German Postwar Film Industry

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    Lost in the Rubble

    The vibrant German film industry, which boasted a cinematic tradition and star system

    relatively independent from Hollywood, found itself in shambles in the aftermath of World War

    II. During the Third Reich, cinema served as Goebbels most powerful propaganda instrument.

    Nationalistic films celebrated nationalism and militarism and entertainment movies projected

    images of immaculate social stability. For its role in disguising the unpleasant realities of the

    fascist regime, Nazi cinema has earned itself the name, Dream Factory.1 If Third Reich film

    was the era of dreams, then the postwar era was a rude awakening to a rubble-strewn reality,

    punctured by recurring nightmares instead of blissful dreams. It was this new state of mental

    being that the German Trmmerfilme , or rubble films, attempted to reflect. Made mostly from

    1946 to 1949, the rubble films only constituted a brief period in German film history in a short-

    lived attempt to cultivate a new sensation of space.

    The Germans experience with space was hardly pleasant. For a set, rubble filmmakers

    could use the real tragic ruins of actual German cities. This close connection between diegetic

    space and the actual space in which Germans found themselves stressed the fact that, unlike the

    Nazi Dream Factory, the Trmmerfilme dealt with the real tangible problems of the here-and-now

    in order to locate meaning in the cold hardships of everyday existence. These hardships actually

    brought more Germans to the cinema. The theater was a warm place with comfortable seats in a

    time of chronic heating and housing shortages. For a populace with few resources, it was the

    most economical form of entertainment and provided the promise of temporary escape from the

    miseries of everyday life.

    1 Robert R. Shandley,Rubble Films: German Cinema in the Shadow of the Third Reich (Philadelphia: Temple

    University Press, 2001), 9.

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    Initially, German film demand went unfulfilled, for cinematic infrastructure had largely

    been destroyed and the Allies initially prohibited German films. Before long, the Allies realized

    that film could be a useful medium for entertaining and pacifying a destitute and antagonistic

    occupied people. Since German film demand could not be filled by current production, the

    British and Soviets took up previously produced German films that the occupation censors

    deemed appropriate for viewing by the German public. The Americans, on the other hand, chose

    to mostly import Hollywood films to Germany. In addition to Hollywoods commercial ambition

    of infiltrating the German film market, the Americans also had cultural and political purposes.

    As Roger Manvell describes in The German Cinema, In the American Zone these films were

    considered to be carefully chosen for their escapist value and for their gradual infiltration of

    new, more democratic values. The result was an initial release of about fifty Hollywood films

    prepared by the Motion Picture Export Association of America with sub-titles in German.2

    For the time being, the films fulfilled the logistical purpose of providing cheap

    entertainment and escapism for an impoverished and war-stricken German people. These films

    facilitated the occupation by redirecting the energies of German frustration away from the streets

    and into the domesticating sphere of the theater. The Allies avoided showing anything

    controversial or which might appear to be propaganda or to hint even at the recent war in

    Europe,3 for their main concern was keeping the general peace.

    In contrast to the other occupation powers approach to films, the Soviets quickly seized

    film as a medium for active political reform and cultural engagement. Rather than using the

    cinema simply as a means of distraction from the current state of affairs, the Soviets wanted to

    make the Germans face their past and address an ignominious history of fascist abuses. It should

    2 Roger Manvell, The German Cinema (New York: Praeger Publishers, 1971), 102.3 Manvell, 102.

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    be noted that almost all of the politically ambitious rubble films were made under the auspices of

    Deutsche Film Aktiengesellschaft (DEFA), the centralized state-owned East German film

    company inaugurated by Soviet occupation authorities. DEFAs purpose was to reeducate the

    German citizens, which involved confronting the wrongdoings of the recent past and eliminating

    fascist ideology in favor of socialism. With the production and screening of the rubble films,

    audiences that retreated into theater space to avoid the berubbled exterior would only be

    confronted again by rubble on the interior film screen. Those seeking a few hours of escapism

    would be sorely disappointed.

