Kolberg (film)
Kolberg | |
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Directed by | Veit Harlan |
Written by | Veit Harlan Alfred Braun Joseph Goebbels (uncredited) |
Based on | Kolberg by Paul Heyse |
Produced by | Veit Harlan Joseph Goebbels (uncredited) |
Starring | Kristina Söderbaum Heinrich George Paul Wegener Horst Caspar Gustav Diessl Otto Wernicke Kurt Meisel |
Cinematography | Bruno Mondi |
Edited by | Wolfgang Schleif |
Music by | Norbert Schultze |
Production company | Ufa Filmkunst GmbH (Herstellungsgruppe Veit Harlan) |
Distributed by | Deutsche Filmvertriebs GmbH |
Release date |
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Running time | 110 minutes |
Country | Nazi Germany |
Languages | German French |
Budget | 7.6 million RM[1] |
Kolberg is a 1945 German historical film directed by Veit Harlan. One of the last films of the Third Reich, it was intended as a Nazi propaganda piece to bolster the will of the German population to resist the Allies.
The film is based on the autobiography of Kolberg in Pomerania, and on a play drawn from the book by Paul Heyse. It tells the story of the defence of the besieged fortress town of Kolberg against French troops between April and July 1807, during the Napoleonic Wars. In reality, the city's defence, led by then-Lieutenant Colonel August von Gneisenau, held out until the war was ended by the Treaty of Tilsit. In the film, the French abandon the siege.
, mayor ofPlot[]
The film begins in 1813 after the phase of the Napoleonic Wars known in German as the Befreiungskriege (Wars of Liberation). The opening scenes show Prussian Landwehr and volunteers marching down the streets of Breslau through enthusiastic crowds. This is followed by a dialogue between King Frederick William III of Prussia and Count August von Gneisenau, in which Gneisenau explains that the siege of Kolberg taught the importance of citizen armies. Ending with the admonition that kings who cannot lead must abdicate, the scene switches to Vienna in 1806 to show the abdication of the last Holy Roman Emperor, Francis II of Austria, whom the script has Gneisenau call "an Emperor who abandoned the German people in their hour of need".
The scene set, the film moves to 1806 and a Kolberg not yet affected by war, where the inhabitants are shown enjoying life, and the town's leaders, Nettelbeck chief among them, discuss Napoleon's proclamations, and what it will mean to them. Some see the French victories as a good thing, some wonder whether to leave. Nettelbeck alone is set on resisting the French. The film continues in this vein, with Nettelbeck struggling against cowardice, lethargy and the old-fashioned ideas of the garrison commander, to defend his city against the approaching French. Nettelbeck creates a citizen militia, in spite of the best efforts of the regular Prussian Army, has supplies collected, and strongly opposes the idea of surrender.
Finally, having been threatened with execution, and convinced that Kolberg can only be saved if a great leader can be found, Nettelbeck sends Maria on the dangerous journey to Königsberg whither the Court of Prussia has retreated, to meet with the King and with Queen Louise, who was described by Napoleon as "the only man in Prussia". Maria's journey leads to the energetic and charismatic Gneisenau being sent to Kolberg. After an initial confrontation with Nettelbeck, in order to show that there is only one leader in Kolberg, and that Gneisenau is that leader, the two work together with the army and the citizens to save the city from the French. After Kolberg is (unhistorically) saved, the film returns to 1813 after the Convention of Tauroggen, a time when Napoleon was defeated in Russia, and Prussian leaders wonder whether it is time to turn openly against him. Frederick William is convinced by Gneisenau to do so, and sits down to write the proclamation An Mein Volk ("To my People") announcing the Wars of Liberation.
Cast[]
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Production[]
The film is based on the 1823 edition of the autobiography of Joachim Nettelbeck, mayor of Kolberg, and on the 1865 play drawn from the book by Nobel laureate Paul Heyse. No reference was made to the latter as the author was Jewish. Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels explicitly ordered the use of the historical events for a film, which he regarded as highly suitable for the circumstances Germany faced.[2]
Kolberg entered production in 1943, and was made in Agfacolor with high production values. It cost 7.6 million Reichsmarks, not 8.5 million as is often stated. The film's extra cast accounted perhaps 5,000 soldiers and hundreds of Kolberg people participated for a daily fee of 5 Reichsmarks. The number of extras is commonly exaggerated at 187,000 and claims of entire divisions of troops taking part are completely false.[1]
Principal cinematography took place from 22 October 1943 to August 1944. The exteriors were shot in and around the cities of Kolberg, Königsberg, Berlin, Seeburg, and Neustettin.[3]
To film scenes with snow during summer, 100 railway wagons brought salt to the set in Pomerania. The film was finally completed at the Babelsberg Studios at Potsdam while the town and nearby Berlin were being steadily bombed by the Allies.
Two extras were killed during the making of the film when an explosive charge went off too early.
Release[]
The film opened on 30 January 1945 in a temporary cinema (U.T. Alexanderplatz) and at Tauentzien-Palast in Berlin, and ran under constant threat of air raids until the fall of Berlin to Soviet forces in May 1945. Simultaneously with the opening in Berlin it was shown to the crew of the naval base at La Rochelle at the Théâtre de la Ville.[3][failed verification] It was also screened in the Reich Chancellery after the broadcast of Hitler's last radio address on 30 January. One of the last films of the Third Reich, it never went into general release.[4]
The city of Kolberg was declared a Festung ("fortress town") as Soviet forces neared it on 24 February 1945. Within a month of the film's opening Kolberg was under full siege (sometimes called the "Second Siege" or "Second Battle" of Kolberg), with around 70,000 trapped German civilians and military personnel. House-to-house fighting caused devastation. Kolberg fell to Soviet and Polish forces on 18 March 1945. Many civilians escaped by sea, and those who survived were permanently expelled along with all Germans in east Pomerania. The ruined city of Kolberg became part of Poland and is now known as Kołobrzeg.
The film was re-released in 1965, with an attached documentary, and is now available on DVD. In Germany, it is a Vorbehaltsfilm ("reservation film"), available for screening from the holder of the rights (Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau Foundation) only under special conditions.[5]
See also[]
References[]
Notes
- ^ Jump up to: a b Noack 2016, p. 222.
- ^ Erwin Leiser, Nazi Cinema p122-3 ISBN 0-02-570230-0
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Filmportal: Kolberg". Retrieved 22 May 2013.
- ^ Richard Grunberger,The 12-Year Reich, p 388, ISBN 0-03-076435-1
- ^ "Filmportal: Kolberg, availability". Retrieved 22 May 2013.
Bibliography
- Noack, Frank (2016) [2000]. Veit Harlan: "des Teufels Regisser" [Veit Harlan: The Life and Work of a Nazi Filmmaker]. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 9780813167008.
External links[]
External images | |
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Screenshot of a scene showing general Gneisenau (Horst Caspar) making a speech on the market square in Kolberg[1] | |
Official film poster (1945)[2] | |
Screenshot of an army scene(the statists for these scenes came directly from the battlefields of the ongoing Second World War)[3] |
- 1945 films
- 1940s historical films
- German historical films
- German epic films
- German films
- Films of Nazi Germany
- German-language films
- Films directed by Veit Harlan
- Films based on biographies
- Films set in Prussia
- Films set in the 1800s
- Films set in the 1810s
- Napoleonic Wars films
- Nazi propaganda films
- Siege films
- War epic films
- Kołobrzeg
- Censored films
- UFA GmbH films
- Films shot at Babelsberg Studios
- Films set in 1813
- Cultural depictions of Napoleon
- Films set in Vienna