther Simon in the title role. The first picture, Ernst Thälmann - Sohn seiner Klasse (Son of his Class), was released at 1954. It was followed by the 1955 sequel Ernst Thälmann - Führer seiner Klasse (Leader of his Class).

Contents

Plot

Ernst Thälmann - Son of his Class

After fellow soldier Johannes Harms reports that a revolution has broken out at home, Thälmann - who leads a revolutionary cell on the Western Front - and his friend Fiete Jansen rebel against their officers, Zinker and Quadde, and desert. Harms dies in a shelling. In Berlin, the American capitalist Mr. McFuller demands to crush the Spartacists. Zinker, now a member of the Freikorps, murders Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg. Thälmann hears of it and promises that their sacrifice will not be in vain. Jansen falls in love with Harms' daughter, Änne.

When Hamburg faces an attack by Zinker's forces, as part of the Kapp Putsch, the workers organize a general strike; after laborers are shot by the rebels, Thälmann ignores the bourgeoisie Social Democrats who reject violence, ambushes the Freikorps and captures their officers. The Social Democrat Police Senator Höhn frees them after they lightheartedly promise not to use violence.

Thälmann makes a speech in the USPD congress, calling to unite with the KPD, when the Soviet steamship Karl Liebknecht, loaded with wheat for the city's unemployed, reaches the port. Höhn sends Quadde, now a police captain, to prevent the distribution of the cargo, but after a stand-off the police retreat. Thälmann visits Vladimir Lenin in Moscow with other German communists.

Thälmann and his friends organize a communist uprising in Hamburg, and manage to hold out against the Reichswehr and the police. Fiete killes Zinker. Then, a delegate from the Central Committee announces that armed struggle is no longer the policy of the party, and that the weapons promised to them by the leadership will not arrive. The communists are forced to flee. Jansen is sentenced to death, but eventually his life are spared. Thälmann appears in the Hamburg harbor and promises not to abandon the struggle.

Ernst Thälmann - Leader of his Class

At 1930, Fiete Jansen is released from jail and is reunited with his wife, Änne. Thälmann, now a member of the Reichstag and chief of the KPD, assists the coal miners in the Ruhr to organize a massive strike after their wages are cut. When the presidential elections take place, veteran SPD member Robert Dirhagen is reluctant to support Paul von Hindenburg, although that is the party line. Thälmann calls for class unity against the Nazis, but the SPD leaders don't want to collaborate with him.

In the elections for parliament the KPD gains many seats and the Nazis lose two million votes. However, the Ruhr industrialists and Mr. McFuller support Adolf Hitler. Dirhagen is enraged to hear that the SPD will not oppose Franz von Papen's decision to allow Hitler into the government and tears his party card. The Nazis seize power.

The Nazis burn the Reichstag and accuse the communists, arresting many, including Thälmann and Dirhagen. Wilhelm Pieck and Jansen plan to rescue their leader with the aid of an Orpo jailer, but the SS guards - commanded by Quadde, now a SS Sturmbannführer - foil the plot. Fiete escapes abroad, joining the Thälmann Battalion in Spain, and later - after the Second World War begins - the Red Army's 143rd Guards Tank Division 'Ernst Thälmann'. Änne is arrested by the Gestapo. Hamburg is bombed, and she dies in her cell.

At August 1944, a German corps is encircled by the Red Army. Hitler demands that they will fight to the end. The Soviets send in Jansen with a group of German communists to convince the soldiers to defy the SS and surrender. Eventually, the Ernst Thälmann Division soldiers break through the German lines, liberate the local concentration camp in which Dirwagen was held and accept the German surrender after the SS were overpowered by Jansen's men. The communist Jansen and the Social Democrat Dirhagen shake hands. In Berlin, Thälmann leaves his cell to be executed, while contemplating on Pavel Kurchagin's words from How the Steel Was Tempered: "...All my life, all my strength were given to the finest cause in all the world - the fight for the liberation of mankind."