    Initially, the rubble films produced in DEFA studios met with critical and popular

    success. The 1946 films, The Murderers Are Among Us (Die Mrder sind unter uns, Wolfgang

    Staudte) and Somewhere In Berlin (Irgendwo in Berlin, Gerhard Lamprecht), did well amongst

    international critics and at the box office. However, by 1947, rubble film had become a

    derogatory term. As Heide Fehrenbach remarks, The gritty realism ofTrmmerfilme soon wore

    thin, and German audiences began to demand films that corresponded more to their fantasies

    than mundane social realities. By early 1948, the genre was bust.4 Initially, international critics

    and filmmakers mistakenly imagined that the rubble films would play the role of unearthing and

    addressing repressed memories of a Nazi past. However, German audiences, who considered the

    rubble films excessively preachy and somber, were more interested in retreating to glamorous

    fantasies than dismantling the Nazi Dream Factory. Rather than facing the past, people preferred

    to be entertained or distracted away from it. Especially in West Germany, the people were

    forward-looking; the rubble was being cleared and the economy was picking up. Before long,

    West Germany would enter a new era of prosperity, outpacing both of its West European

    4 Heide Fehrenbach, Cinema in Democratizing Germany: Reconstructing National Identity After Hitler(Chapel Hill:

    The University of North Carolina Press, 1995), 149.

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    occupiers, France and Britain. With a bright future, full of the diversions inherent in a capitalist

    consumer economy, no one wanted to look back.

    Indeed, by 1949, few German films were being produced for the sake of hashing out the

    nations contentious past. Most films shied away from political topics altogether.

    Chart 1: German films completed or in production but

    not yet released at beginning of 1949

    political

    15%

    deals

    w/contemporaryissues but not

    political

    36%

    pure

    entertainment

    44%

    period/biographi

    cal films

    5%

    5

    Even films that did attempt to confront political or contemporary issues often tried to soften its

    bite by applying humor to otherwise serious problems.

    Chart 2: Breakdown of political films

    humorous orsatirical

    15%

    non-humorous

    85%

    Chart 3: Breakdown of films dealing w/contemporary

    issues

    light,

    humorous

    48%non-humorous

    52%

    The dark, menacing shadows of the rubble films, and its struggle with sobering questions of war

    guilt and responsibility, were rarely welcome on German screens by 1950.

    Critics complained that German film betrayed its initial promise,6

    for the general

    feeling was that the talents which had shown their initial strength during the three years of

    social adjustment were soon to be stifled, unless they turned wholly in the direction of escape.7

    5 Number of films in each category from Manvell, 112-113.6 Fehrenbach, 148.7 Manvell, 113.

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    In a sort of final judgement on the film of that era, Fehrenbach says, Some of the best postwar

    German films had been the earliest8 the rubble films.

    Rubble films, as their name suggests, dealt with the horror of the devastated German

    cityscape and the project of reconstruction. They involved a break with previous ways of

    representation and expressed a desire to distinguish themselves from the classical continuity and

    linearity of the Ufa film systems style. Rubble films experimented with the emotionally charged

    mise-en-scne of the Weimar Expressionist tradition, borrowing from detective thrillers and film

    noir. German filmmakers believed that a new way of looking at history required a new cinematic

    language.

    Wolfgang Staudtes The Murderers Are Among Us (Die Mrder sind unter uns, 1946) was

    the first film made by DEFA and is considered by many to be the finest and most characteristic

    rubble film. In it, Dr. Hans Mertens, a recently returned veteran from the German army,

    occupies an apartment with a former concentration camp victim, Susanne Wallner, with whom he

    eventually develops a romantic relationship. During the film, he encounters his former army

    captain, Ferdinand Brckner. Brckner, who had ordered the liquidation of Jewish civilians

    during the war in Hans presence, is now settled comfortably back into civilian life as the owner

    of a factory. Hans, haunted by guilt, attempts to kill Brckner but is stopped by Susanne. In the

    hands of the law, Brckner eventually ends up behind bars.

    8 Fehrenbach, 148.

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    1

    Above is the first shot ofThe Murderers Are Among Us. A large piece of rubble obstructs

    our view and confines us to a shallow and claustrophobic space, but the camera slowly rises out

    of the mire to orient us with the larger environment. However, it is a muddled orientation, with

    canted framing. Throughout the film, a lack of establishing shots results in this indeterminacy of

    space.

    2

    The camera appears as tipsy as the drunk protagonist, Hans, shown in image 2. Throughout

    much of the film, Hans wanders and meanders through the rubble landscape. Just as the wrecked

    streets are no longer arranged in neat straight lines, Mertons motion through these streets is

    similarly irregular. Having lost his control over space, the rubble exerts sway over Hans

    movement.

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    Mirroring Hans psychological turmoil and confusion, most of the film is characterized

    by oblique camera angles and destabilizing viewpoints. The composition of elements on the

    screen is frequently at odds with the limits of the frame, as in image 2, where the ground and

    buildings appear slanted. Gravity no longer acts as the centralizing force that pulls towards the

    bottom of the screen. This spatial tilt indicated by much of the camera positioning, and the

    disorientation of the entire German nation, is made explicit by a poster of Deustschland hanging

    crooked on a crumbly wall:

    3

    Having lost its moral compass, the nation must, in a manner of speaking, set things straight.

