The Adventures of Werner Holt (film)

Die Abenteuer des Werner Holt

The premier of The Adventures of Werner Holt.
Directed by Joachim Kunert
Produced by Hans Mahlich, Martin Sonnabend
Written by Dieter Noll, Claus Küchenmeister, Joachim Kunert
Starring Klaus-Peter Thiele
Music by Gerhard Wohlgemuth
Cinematography Rolf Sohre
Edited by Christa Stritt
Production
company
Distributed by PROGRESS-Film Verleih
Release date
  • 5 February 1965 (1965-02-05)
Running time
164 minutes
Country East Germany
Language German

The Adventures of Werner Holt (German: Die Abenteuer des Werner Holt) is a 1965 East German drama film directed by Joachim Kunert.

Plot

Werner Holt, a young Wehrmacht soldier stationed on the eastern border of Germany in the last days of World War II, is awaiting the attack of the Red Army with his friend and commander Gilbert Wolzow. Holt recalls the last two years of his life: his meeting with Wolzow, their conscription, his experience as an assistant in an anti-aircraft battery. He remembers how he began to lose faith in the war's aims, after witnessing the brutal crushing of the Slovak National Uprising and having a sexual encounter with an SS officer's wife, which left him disgusted. After that, he realized that his father's claims about millions of people being murdered in the concentration camps were true.

As the Soviets attack, Wolzow orders his ill-equipped soldiers to hold to the last man. Holt flees, only to hear that his friend was himself accused of treason by an SS blocking detachment. He arrives in time to see Wolzow hanged. Enraged, Holt grabs a machine-gun and mows down the executioners. He then deserts.

Cast

Production

The script was based on Dieter Noll's best-selling novel, The Adventures of Werner Holt, for which he received East Germany's National Prize at 1963.[1]

Reception

The film sold more than three million tickets in East Germany alone,[2] and was well received in the Soviet Union.[3] It was one of the relatively few DEFA pictures to be released in West Germany, where it enjoyed considerable success, as well.[4]

Director Joachim Kunert, writer Claus Küchenmeister and cinematographer Rolf Sohre all won the National Prize of East Germany, 2nd Class, on 6 October 1965.[5] The film was also selected as the best film of the year by the readers of the magazine Junge Welt, and its producers were honored with the Erich Weinert Medal. Abroad, The Adventures of Werner Holt received the Prize for the Best Anti-Fascist Film and the Prize of the Soviet Peace Committee at the 4th Moscow International Film Festival,[6] as well as a Honorary Diplom in the 1965 Edinburgh Film Festival. In addition, It was granted an Honorary Medal in the 1966 Carthage Film Festival.[7]

On 6 February 1965, the National Zeitung columnist Hartmut Albrect wrote that the picture contained "extraordinary, well-made scenes that convey deeper messages than those immediately noticed." Günter Sobe from the Berliner Zeitung dubbed the picture as "remarkably authentic" that has "a powerful effect." Critic Ulrich Gregor praised Kunert's decision to split the plot into two storylines in order to deal with the chronological inconsistency of Noll's book.[8] The German International Film Lexicon described the picture as "one that causes shock... and warns against misguided ideals."[9]

Sabine Hake cited The Adventures of Werner Holt as one of the most notable films that, using a modernist style, challenged the traditional East German anti-Fascist narrative by introducing a more personal perspective to the theme.[10] Anke Pinkert, too, viewed it as a picture that dealt with the issue of in a more realistic manner than previous works.[4] James Chapman wrote that the "flashbacks and the stream-of-concioucenss techniques" employed by the director enabled Kunert to present "a fully rounded protagonist".[11] Daniela Berghan included the film among DEFA's Anti-Fascist classics.[12] Authors Antonin and Miera Liehm classified it as one the "army epics", a genre that used the setting of the German military to convey strong criticism of the country's militaristic tradition.[13]

In 1996, The Adventures of Werner Holt was selected by a commission of historians and critics as one of the hundred most important German films ever made.[14]

References

  1. Paul Cooke, Marc Silberman. Screening War: Perspectives on German Suffering. ISBN 978-1-57113-437-0. Page 76.
  2. Ralf Schenk. Der Panzer rollte direkt auf uns zu. Superillu, 30 August 2006.
  3. Sovexportfilm. Soviet Film, 1970. Moscow (1970). ISSN 0201-8373. Page 11.
  4. 1 2 Anke Pinkert. Film and memory in East Germany. Indiana University Press (2008). ISBN 0-253-21967-1. Page 146.
  5. DEFA chronicle of 1965.
  6. "4th Moscow International Film Festival (1965)". MIFF. Retrieved 2012-12-06.
  7. Die Abenteuer des Werner Holt. Defa-stiftung.de.
  8. Die Abenteuer des Werner Holt. Fk-thueringen.de.
  9. Die Abenteuer des Werner Holt. Zweitausendsundeins.de.
  10. Sabine Hake. German National Cinema. Routledge (2002). ISBN 978-0-415-08901-2. Page 123.
  11. James Chapman. War and Film. Reaktion Books (2008). ISBN 978-1-86189-347-5. Page 79.
  12. Daniela Berghahn. Hollywood behind the Wall: the cinema of East Germany. ISBN 978-0-7190-6172-1. Page 73.
  13. Miera Liehm, Antonin J. Liehm. The Most Important Art: Soviet and Eastern European Film After 1945. ISBN 0-520-04128-3. Pages 269-270.
  14. Die Abenteuer des Werner Holt. Progress-film.de.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.