Cast

  • Fred Kötteritzsch as Franz von Papen
  • Will van Deeg as Heinrich Himmler
  • Georges Stanescu as Georgi Dimitrov
  • Theo Shall as judge (part 1)/Marcel Cachin (part 2)
  • Hubert Temming as Jacques Duclos
  • Karl Heinz Weiss as Maurice Thorez
  • Carla Hoffmann as Rosa Thälmann
  • Hans-Peter Minetti as Fiete Jansen
  • Karla Runkehl as Änne Jansen
  • Isa Henselmann as Ännchen Jansen
  • Wilfried Ortmann as Hannes Harms
  • Ursula Röschmann as Mrs. Harms
  • Paul R. Henker as Fiete's jailer (part 1)/Robert Dirhagen (part 2)
  • Erich Franz as Arthur Vierbreiter
  • Erika Dunkelmann as Martha Vierbreiter
  • Raimund Schelcher as Krischan Daik
  • Herbert Richter as Kruczinski
  • Rudolf Klix as Willbrandt
  • Johannes Arpe as Police senator Höhn
  • Sergei Kalinin as Karl Liebknecht captain
  • Karl Kendzia as Adolf Wahlkeit
  • Otto Dierichs as enraged industrialist
  • Wilhelm Koch-Hooge as Captain Schröder
  • Kurt Dunkelmann as Thälmann's first jailer
  • Otto Krone as Thälmann's second jailer
  • Pitt Kröger as the second jailer's son
  • Hans-Peter Thielen as Hartrein
  • Werner Pledath as Hauck senior
  • Hannes Fischer as Hauck junior
  • Paul Paulsen as Mr. McFuller

Production

Background

Ernst Thälmann, the Communist Party of Germany's chief who was executed by the Nazi regime at 1944 after spending 11 years in prison, was revered as a national hero in the nascent East Germany.[2][3][4][5] Thälmann's character combined communist convictions with an uncompromising struggle against Fascism; in a broader sense, he served as part of what author Russell Lemmons referred to as East Germany's "foundation myth": the belief that the communists were the most authentic anti-fascists, and therefore, their successors in the Socialist Unity Party were the legitimate leaders of a new German state.[6] Thälmann became the center of what many historians saw as a cult of personality.[3][4][5][7] This veneration required that all controversial aspects of his political career be repressed from mass consciousness.[8] Journalist Erich Wollenberg wrote that in the Ernst Thälmann films, "the Thälmann cult reached its apotheosis."[2]

Inception

The film was conceived at 1948, after the Soviet Occupation Zone's provisional authorities and the leadership of the Socialist Unity Party commissioned it; According to director Kurt Maetzig, "it was handed down from above".[1] Willi Bredel and Michael Tschesno-Hell, both political functionaries, were exempted from all their other duties in the party to concentrate on the writing of the script. A "Thälmann Committee" was created to direct the production of the film; its members included representatives from the Ministry of Culture, the Ministry of Press and Agitation, the DEFA studio and Thälmann's widow, Rosa, although she was removed at 1949.[9] The committee held its first meeting on 8 October 1948. At the third meeting, on the 27th, the members decided that portraying Thälmann's entire life would make the film to cumbersome, agreeing that it should concentrate only on the important historical events. The resolution also stated that the plot should focus on meetings between Thälmann and small groups of people, that would be seen embracing Socialism after being convinced by "the radiance of his personality". On the fourth meeting, it was suggested to begin the plot only at 1931 and stress Thälmann's part in the 1932 public transportation strike; yet member Otto Winzer pointed out that in order to appeal to the youth, the picture should deal with the protagonist's earlier years.[6]

Development

Bredel and Tschesno-Hell completed the first draft of the script at early 1951. The plot began with the four-year-old Ernst shoving socialist pamphlets in his trousers to hide them from the police officrs who raided his father's tavern, where an illegal meeting of the SPD took place.[9] It also featured his childhood and youth with his parents, his falling in love with the young Rosa Koch and his years as a simple worker who turned to communism.[6]

DEFA concluded that Bredel's and Tschesno-Hell's script would require splitting the film into three parts. This was deemed to long by the committee. After a year of deliberations, most of the original screenplay was rejected.[9] On January 1951, it was decided to have a two-part picture, the first dealing with the time from the end of World War I to 1930, and the second taking off at 1932 and continuing until the founding of the German Democratic Republic. The two parts were named Ernst Thälmann - Sohn des Volkes and Ernst Thälmann - Führer des Volkes (son and leader of the people, respectively). The titles were later changed to Sohn and Führer seiner Klasse.[6]