    The opposition between the screens composition and its frame are accentuated by scenes

    with strong diagonals:

    4 5

    Like image 3, both of the above scenes are shot with oblique angles. Image 4, shot from a low

    angle, pictures a passing train and image 5, shot from a high angle, shows Hans ascending the

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    stairs. In both cases, people are traversing diegetic space within a screen space slashed with

    diagonals. Train tracks or railings obstruct our view. The shot in image 4 is taken almost right

    below the tracks, inducing a sense of claustrophobia.

    The films constant refusal to give the viewer a neat, satisfying visual composition

    indicates that German sight has been badly damaged. Only now is the nations blindness during

    the years of the Nazis being revealed. Mirrors and windows, which are common metaphors for

    the cinema, appear cracked and broken throughout the film. Thus, cinema has registered the

    trauma of the war era, during which time Nazi propagandists usurped the screen and inflicted

    blindness upon the populace. In one scene, a lady takes her broken eyeglasses to be fixed by a

    local eyeglass repairman. He says, Ill see if I can find another frame that fits. Indeed, this

    statement could be a manifesto for the makers of rubble films searching for a new cinematic

    frame to counteract the distorting lens of the Nazi Dream Factory. He goes on to say, This junk

    here is giving me a new start in life. Similarly, German filmmakers were taking the rubble, the

    utter devastation and seemingly worthless trash left by the war, and reappropriating it towards

    building a new cinematic spatial orientation and repairing Germanys sight.

    6

    Image 6 illustrates the brokenness and fragmentation of German vision. Throughout this whole

    scene of dialogue between Hans and Susanne, one of the windowpanes bisects Hans face. The

    uncanny effect of viewing Hans divided face underscores the neurotic divide within Hans inner

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    being. Visual reinforcements of this tortured psychological fragmentation appear throughout the

    film. The low-key lighting characteristic of film noir casts Hans face in high contrast, indicating

    his torn feelings. Below, Image 7 features a shadow of Hans cast upon the ceiling, shot from an

    unusual angle. The shadow, representing the demons populating Hans mind, is upside-down and

    signifies the overturning of Hans being.

    7

    Hans overturned being, torn between dualities of dark and light, is the result of

    witnessing the liquidation of Jewish civilians during the war. In a flashback to this traumatic

    moment, numerous juxtapositions intensify the horrific quality of the scene. As the sound of

    gunfire during the liquidation rattles outside in offscreen space, this sound mixes with the cheery

    singing of German officers during a holiday party. The dcor of the room is that of bright

    holiday cheer. One shot shows a crucifix, with a helmet hung on one side of the cross and a

    bayonet laid on the other side. This militarized crucifix depicts the contradictions that rack

    Hans mind throughout the film. Joy, suffering, religion, and violence are all joined together in

    one unholy cacophony.

    The literal absence of harmony is signaled in the beginning of the movie through

    discordant jazz music. Later, Hans breaks up a chess game in a fit of drunken rage. Chess,

    which divides up the board space and playing pieces into the two neat binaries of black and

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    white, jars with Hans experience with ambiguity and the mixing of seemingly irreconcilable

    notions, such as the crucifix and bayonet, during the war. Hans verbally expresses his rejection

    of simplistic moral binaries and abstractions with the statement, Only in fairy tales is there a

    choice between good and bad. Another time, Hans says, It depends on your viewpoint.

    Indeed, the entire film attempts to capture multiple viewpoints in a fragmented and destabilized

    way of discerning space.

    Hans comment on viewpoint is even more striking in light of the fact that, regarding the

    most traumatic and important scenes of the film, we are given no view at all of the action. The

    intensity of the scenes lies in the tension between offscreen and onscreen space. In the climax of

    the film, Hans prepares to kill Brckner, the army captain who ordered the massacre. Here,

    Hans offscreen presence is indicated only by a ghoulish silhouette that overshadows the terrified

    Brckner.

    8

    The shadow, again, represents Hans inner demons and ghosts of guilt and responsibility.

    Brckner, who also symbolizes the inner demon of both Hans and Germany, is visually interior

    to Hans shadow. Hans desire to kill Brckner is thus an attempted exorcism of his own

    darkened soul. In this scene, the viewer hears Brckner narrate Hans actions rather than seeing

    it firsthand. Brckner first comments on Hans ominous facial expression and then exclaims in

    alarm that Hans is taking out a gun. Hans shadow grows larger and larger in contrast to the

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    captain, soon engulfing the captain in darkness. The audience must fulfill the phenomenological

    role of imagining rather than seeing the tortured face and soul of Hans as he prepares to commit

    murder. In this scene, Hans is nothing more than a shadow, a ghost of a man.

