Professor Mamlock (1961 film)

This article is about the film by Konrad Wolf. For the play, see Professor Mamlock (play). For the film by Herbert Rappaport, see Professor Mamlock (1938 film).
Professor Mamlock

Sergei Yutkevich greets Konrad Wolf and Wolfgang Heinz during the Moscow Film Festival.
Directed by Konrad Wolf
Produced by Hans-Joachim Funk
Written by Friedrich Wolf
Karl Georg Egel
Konrad Wolf
Starring Wolfgang Heinz
Music by Hans-Dieter Hosalla
Cinematography Werner Bergmann
Edited by Christa Wernicke
Production
company
Distributed by PROGRESS-Film Verleih
Release dates
  • 17 May 1961 (1961-05-17)
Running time
100 minutes
Country East Germany
Language German

Professor Mamlock is an East German drama film. It was released in 1961.

Plot

Professor Mamlock, a respected Jewish surgeon, is certain that the Weimar Republic would survive the political crisis of the early 1930s. He disapproves of his son, Rolf, a communist activist who openly opposes the Nazis. When Hitler rises to power, Mamlock loses his work and his dignity. Realizing the mistake he made by being politically apathetic, Mamlock commits suicide. The film ends with his dead face blending away from the screen, on which appears the inscription: "there is no greater crime than not wanting to fight when fight one must."

Cast

Production

Wolfgang Heinz playing Mamlock in theater, 1959.

The film was adapted from the play Professor Mamlock, written by the director's father Friedrich Wolf during 1933, when he was in exile in France. It featured most of the cast that participated in the 1959 Kammerspiele staging of the play.[1]

When Wolf was asked why he decided to make another film adaptation of the play - the first was done in 1938 - he answered: "our objective was not the persecution of Jews... But the destiny of a liberal intellectual, who is forsaken by his class. This individual no longer believes in the middle class, and yet he does not find his way to the working class. His only escape becomes suicide".[2]

Reception

Professor Mamlock sold 940,000 tickets in East Germany, becoming a modest commercial success.[3] The film won the Gold Prize in the 2nd Moscow International Film Festival on 23 July 1961.[4] Wolf also received the Silver Lotus Award in the II International Film Festival of India, held in New Delhi in November 1961.[5]

Daniela Berghahn considered the film as "paradigmatic" to DEFA's treatment of the persecution of Jews by the Nazis: by contrasting the a-political, lethargic Mamlock to his son, Rolf, the passionate communist and resistance fighter, Wolf condemned the professor for failing to join the resistance and "utterly scandalously... Made him accountable for his own fate."[6] Anthony S. Coulson analyzed the picture as a belated metamorphosis of the title character, who ceases denying reality only when all is lost: "Mamlock's transformation is presented as a renunciation of his previous self... But that insight comes too late to save him and his kind... His fate is attributed to his failure to fight... Wolf's film reaffirms the political pathos of his father's play."[7]

References

  1. Stephen Brockmann. A Critical History of German Film. ISBN 978-1-57113-468-4. p. 226.
  2. Professor Mamlock. DEFA Film Library at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
  3. Thomas Heimann. Bilder von Buchenwald. Böhlau (2005). ISBN 3-412-09804-3. p. 69.
  4. "2nd Moscow International Film Festival (1961)". MIFF. Retrieved 2012-11-04.
  5. Diethelm Weidemann, N. L. Gupta. India-GDR Relations: A Review. Kalamkar Prakashan (1980). ASIN B0000EDUAU. p. 93.
  6. Daniela Berghahn. Hollywood behind the Wall: the cinema of East Germany. ISBN 978-0-7190-6172-1. p. 89.
  7. Seán Allan, John Sandford. DEFA: East German cinema, 1946-1992. ISBN 978-1-57181-753-2. pp. 168-172.
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