The political establishment had closely monitored the work. According to historian René Börrner "no other film had ever received such attention from the Politburo of the SED". on August 1951, Walter Ulbricht sent the committee a letter in which he requested that a meeting between Thälmann and Joseph Stalin would be portrayed.[7]

There were other political concerns, as well. Under the influence of events in the Soviet Union, the Ministry of Culture accused the DEFA filmmakers of taking up a Formalistic approach, and demanded that they reject it and adopt a Socialist realist line. During 1952, Bredel's and Tschesno-Hell's script was again subject to revisions and had to be re-written.[6] In July, State Secretary of Press and Agitation Hermann Axen told the Thälmann committee that the main problem to be solved was "The authors' primitive depiction of Thälmann", that failed to present his "grand revolutionary instinct". Later, committee member Hermann Lauter demanded to include historical events that had no relation to Thälmann's life, like the October Revolution.[9]

Approval

During late 1952, the writers accepted most of the demands. Their final draft was approved by the managerial committee and the Ministry of Culture only at 13 March 1953. The work on the screenplay of "Leader of his Class" began at summer 1953. Russel Lemmons claimed that this time, the writers "knew what was expected of them". The script was completed at 8 September, and later accepted with only minor changes.[6]

A demonstration of the materials to the first film was held for the State Committee of Cinema at 17 November. The chief of the Soviet commission in East Germany, Vladimir Semyonov, and director Sergei Gerasimov were present as well. Semionov personally made an adjustment to the script; he requested that a scene in which Thälmann appeared to be concerning doubt would be removed, since it was not in accordance with the principles of the proletarian struggle. In general, however, he approved of the presentation;[9] the script also introduced elements fitting the atmosphere of the Cold War, in the form of the films' main villain, the American capitalist Mr. McFuller.[1]

The final version was modeled after Mikhail Chiaureli's 1946 film The Vow[7][a 1] and his 1949 The Fall of Berlin, with a color scheme dominated by red.[10] On early 1954, two years after the original deadline, Son of his Class was ready for screening.[11] After the release of the first part, the principal photography of the second was carried out at the summer of 1954. As many as 150 servicemen of the Barracked People's Police were daily used throughout the shooting in the roles of extras.[12]

Reception

Contemporary response

Ernst Thälmann - Son of his Class premiered in the Friedrichstadt Palast, on 9 March 1954; over 3000 people attended, including Wilhelm Pieck and Walter Ulbricht. In a speech he carried after the screening, Pieck called the film a "message to all peace-loving Germans, especially our youth".[9] The picture was distributed in eighty prints.[13] It was the first film ever to be released simultaneously in East and West Germany, after the 1954 Berlin Conference brought about a temporary rapprochement between the two states.[14]

The first part was excessively promoted by the press; tickets were handed out without charge on several occasions, and mandatory screenings were held in collective farms and for school children. Within 13 weeks of its release, Son of his Class was viewed by 3.6 million people.[13] Director Kurt Maetzig, Willi Bredel, Michael Tschesno-Hell, cinematographer Karl Plintzner and actor Günther Simon, who portrayed Thälmann, were all awarded East Germany's National Prize, 1st Class, at 7 October 1954.[15] The film also won a special Peace Prize in the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, on the same year.[16]

Leader of his Class, that had its premiere in Berlin's Volksbühne at 7 October 1955, was strongly endorsed by the government, as well. Within 13 weeks, it was viewed by 5.7 million people.[13] His appearance in the film won Günther Simon the Best Actor Award in the 1956 Karlovy Vary Festival.[17]

De-Stalinization

Nikita Khrushchev's Secret Speech on February 1956 signalled the beginning of a new course in the politics of the Eastern Block, including in the field of art. Joseph Stalin's character, which was celebrated during his lifetime, was now being edited out of many motion pictures; some films that were made before 1953 were banned altogether.[18]

On 5 June 1956, a month before the 9th Karlovy Vary Festival, Alexander Abusch wrote the SED Politburo a letter notifying them on the removal of montage that featured Stalin from the film, so it would be fit for screening in Czechoslovakia. Abusch alsp requested permission to edit out a scene in which Fiete Jansen quoted Stalin's words: "Hitlers come and go, but Germany and the German people remain." After the 1961 22nd Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, which espoused a strict anti-Stalinist line, a group of officials in the East German Ministry of Culture held a conference from the 25th to the 27th of November 1961. They decided to remove all the footage involving the figure of Stalin from the film.[9] All copies, even those abroad, were subject to the resolution.[1] In the post-1961 version, Stalin does not make an appearance, but his name remains in the opening credits, along with the actor portraying him, and is mentioned on several occasions.