    Offscreen space is also connoted by Hans stares toward the direction of the camera.

    Usually, he is not staring at anything in his immediate surroundings, but rather, into his inner self

    or into the past.

    9 10

    A gradual zoom to close-up of Hans face heightens the intensity of the scene and challenges the

    viewer to look through Hans eyes and into his psychological space. In image 9, Hans initially

    appears to be staring frontally at us, but he is actually staring through us and into the past. The

    blurred edges of the screen space signal to the viewer a shift in space and time to a flashback in

    Hans mind, and the scene is accompanied by a sonic flashback to nonsimultaneous sounds of

    war. In image 10, Hans is listening to the captains Christmas speech. He stares offscreen to the

    right, presumably watching the captain, but is concurrently looking into the past and begins

    flashing back to the time of the massacre. Thus, offscreen space establishes both spatial and

    temporal tensions.

    During the massacre flashback, the viewer initially assumes that the screen shows Hans

    visual memory. However, to our surprise, Hans walks onto the screen from the offscreen left.

    Since Hans could not possibly remember seeing himself from a third-person point of view, he

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    must be imaginingthe memory, or reconstructing a traumatic moment. He is thinking of how he

    must have or would have looked. Hans is horrified to view his own powerlessness through this

    imagined memory. The third-person point of view expresses the introspective desire to see or

    represent ones self. All of the rubble films are obsessed with scrutinizing and representing

    Germany, the collective self. Thus, Hans imagined memory represents the rubble films

    attempts to re-imagine the role of the German people during WWII atrocities.

    Introspection is figured again in image 11, which features the windows to Hans and

    Susannes apartment. Hans, a former surgeon who has now lost his will to practice medicine,

    uses his old x-rays to seal up the broken windows. He tells Susanne, Here you see a day out of

    my past, and begins to recollect memories of himself. Ironically, rather than using these

    windows to look into the present exterior space, Hans and Susanne use these windows to look

    into the past and the interior. The x-rays symbolize the films attempt to introspect, to look

    inside a human being. Hans finds it necessary to first confront his past and himself before he can

    become outward looking.

    11

    Juxtaposed with these introspective images is the house of Brckner, who ordered the

    liquidation of civilians during the war. Feeling neither guilt nor remorse, he has re-entered

    civilian life with confident vigor. Dcor emphasizes the difference between Brckner and Hans.

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    12

    Above is a conventional shot that neatly establishes the comfortably open space of the room.

    The verticals of the walls and horizontals of the windowpanes are parallel and perpendicular to

    the edge of the frame, thus leaving the viewer with a satisfying sense of order. Brckners

    resettlement into civilian life is trim and well organized, mirroring his clean conscience. Hans

    chaotic and cluttered apartment, which echoes the confusion of his guilt-ridden mind, stands in

    complete contrast to Brckners bright room. Brckners room has already been repaired from

    the damage of the war. He says, Even got real glass in the windows. This clean and clear view

    onto the outside world offered by Brckners new windows contrasts with Hans x-ray window,

    which communicated Hans need to first examine the past and the interior soul.

    The Nazi cinematic aesthetic, what Eric Rentschler called, the cinema of clear lines and

    straightforward answers,9 is a major source of criticism in The Murderers Are Among Us. The

    dcor of Brckners room is only instance when Staudte attempts to portray the Nazi aesthetic.

    In his films, Staudte reinterpreted three spatial figurations in Nazi cinema: rotation, seriality, and

    verticality. To see how Staudte dealt with these spatial formations, we must first examine two

    films by Nazi propagandist Leni Reifenstahl: Triumph of the Will (Der Triumph Des Willens,

    1935) and Day of Freedom (1935).

    9 Eric Rentschler, The Ministry of Illusion: Nazi Cinema and its Afterlife (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard

    University Press, 1996), 53.

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    Triumph of the Will, a documentary of the 1934 Nuremberg Nazi Party rally, starts out

    with a shot of a flying plane, thus establishing the spatial sensation of loftiness or height. Within

    this plane is Hitler as he flies towards the masses of faithful followers at Nuremberg. A shot-

    reverse-shot sequence between the airplane and the enthusiastic masses on the ground establishes

    a dialogue between Hitler and his subjects carried out in a relationship based on vertical spatial

    difference. Later in the documentary, this relationship is further reinforced by angle of framing.

