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WSWS
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Festivals
The Berlin Film Festival - Part 4
Two German films about fascism
By Stefan Steinberg and Bernd Reinhardt
11 March 1999
Two German feature films presented at the recent Berlin film
festival approached the theme of fascism from very different standpoints
and with varying degrees of success. Aimee and Jaguar,
by German director Max Faerboeck, opened the official competition
at this year's festival. Based on the life of Lilly Wust, now
85 and living in Berlin, it deals with her love affair with the
Jewish woman, Felice Schragenheim. When they first meet, Lilly
already has four children and a husband on the Eastern front.
Under such circumstances, Lilly considers filing for divorce and
begins living with Felice. It is 1943 in Berlin, two years before
the end of the war.
Lilly is unaware that Felice is Jewish. However, for some time
the Gestapo has been on Felice's trail. She and other Jewish women
friends--among them, Lilly's maid--have been acquiring passports
enabling Jews to flee Germany. During the day, Felice works at
the publishing house of a Nazi newspaper. One day, Aimee and Jaguar,
as they call themselves, arrive home following a swim. Gestapo
agents are waiting for them. Felice is arrested, sent first to
the concentration camp at Theresienstadt, then to another camp
from which she never returns.
The strength of the film is its convincing portrayal of a profoundly
open and honest love affair. In dealing with its subject matter,
the film never descends into kitsch, nor becomes dull or melodramatic.
At its heart is the tension between the two women, and their relationship
is portrayed in a very sensitive and moving manner. Disconcerting,
however, is the manner in which all the other aspects of life
are so stubbornly subordinated to the central theme of a love
story.
The psychology and character of the people who surround Lilly
and Felice comes across in a simplified and cliched way. There
are the grim, ice-cold Gestapo operatives and somewhat simple
hangers-on, like Lilly's husband, who enthusiastically lap up
the Nazi appeals. And there is the brooding Nazi intellectual,
unsettled by the newspaper reports, embodied in the figure of
Felice's editor. Even Felice's Jewish girlfriends come across
as oddly distant and shadowy figures, as do Lilly's communist
father and her maid.
As lovers, Lilly and Felice appear extraordinarily sympathetic
to the audience. However, as independent individuals operating
within (fascist) society, they remain strangers. At the end of
the film one hardly knows more about them than one did at the
beginning. It is possible to conjure up images of Lilly's previous
housewifely existence with her four children. About Felice one
learns virtually nothing. What remains is their powerful and remarkable
love for each other, which because of its treatment retains a
powerfully mystical element.
Both main actresses (Juliane Koehler and Maria Schrader) were
awarded the Berlinale Silver Bears for their performances.
Didi Danquart`s film, Jewboy Levi, can be recommended
without qualification. Danquart wrote the script, based on the
stage-play by the dramatist Thomas Strittmatter.
The film's setting is a Black Forest village in 1933. Worn-out
tracks and a damaged tunnel necessitate the visit of a railway
repair team from Berlin to this desolate region where time seems
to have stood still. Radios are unknown, everyone is avowedly
Catholic and the fascist take-over in Berlin is, on the whole,
treated with nonchalance.
The basic economic unit is the farm, which dictates the lives
and concerns of the rural population. The purpose of marriage
and family is to preserve the farm and to increase its stock.
Lisbeth, daughter of farmer Horger and still single, is being
wooed by Paul, unemployed and without roots, who constantly quotes
from the verses of Dadaist Kurt Schwitters and has nothing but
contempt for farmer Horger.
Things are quite different for Levi. The itinerant Jewish trader
is also interested in Lisbeth. Respected in the community and
following in the footsteps of his father and grandfather, he provides
the villages in the Black Forest with necessities that can only
be acquired in the city or even farther afield. Horger thinks
highly of him and his wife looks forward to his visits, when he
brings her cottons and silks for sewing. In humorous vein the
film follows the loquacious Levi on his travels as he philosophises
over life with his pet rabbit Jankel.
When the railway engineer, a committed Nazi, appears in the
village with his secretary and the railway workers things begin
to change. The repair crew disrupts the inhabitants' settled routine.
The life of the village increasingly centres around the concerns
of the railway. As a state enterprise it represents the new Hitler
regime and also proves to be a new source of income for the farmers
supplying the rail workers. Lisbeth advises the unemployed Paul
to get himself a job with the railway. In the evening, the railworkers
sit in the local inn with the villagers. The "People's Broadcaster",
a radio donated by the engineer to the inn-keeper and at first
emphatically rejected as modern rubbish, blares out for the Berliners.