Critical reaction

In East Germany, the films were received with favourable acclaim. On 28 March 1954, Minister of Culture Johannes R. Becher called Son of his Class a "national heroic epic," and a "masterful depiction of history" at an article published in the Tägliche Rundschau newspaper.[9] Berliner Zeitung columnist Joachim Bagemühl wrote that "Maetzig created massive crowd scenes, the likes of which were rarely seen in film hitherto."[19] Journalist Herbert Thiel dubbed the second part "an outstanding film" in a Schweriner Volkszeitung article from 1 October 1955. The Das Volk magazine critic Kurt Steiniger claimed that when he watched the picture, his "heart beated in coordination with the thousands of people around Thälmann." On 18 October, a reporter of the Mitteldeutsche Neuste Nachrichten wrote "not a single person will not ask himself... how is it, that this film touched me so deeply?"[1] Author Henryk Keisch commented: "in the midst of those unprecedentedly monumental scenes... There is a distinct man, with distinct emotions and thoughts... it is a grand work of art."[20] At 1966, the GDR's Cinema Lexicon called Ernst Thälmann a "thrilling and informative document about the indestructible force of the best parts of the German people, successfully recreating... the heroic struggle of the German workers led by Thälmann."[7]

French writer Georges Sadoul praised the series for "presenting Thälmann in a thoroughly human way" on an article published in Les Lettres Françaises at 21 July 1955.[19] In West Germany, a Der Spiegel review from 31 March 1954 dismissed the first part as communist propaganda, calling it "a machine of hate" that is "bearable to watch only due to Kurt Maetzig's mischievous sense for details."[21] The magazine's film critic viewed the second part as "less original and even less well-made."[22] Detlef Kannapin wrote that the films were "a myth", intended to "espouse propaganda elements... in a Socialist Realist style" and their main aim was to depict Thälmann as "the great, faultless leader."[2] Seán Allan and John Sandford described it as combining "fact with the officially endorsed distortion of history."[23] Sabine Hake wrote that the film was made after Maetzig turned to directing pictures with "straightforward propagandistic intentions."[24] Russell Lemmons concluded that eventually, instead of a story of a simple man rising to greatness, it was a history of the German working movement in 20th century.[6]

In a 1996 interview, Kurt Maetzig told "I believe that the first part is bearable and even has artistic qualities, while the second deteriorated... Due to over-idealization. In many aspects, it is simply embarrassing."[25]

Historical accuracy

Shortly after the script of Son of his Class was approved, DEFA director-genral Joseph Schwab told the Thälmann committee members that he was concerned about the veracity of the plot. He pointed out three inaccuracies: at 1918, there were no Workers' and Soldiers' Councils on the Western Front, only inside Germany; the American general accomppanying Mr. McFuller could not have been present in Berlin during the crushing of the Spartacus Uprising, since peace with the United States was not achieved yet; and finally, Wilhelm Pieck was not with Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht at November 9, 1918. Only Pieck's part was omitted from the screenplay. Bredel told Schwab that the rest would be left for the decision of the Politburo. The scenes which the director-general opposed to appear in the film.[9]

In a meeting held in East Berlin's Academy of Sciences at 17 November 1955, West German film critic Klaus Norbert Schäffer told writer Michael Tschesno-Hell that the second part focused solely on the communist resistance to the Nazis, ignoring the Social-Democrats and others who opposed the regime. He also mentioned that while Thälmann was incarcerated in three different prisons, the film gives the impression that he was held only in one. Another claim made by Schäffer was that the arms shipment promised to the communist rebels in Hamburg was intercepted by the army, and not held back by Thälmann's enemies in the party, as seen in Son of his Class. Tschesno-Hell responded to Schäffer by telling that "there are great truths and minor truths. In art, it is completely legitimate to permit the great ones have precedence."[6] René Börrner noted that the film skipped over the years between 1924 and 1930, thus ignoring Thälmann's ascendance to the position of party chief - and the many controversies and ideological rifts that characterized the KPD in that time.[20]