    13 14

    When giving his speeches, Hitler is viewed through low-angle shots, exaggerating his size and

    stature and elevating him to a semi-religious figure of power and excellence. The crowds, on the

    other hand, are shot with high angles, rendering them small and dependent. As Hitler delivers

    his fiery speeches, the spectators are almost in a position of worship, with their necks arched as

    they raptly look up at his figure and listen to his words.

    Various tracking shots across soldiers helmets, belts, boots, and weapons furnish the

    sensation of spatial repetition. Serial images appear on one side of the screen and exit on the

    other in seemingly endless succession. These tracking shots celebrate uniformity and sameness.

    With the swelling crowds, the soldiers represent limitless unanimity and solidarity. The endless

    repetition conjures up the idea of infinity, which in turn suggests the infinite might of Germany.

    Seriality also invokes the idea of mass production, which characterizes industrial efficiency. The

    industriousness of the German people is represented in a scene in which soldiers awaken and

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    immediately fall into their respective roles in the army like a swarm of bees. Some are in charge

    of serving rations, some are in charge of washing the uniforms, and others prepare the jeeps. The

    dynamic army is a massive and well-oiled social machine. Each solider is a devoted cog in the

    spinning wheels of this war engine.

    InDay of Freedom, a documentary about the readiness and power of Germanys armed

    forces, seriality and uniformity is again a main visual theme. The opening shot ofDays of

    Freedom is shown below in image 15. The corridor of bayonets seem to go on into deep space

    forever, communicating the endless might of the German army.

    15

    Staudte would later mimic this composition of serial visual elements extending into deep space.

    For example, image 16 shows a scene from Staudtes The Kaisers Lackey (Der Untertan), when

    a group of young men carry out mindless and conformist rituals to gain membership to an

    exclusive club.

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    16

    This unquestioning conformity is what allows the German army to operate with machine-

    like efficiency. In a military exercise inDay of Freedom, the soldiers are perfectly in sync with

    the military machines, operating with fantastic coordination. The spatial movement of rotation is

    omnipresent in the functioning of these machines, with frequent extreme close-ups of the

    spinning propellers and wheels of military planes and vehicles.

    17

    Circular motions do not imply circular paths the rotating wheels of a German tank hurls the

    vehicle forward in a linear motion of conquest and progress. Each cog in the wheel of the

    German military machine spins tirelessly for the forward advancement of the nation. The

    soldiers constantly spin the wheels and gears of large artillery guns in order to elevate the angle

    of the guns.

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    18

    The artillery guns, lined up in a row, again recall the concept of seriality and repetition. Indeed,

    repetition is the inherent in the motion of rotation. In regards to verticality, the upward oriented

    cannons of the guns make them seem as if they are aspiring to loftiness, or as if these machines

    are glorifying their leader with the infamous upward pointing Hitler salute.

    Vertical height inDay of Freedom, just as in Triumph of the Will, is again symbolized by

    airplanes. The final sequence of the documentary is a montage of warplanes. The superimposed

    images of the warplanes, as one image fades into another, makes it appear as if they are flying in

    all directions at once. Their access to space is expansive, limitless, and infinite, communicating

    the spatial freedom stated by the title of the documentary. On the ground, soldiers also appear

    to be moving in all directions at once; soldiers marching across the screen from the bottom right

    to the top left then dissolve into another image of soldiers marching across the screen from

    bottom left to top right. In one instance ofDay of Freedom, there is a low-angle low-level shot

    of an approaching tank. The tank rolls over the viewers entire field of vision, totalizing the

    space in a display of enormous might.

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    19

    The constant rotation and repetition around and across the screen is mesmerizing,

    hypnotic. The near-magical powers of these spatial figurations become targets of criticism in

    The Murderers Are Among Us. Near the end of Staudtes film, Brckner delivers a highly

    nationalistic Christmas speech to the workers at his factory. He says that, following the

    devastation of Germany in the war, they must unite to build a brighter Germany. The vertical

    dimension of space is again manipulated to define the relationship between a superior, Brckner,

    and his underling workers. Brckner, who sports a Hitler-like mustache, is shot from a low-

    angle while the factory workers are shot from a high-angle. The crowd looks up at him,

    captivated.

    20 21

    The sense of hypnosis induced by the crowds vertical relationship to Brckner can also

    occur with rotational motion. In a bawdy cabaret, close-up shots of a spinning phonograph and

    of twirling skirts associate rotation with two forms of culture, music and dance. The rotation

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    emphasizes cultures hypnotic powers and its ability to spin lies and fantasies. The cabaret is

    associated with moral corruption and sexual lewdness, especially since Staudte chooses to shoot

    some of the sequence of spinning skirts from beneath the dancers legs:

    22

    The lewd captain agrees to meet the dancers in the dressing room, saying, I always wanted to

    get a look behind the scenes. The implication is that he wants to get a look under the dress, just

    as the viewers were offered earlier in the scene.

