Walter Ulbrich

This article is about the TV writer and producer. For the East German politician, see Walter Ulbricht.
Walter Ulbrich
Born 15 June 1910
Metz (belonging to Germany at the time)
Died 13 November 1991 (aged 81)
Unterpfaffenhofen, Bavaria
Occupation Writer and producer
Years active 1938–1978

Walter Ulbrich (June 15, 1910 – November 13, 1991) was a German film producer primarily known for writing and/or producing 10 of 16 four-part adventure mini-series made for West German TV in the 1960s and 1970s. Mostly based on classics of world literature such as Robinson Crusoe or The Sea Wolf, these West German/French co-productions traditionally premiered on West German public-service television in December and are therefore also known as Weihnachtsvierteiler (Christmas four-parters).[1] The series have been dubbed into a variety of languages and also became popular outside Germany, especially in France, the UK, and Canada.

His work and influence on European TV productions

As a writer, Ulbrich saw scriptwriting as an important process and tried to make sure his productions were true to the books, yet at the same time exciting. The latter sometimes necessitated including plots or characters from other novels or inventing them outright, which has garnered his adaptations some criticism.[2] Because a script had to be arrived at that satisfied both German and French production partners, the scriptwriting stage could be lengthy, and so in the case of Two Years' Vacation it took four years from first draft to airing, because of script development as well as financial problems (on the French side).[2]

Differences between e.g. the English, German, and French versions of a series often comprised more than just a different dub and titles: e.g. Two Years' Vacation has different scores (German score by Hans Posegga, French score by Alain Le Meur) and the German cut adds an extended introduction set in Peru that shows the—purely MacGuffin—gold treasure being stolen, but misses a few scenes at the end where the youths are reunited with their families. Also, the German version has narration by the character Dick Sand as an adult, which brings out some of the elements of the story which Ulbrich perceived as class warfare. The French cut lacks that added social comment. Generally, the German versions tend to focus more on action scenes (because they were also intended for prime-time adult audiences) and have more experimental/contemporary-sounding scores than their French counterparts.[2]

On April 27, 1970, Ulbrich founded his own production company, Tele München Gruppe (TMG), which is still active today. In 1980, Concorde Filmverleih was founded as a distributor.[3]

Ulbrich's productions were all done in cooperation with the ZDF public-service television channel and other international partners, especially from France and Romania. Their success prompted the other German public-service channel ARD to emulate the formula, leading to adventure series such as Huckleberry Finn and His Friends (1979/80) and Captain James Cook (1987).[4] Ulbrich may not have invented international TV co-productions, but his series demonstrated the feasibility of high-quality TV productions using an eclectic mix of nationalities in front and behind the camera.

Selected filmography

Four-parters with Ulbrich as writer and/or producer

# Role[1] Title Year Film gauge Notes
1 W The Adventures of Robinson Crusoe 1964 35 mm Black-and-white
2 P Don Quixote 1965 35 mm Starring Josef Meinrad as Don Quixote. Black-and-white
3 WP Treasure Island 1966 35 mm Filmed in color, but premiered on German TV in black-and-white
4 WP The Adventures of Tom Sawyer 1968 35 mm
5 W Leatherstocking Tales 1969 35 mm
6 WP The Sea Wolf 1971 35 mm Starring Raimund Harmstorf as Wolf Larsen
Combination of The Sea Wolf, The Road, The Cruise of the Dazzler, and several other works by Jack London[5]
7 W Two Years' Vacation 1974 35 mm Combination of three Jules Verne novels with added elements (such as the treasure hunt) by Ulbrich
8 WP Burning Daylight 1975 16 mm Based on several works by Jack London about the Klondike gold rush
9 WP Michael Strogoff 1976 16 mm Again starring Raimund Harmstorf
10 W Kidnapped 1978 16 mm Starring David McCallum. Combination of the novels Kidnapped and Catriona.
Also known for its Gaelic-inspired main title theme (David's Theme) by Vladimir Cosma which has been covered by folk music artists such as the Kelly family (1979) and Declan Galbraith (2006) as David’s Song (Who’ll Come With Me).

^ W: as writer, P: as producer

Ulbrich also re-edited the French-produced Joseph Balsamo (1973, 16 mm, starring Jean Marais) for German TV, renaming it to Cagliostro, reducing its running time from 360 minutes to 255 minutes, and changing the plot substantially.

See also

References

External links