Kuhle Wampe Oder: Wem Gehort Die Welt?

Slatan Dudow

Scen.: Bertold Brecht, Ernst Ottwald; F.: Günther Krampf; Scgf.: C.P. Haacker, Robert Scharfenberg; Mu.: Hanns Eisler; Su.: Carl Erich Kroschke, Peter Meyrowitz, Michelis; Int.: Hertha Thiele (Annie), Ernst Busch (Fritz), Martha Wolter (Gerda), Adolf Fischer (Karl Genosse); Prod.: Willi Münzenberg, Lazar Wechsler; Pri. Pro.: 1933. 35mm. L.: 2054 m. D.: 80′. Bn.

info_outline
T. it.: Italian title. T. int.: International title. T. alt.: Alternative title. Sog.: Story. Scen.: Screenplay. F.: Cinematography. M.: Editing. Scgf.: Set Design. Mus.: Music. Int.: Cast. Prod.: Production Company. L.: Length. D.: Running Time. f/s: Frames per second. Bn.: Black e White. Col.: Color. Da: Print source

Film Notes

Kuhle Wampe is the culmination (and swan song) of German proletarian cinema, as well as the only film where Bertolt Brecht’s participation was concrete, almost on an artisanal level. (It’s an interesting case in the sense that the film does not resemble the “usual suspects” of “Brechtian cinema” as imagined in the literature on film). A dream team was backing him: the director Slatan Dudow, the composer Hanns Eisler, the co-writer, with Brecht, Ernst Ottwalt, actors Hertha Thiele (lead actress of the contemporary Mädchen in Uniform) and Ernst Busch, the all-time greatest singer of proletarian songs and the future Galileo for Brecht’s famous Berliner Ensemble interpretation. Kuhle Wampe builds on a multitude of elements: public (mass scenes of 4000 people) and private lives (the story of a worker’s family, and the relationship of two young workers, the city – the bicycles already prefiguring the theme of anonymity of a forthcoming masterpiece, Ladri di biciclette – and nature (whatever Berlin offers of it, the beauty heightened in a song interpreted by Helene Weigel), lyrical images coupled with ironic insights about petit-bourgeois temptations.

The real hero of the film is the working class. Although the subject of the birth of proletarian consciousness is familiar from many Soviet films and, of course, from working class literature, the splendid blending of document, fiction and collage is deeply original – a unique monument to the “other Germany”, with great emotions (which Brecht was a specialist in manipulating, not liquidating) and the intelligence of razor-sharp dialogue. For instance the subway scene (that centers on international news about coffee crops being burned) presents a splendid typology (class society through faces) of diverging opinions, illusions, relative truths, mutual misunderstandings and ways to see the world, honest, dishonest, absurd. Without the slightest trace of filmed theater.

The episodic structure works brilliantly. Right at the beginning a young unemployed man commits suicide by jumping out the window of his home, but not without first leaving his watch on the window ledge: his time is up, hopefully the times are changing. (Considering that this is 1932, we know that the future hardly encouraged the hopes expressed in the film.) Next: silence, the emotional distance and nonchalance of the neighbors… “Ein Arbeitslose weniger”/ one less unemployed person. The best comment on the film came from the censors: “That scene shows that suicide is the destiny of a whole class.” Which was commented on by Brecht and Dudow: “That man gave us a crash course in realism, from the point of view of a policeman.”

If these lines have concentrated on the charismatic person of BB, it should be added that the director of the film, the Bulgarian-born Slatan Dudow (1903- 1963), was a great talent of his own right. He made Kuhle Wampe after a small, sharp film called Zeitprobleme: wie der Arbeiter wohnt and before a delicious satire called Seifenblasen; his later film work (after exile in France and Switzerland) represents perhaps the nest career of a director in the early decades of DDR cinema.

Peter von Bagh

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