    Rotational motion in space corresponds with cyclical movement in time. Much has

    already been written on the erratic temporal quality of rubble films, mostly from a

    psychoanalytic perspective on memory and trauma. Drawing from Julia Kristeva, Erica Carter

    says that Memory-time is cyclical, repetitive, hysterical in the Freudian sense.10 Many rubble

    film protagonists are subject to uncontrollable recurring nightmares about the traumatic war.

    Their temporal dislocation is manifested in the films through numerous flashbacks and a non-

    linear narrative, all indicating that the rubble films are dealing with the question of a tortured

    history.

    Of relevance to this paper is the question of how this temporal quality of the rubble films

    is figured spatially. The filmRotation (Wolfgang Staudte), as the title suggests, centralizes the

    10 Erica Carter, Sweeping up the Past: Gender and History in the Post-war German Rubble Film,Heroines

    without Heroes: Reconstructing Female and National Identities in European Cinema 1945-51, ed. Ulrike Sieglohr

    (London and New York: Cassell, 2000), 100.

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    issue of rotation, both temporal and spatial. Released in 1949,Rotation was the most expensive

    DEFA production up to that point. The story, which spans from 1925 to 1945, focuses on the life

    of a fictional character, Hans Behnke. Hans is an average man who is simply trying to provide a

    comfortable lifestyle for his wife and son. When the Nazis come into power, Hans tries to stay

    away from politics, but joins the Nazi party simply for economic reasons, since he cannot keep

    his job at the printing press or get promoted unless he is a party member. As the film progresses

    and the evils of the Nazi regime become more clear, Hans reluctantly helps his Communist

    brother-in-law set up an underground printing press. When his nave son, Helmut, finds out,

    Helmut reports his fathers treason to Nazi officials. Hans goes to jail and Helmut goes off to

    fight the war for Germany. By the end of the film, the war is over. Hans wife has been killed by

    the war and Helmut, having discovered the error of his ways, is reconciled with his father.

    The opening shot ofRotation features a large spinning roller, which we soon discover is

    part of a printing press rolling out newspapers. It is thunderous, relentless, and impersonal. Like

    the indifferent hand of fate, it recounts the unstoppable tribulations of history, declaring

    headlines like 4 MILLION UNEMPLOYED! and WAR! The mechanical and repetitious

    reproduction of culture is featured again in a fade from the printing press to spinning record

    player in Hans home. The record player is playing happy and upbeat music that, beyond

    anything else, conveys a sense of middle-class complacency when juxtaposed with the previous

    monumental headlines.

    Staudte shows that Hans is part of this mechanized process of rotation and repetition, the

    end product of which is cultural reproduction. During the Weimar era, which was plagued by

    high unemployment, Hans takes a variety of odd jobs to earn money. In one instance, he is one

    of about a dozen men pushing a large wheel. It is uncertain what the wheel is intended to

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    manufacture it is simply one wheel in a larger capitalist machine. Similarly, Hans, like the

    undifferentiated men around him, is just one cog in the wheel of a faceless sociopolitical

    machine that he makes no attempt to understand. In another instance, Hans is explicitly used to

    in the project of cultural reproduction. He, along with several other men, walk the streets with

    signs that feature pictures of scantily clad women to advertise a local cabaret. During these odd

    jobs, Hans is always accompanied by several other men performing the same exact task.

    Seriality, or visual repetition, emphasizes the workers lack of individuality.

    In this film, rotation signifies endless repetition, especially the repetition of historical

    tragedies. Therefore, rotation leads to nothing but stagnation, a state in which humanity turns

    round and round in the same circle, never going anywhere. In contrast, rotation inDay of

    Freedom leads to forward motion and progress rather than stagnation. It is the rotation of the

    wheels of military vehicles that will allow the German army to surge forward and cut new

    ground, in linear rather than circular motion. Staudte, clearly, has a more pessimistic view of

    rotation. In his films, rotation implies fixation around a rigid locus or center, or rather, an

    imagined center based upon illusions of national destiny and ethnic superiority.

    At the end ofRotation, Hans son Helmut appears at a railroad crossing, looking exactly

    like his father did at the same railroad crossing in one of the first scenes of the movie. The

    similarity between Hans and Helmuts situations at the beginning and end of the film suggests

    that history is repeating itself. However, contrary to rotation, the railroad implies linear motion.