Jouranlist Erich Wollenberg, a former member of the KPD, wrote a review of Son of his Class at 1954, in which he claimed that the film was a "cocktail of heroic lies and distortions, with few drops of truth mixed in it." He pointed out that, contrary to the film, Thälmann was not on the Western Front when the German Revolution broke out on 5 November 1918, but in Hamburg: this detail was cited in Thälmann's official biography, written by Bredel himself. Wollenberg had found one other discrepancy between the biography and Son of his Class: the real Thälmann played no major role in the struggle against Kapp's supporters.[2]

Historian Detlef Kannapin noted that, while the film portrays Thälmann as seeking to convince the reluctant Social-Democrats to join forces against the Nazis, he never pursued that policy. As late as October 1932, he referred to the SPD as the chief rivals of the communists, and often called them "Social-Fascists". The Comintern's resolution to form an anti-Nazi bond with the Social-Democrats was only made at 1935, when Ernst Thälmann was already imprisoned. According to Kannapin, the figure of Robert Dirhagen, the minor SPD member, symbolizes the Social-Democrat wing of the SED, which united with KPD under Soviet pressure.[2] Seán Allan and John Sandford wrote that in the film, the blame for Hitler's rise was "laid solely on the Social-Democrats", thus justifying the KPD's Stalinist line and its rivalry with the SPD before 1933.[23][a 2]