The new guests at the inn make no secret of the fact that they
hold Jews responsible for the deplorable state of the nation's
affairs and that the new regime will clean up the problem. Paul
for one is unconvinced by the new government and tries out his
latest anti-Hitler-joke on the two village cripples, mocking the
engineer and his men: "Something here smells of brown shit."
The engineer plans a "little festivity" inviting
the village officials--the mayor, the priest, the teacher and
the pharmacist. Horger sells a calf to the engineer for the party
at a bargain price. Levi had previously offered a considerably
higher sum for the animal. To his wife Horger justifies his bad
deal, "The railway is the government."
Those who do not take advantage of the new opportunities and
connections opened up by the railway, rapidly lose out to their
competitors. Horger eventually begins to feel the force of this
himself. On one occasion Lisbeth, who works at the inn, defends
Levi against the anti-Semitic vulgarities of the engineer and
his crowd, with the consequence that Horger's grocery deliveries
are turned away by the railway. "Must have a skeleton in
your cupboard," says a suspicious farmer, seeing that Horger's
goods have been rejected by the engineer.
The film's depiction of definite social mechanisms at play
refutes the conception that Nazism is merely synonymous with racist
ideology, eagerly soaked up by a potentially racist population.
Anti-Semitism was deliberately used by the Nazis in order to enforce
the new regime. The farmers begin to watch over one another, unconsciously
assuming the values of the new system.
What also makes this film well worth seeing is the depiction
of the characters, none of which are stereotypes. Everyone has
seen films featuring vulgar, blunt and usually stupid Nazis, cunning
informers and intrepid resistance fighters. Instead Danquart presents
characters whose behaviour, with its own inner contradictions,
is completely comprehensible. Paul for example looks down on farmers.
They are for him "brainless milkers-of-cows". However,
because he has no means himself, he cannot win their respect.
Jobless in the countryside, his value and standing is nil and
he remains an outsider.
Paul is struck from the beginning by the Nazi engineer and
his followers. He is fascinated that such solid members of the
community like Horger can be pressured by the Nazis. Paul's anarchistic
provocations more and more take on the character of a challenge
rather than disapproval. In one scene he surprises the engineer's
secretary (and lover) as she bathes in a stream. She scolds him
for his lack of manners and advises him to work for "the
right side," there are better things for him to do than "frighten
little girls while they bathe." With that she touches on
Paul's sore spot. Here in the village under the present conditions,
he has no prospects.
Paul humiliates the engineer at the party, and, for his efforts,
gets beaten up by the railworkers, who denounce him as a "red
pig" and throw him in the river. Soaking wet, pushing his
motorbike home, he encounters Levi, who expresses his sympathy
for Paul's plight and tries to help. Paul explodes furiously,
"Take your dirty Jew fingers off my motorbike!"
Horger has also changed. Someone has killed Levi's pet rabbit,
ripping off its head. Levi tries to buy another from Horger, who
shoves Levi from his farmyard. "I can't sell meat anymore
and you want a rabbit?" the farmer bawls. "I am not
going to let you destroy my farm, you ... Christ-killer!"
"I don't understand you, I don't understand any of you!"
says Lisbeth to her mother. When the daughter asks her what has
everyone got against Levi all of a sudden, the older women tries
to forestall all further objections and retorts simply: "You
are a Catholic."
The final scene of the film takes place in the inn. The railworkers,
accompanied by an accordion, are loudly bawling an anti-Jewish
song, compelling Levi to sing as well. Shamed in front of his
daughter, Horger demands they stop tormenting Levi. The railworkers
respond "What's wrong, Horger? Are you a Jew?" Horger
spits back: "I am no Jew," and suddenly brays in Levi's
direction, "It's all his fault!"
At the end even Paul is to be found "on the right side,"
despite his love for American swing music and Schwitters, the
German artist, who like many others had to flee Germany during
the Nazi regime.
See Also:
The 49th Berlin Film Festival: Part 1
[3 March 1999]
The 49th Berlin Film Festival: Part 2--the
latest from Tavernier and a film from Turkey
[4 March 1999]
The 49th Berlin Film Festival: Part 3--documentary
films from Germany, Switzerland and Austria
[10 March 1999]
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