    The crossing at the railroad suggests a transition from one space to another. Indeed, as Helmut

    and his fianc approach the same fork in the road that his parents once approached some twenty

    years earlier, he takes the path on the left whereas his parents took the path on the right. Here,

    Staudte maps political space onto filmic and physical space, with the right path representing the

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    rightist fascists and the left path representing the leftist Communists. The implication is that

    Helmut has made the critical political choice to break out of historys tragic cycles.

    Similarly, Staudtes mission as a filmmaker was to break the calamitous cycles of

    historical violence by exposing the false discourses of fascism and nationalism. He aimed to

    counteract the Nazis degradation of German culture and to revive or rescue the German people

    from false texts. In one of the first scenes ofRotation, a long tracking shot depicts a train station

    that has been converted into a makeshift hospital. This scene takes place near the end of the war,

    so Germanys loss is already imminent. The radio is on, enthusiastically recounting the war and

    confidently forecasting ultimate German victory. A poster says, We shall never surrender! The

    confidence and exuberance of the radio and poster, both forms of mechanically mass-produced

    culture, stand in stark contrast to the mood exuded by the listless and despondent nurses and

    wounded soldiers. The almost-complete silence of the passive and dejected people speaks the

    volumes of truth that the bombastic radio and poster attempt to conceal that Germany is losing

    the war and that its people have already resigned to a state of defeat and misery. This tension,

    especially between the aural radio and the visual image of the tattered people, exposes the

    hypocrisy and lies disseminated by the fascist government.

    The honesty of the visual image is sometimes accompanied by genuine text. When Hans

    is thrown in prison, his scribblings and the scribblings of prisoners jailed there before him are

    etched onto a barren wall. It lists friends that were executed, days imprisoned, and other

    statements that embody a stark and spare honestly, in complete contrast to the embellished

    posters and radio announcements. At the end of the film, the camera tracks down a list of names

    soldiers killed during the war. This internal military document, again with great restraint,

    speaks the horrible truth that laid behind the confident discourse of the Nazi regime. This list

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    and the etchings on the prison wall are private texts, not produced for public mass consumption.

    As such, they lack embellishment, and are naked and raw in conveying the horrible fates of

    individual people.

    Because the walls in berubbled German cities have fallen, the boundary between interior

    and exterior dissolves. The terrifying truths that laid hidden in private interior spaces, both

    physical and psychological, are exposed to the public. The rubble reveals the lies propagated by

    fascist cultural texts, often through juxtaposition. The juxtapositions often operate through

    tensions between the sound and the image, as in the case withRotations scene of miserable

    people listening to the confident radio. In Roberto Rosselinis Germany, Year Zero (Germania,

    Anno Zero, 1947), the camera tracks along the citys rubble while a recording of one of Hitlers

    speeches plays in the background. We hear Hitler say, We shall succeed! Victory shall be

    ours! in the context of the rubble, the embodiment of Germanys utter failure and defeat. In

    Staudtes The Kaisers Lackey, the main character stands upon a podium and delivers a militant

    nationalistic speech in a prewar setting. The next scene is set after the war in the same location,

    which has been reduced to rubble. The main characters speech is repeated again, but this time,

    the visual accompaniment of rubble exposes the folly of his speech. If the spiring towers and

    majestic architecture of Triumph of the Will represents lies, then the rubble is the truth laid bare.

    In the permeable spaces of the rubble, hidden lies and hypocrisies are exposed. The facades of

    the buildings are gone all that is left is the naked truth.

    Rubble space is the chaotic antithesis of the straight lines and orderly formations that

    figure so largely in Leni Reifenstahls films. Ironically, the background of the opening image of

    Somewhere in Berlin is that of a gridlike map, delineated in neat geometric blocks and lines.

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    creeps up the screen. Earlier in the film, Hans and his family live in a dingy basement due to the

    bad economic conditions of the Weimar Republic. Hans inability to control the space in which

    his family lives is his greatest frustration, and he throws a tantrem bemoaning the fact that his

    family has to live in a basement, a rathole. These subterranean spaces, the sewers and Hans

    basement, represent the subaltern or working class people, who are suppressed both politically

    and spatially. Once Hans starts earning more money during the rise of the National Socialists,

    his family moves to a more comfortable middle-class home. There, they are constantly cleaning

    and trying to acquire commodities for the house.

    In The Murderers Are Among Us, Susanne is also constantly cleaning and trying to create

    order in the apartment she shares with Hans. However, Hans complains bitterly about the

    neatness of the apartment. The orderliness of that space is too much for Hans to endure, for his

    psychological being is characterized by chaos and ambiguity. Repulsed by the contradiction

    between the neat apartment space and his inner turmoil, Hans repeatedly retreats to the

    empathetic rubble.