Cultural impact

Mandatory screenings of both parts continued to be held in factories and collective farms years after their release. The films became part of the curriculum in the East German education system, and all the pupils watched them in school.[20] Footage from the movies was used to make eight short films, with lengths ranging from 8 to 27 minutes, that were shown to young children.[26] It held a particularly significant status in the Ernst Thälmann Pioneer Organisation; At 1979, the movement's manual still listed the film as an important source of information about Thälmann's life.[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Dr. Petra Anders. "Ernst Thälmann–Führer seiner Klasse, Propaganda für Arbeiterklasse [Ernst Thälmann - Leader of his Class, Propaganda for the Working Class]" (in German). Landesinstitut für Schule und Medien Berlin-Brandenburg. http://bildungsserver.berlin-brandenburg.de/fileadmin/bbb/medien/medienpaedagogik/filmpaedagogik/ddr_im_film/Ernst_Thaelmann1.pdf. Retrieved 22 April 2011. 
  2. ^ a b c d e Peter Monteath (editor) (2000). Ernst Thälmann. Mensch und Mythos. Rodopi. ISBN 978-9042013230.  Wollenberg: pages 109-112; Kannapin: pages 128-136.
  3. ^ a b Klaus Heller,Jan Plamper‏ (2004). Personality cults in Stalinism. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. ISBN 9783899711912.  Page 312.
  4. ^ a b Alan Lloyd Nothnagle (1999). Building the East German Myth: Historical Mythology and Youth Propaganda in the German Democratic Republic, 1945-1989 (Social History, Popular Culture, and Politics in Germany). Michigan: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0472109463.  Page 121.
  5. ^ a b John Rodden‏ (2006). Textbook reds: schoolbooks, ideology, and Eastern German identity. Pennsylvania State University Press. ISBN 978-0271025216.  Page 170.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Sabine Hake; John Davidson (editors) (2007). Framing the Fifties: Cinema in a Divided Germany (FILM EUROPA: German Cinema in an International Context). Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-1845452049.  Pages 91-105.
  7. ^ a b c d e René Börrner (15 November 2001). "Ernst Thälmann als Leitfigur der kommunistischen Erziehung in der DDR [Ernst Thälmann as a Leading Figure in the East German Communist Education]" (in German). Technischen Universität Braunschweig. http://deposit.ddb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?idn=967644135&dok_var=d1&dok_ext=pdf&filename=967644135.pdf. Retrieved 22 April 2011.  pages 26-29.
  8. ^ Silke Satjukow,Rainer Gries (2002). Sozialistische Helden. Christoph Links Verlag. ISBN 978-3861532712.  Page 101.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i Dagmar Schittly (2002). Zwischen Regie und Regime. Die Filmpolitik der SED im Spiegel der DEFA-Produktionen. Christoph Links Verlag. ISBN 978-3861532620.  Pages 64-70.
  10. ^ Joshua Feinstein (2002). The Triumph of the Ordinary: Depictions of Daily Life in the East German Cinema, 1949-1989. The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0807853856.  page 39.
  11. ^ Thilo Gabelmann (1996). Thälmann ist niemals gefallen?. Eine Legende stirbt. Das Neue Berlin. ISBN 978-3359008002.  Page 284.
  12. ^ Torsten Diedrich (2003). Die getarnte Armee. Geschichte der Kasernierten Volkspolizei der DDR 1952 - 1956. Christoph Links Verlag. ISBN 978-3861532422.  Page 248.
  13. ^ a b c Daniela Berghahn (2005). Hollywood Behind the Wall: The Cinema of East Germany. Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0719061721.  Page 53.
  14. ^ Michael Lemke (2001). Einheit Oder Sozialismus?: Die Deutschlandpolitik Der SED 1949-1961. Bohlau Verlag. ISBN 978-3412142001.  Page 311.
  15. ^ DEFA Foundation. "DEFA-Chronik für das Jahr 1954 [DEFA - Chronicle of the Year 1954]" (in German). defa.de. http://www.defa.de/cms/DesktopDefault.aspx?TabID=588. Retrieved 8 October 2011. 
  16. ^ DEFA Foundation. "Ernst Thälmann - Sohn seiner Klasse [Ernst Thälmann - Son of his Class]" (in German). defa.de. http://www.defa.de/cms/DesktopDefault.aspx?TabID=412&FilmID=Q6UJ9A002KN3. Retrieved 20 June 2011. 
  17. ^ "9. MFF Karlovy Vary" (in Czech). kviff.com. http://www.kviff.com/cz/o-festivalu/historie-rocniky/1956/. Retrieved 22 April 2011. 
  18. ^ Miera Liehm, Antonin J. Liehm (1977). The Most Important Art: Soviet and Eastern European Film After 1945. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-04128-3.  page 204.
  19. ^ a b "Ernst Thälmann – Führer seiner Klasse [Ernst Thälmann - Leader of his Class]" (in German). Bildungsserver Berlin. http://bildungsserver.berlin-brandenburg.de/6025.html. Retrieved 22 April 2011. 
  20. ^ a b c René Börrner (2004). Wie Ernst Thälmann treu und kühn! Das Thälmann-Bild der SED im Erziehungsalltag der DDR. Klinkhardt. ISBN 978-3781513211.  Pages 31-32.
  21. ^ uncredited author (31 March 1954). "Mit kernigem Silberblick [With a Powerful Gaze]" (in German). Der Spiegel. http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-28955690.html. Retrieved 22 April 2011. 
  22. ^ uncredited author (9 November 1955). "Führer seiner Klasse [Leader of his Class]" (in German). Der Spiegel. http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-31971445.html. Retrieved 23 April 2011.  (bottom of the page).
  23. ^ a b Seán Allan, John Sandford (1999). DEFA: East German Cinema 1946-1992. Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-1571817532.  Page 70.
  24. ^ Sabin Hake (2001). German National Cinema (National Cinemas). Routledge. ISBN 978-0415089029.  Page 94.
  25. ^ Ingrid Poss (2006). Spur Der Filme: Zeitzeugen uber die DEFA. Christoph Links Verlag. ISBN 978-3861534013.  Page 97.
  26. ^ Tilo Prase, Judith Kretzschmar‏ (2004). Propagandist und Heimatfilmer. Leipziger Universitätsverlag. ISBN 978-3937209289.  Page 46.

Annotations

  1. ^ The scene in which Thälmann swears to uphold the legacy of Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg bears great resemblance to Stalin's oath to hold on to Lenin's teachings in The Vow. Another motif from the film is the blood-stained letter taken from the corpse of a dead man: Fiete Jansen picks one such from Harms' body; a similar letter, originally carried by murdered communist Petrov, reaches Stalin in The Vow.
  2. ^ The film has several other fictional details that are presented as historical occurrences: While a Soviet ship named Karl Liebknecht existed, it was the flagship of the Caspian Sea Fleet and never reached Hamburg. There was no 143rd Tank Guards Division or any other military formation named after Thälmann in the Red Army.

External links