    The rubble space is as dangerous and unpredictable as it is disorderly. Marked by

    instability, pieces of rubble could collapse at any moment. Before Susanne fixes up the

    apartment, water leaks in through cracks and wind sweeps debris through the broken windows.

    Porous boundaries allow a flow or flux between interior and exterior. In The Murderers Are

    Among Us, this breakdown of boundaries is a positive circumstance, for the neat lines drawn by

    the Nazis have been dissolved so that the contradictions within fascist culture can be revealed.

    The reduction of Germany to rubble, though horrifying, is simultaneously a cleansing process

    that reveals the terrible truth of the German past and allows the nation to redefine itself by

    building a better cultural edifice.

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    However, in films like Germany, Year Zero and Somewhere in Berlin, the rubble is a

    much more irredeemable and negative force. Violence created the rubble, and thus the rubble is

    only capable of propagating more violence. In the final scene ofGermany, Year Zero, there is a

    shot-reverse-shot sequence between Edmund, the child protagonist of the film, and his nemesis,

    the rubble. Then, he jumps off the rubble and commits suicide. The next shot is that of

    Edmunds body, which eventually exits the bottom of the screen as the camera tracks upward

    until finally, all we see is the rubble.

    Similarly, in Somewhere in Berlin, a young boy dies by falling off rubble. Throughout

    the film, the rubble is a menacing space. Though adults find it difficult to navigate and control

    the rubble, children run rampant throughout it in a state of near-anarchy. The adults cannot

    manage to discipline their children no matter how hard they try. Thus, the rubble is a primitive

    and uncivilized space. The militaristic children run wild; they enjoy playing war games by

    shooting fireworks throughout the rubble, destroying property and hiding from adults with

    impunity. In the end, the savage rubble must be tamed and order must be reestablished. Adults

    demolish the rubble and begin rebuilding in an effort to reclaim the space for civilization.

    Underscoring most of the rubble films is this belief that order must be reestablished, an

    order that is possible only with the resurrection of male agency. Much has been written about the

    role of gender in rubble films; here, I will only summarize the main points briefly. One of the

    major results of Germanys defeat was a collective loss of belief in the dominant fiction of ideal

    masculinity.11 Many of the rubble films portray passive males that find themselves aimless and

    impotent amongst the rubble. Deleuzes traditional SAS framework is no longer applicable; the

    male lead, instead of acting upon or transforming the setting, is engulfed by the rubble.12 It is the

    11 James Fischer, Deleuze in a Ruinous Context: German Rubble-Film and Italian Neorealism,Iris: A Journal of

    Theory on Image and Sound, No. 23, Spring 1997 (Coralville, IA: University of Iowa), 57.12 Fischer, 58-60.

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    females that are actively engaged with the environment, constantly sweeping up the debris. The

    adult German male, who had been featured with such aggressive confidence in Nazi films, is

    reduced to dependence upon women and children. InBetween Yesterday and Tomorrow

    (Zwishen Gestern und Morgen, Harald Braun, 1947) and StraBenbekanntschaft(Street

    Acquaintance, Peter Pewas, 1948), the customarily authoritative male narrative voice is replaced

    by a female voice, indicating a subversion in gender hierarchy.13

    The potential of the rubble to overturn previous cultural and cinematic traditions was,

    however, not fully exploited. Though the rubble films acknowledged the toppling of male

    dominion as a result of the war, German filmmakers viewed this circumstance as a wound that

    must be healed. In other words, the previous patriarchal social system should and must be re-

    instituted. In Somewhere in Berlin, the children conspire to make the father return to his role as

    active head of the household. The father is the only person that can rebuild the familys garage,

    and by extension, Germany. The films climax arrives when the father reassumes his rightful

    role by ascending a mound of rubble and working away. His central position and the screen and

    higher spatial level indicate his dominance over the project of reconstruction. Similarly, in The

    Murderers Are Among Us, the role of the female lead, Susanne, is to rejuvenate the male lead and

    restore his wholeness. Though Susanne is supposedly a concentration camp victim, her history

    and memories go completely unmentioned. Most rubble films only explore the traumatic

    experiences and war guilt of German males rather than focusing on the actual victims

    themselves. Women and Jews appear to be ahistorical the promise of a future for Germany

    lays in the re-masculinization of Germanys men.

    In The Murderers Are Among Us, Hans eventually regains the will to act and aggressively

    pursues Brckner. In Somewhere in Berlin, the films triumphant ending features the father

    13 Carter, 94.

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    retaking his rightful place as the head of the family and of the community. Indeed, only

    Rosellinis Germany, Year Zero fails to offer the hope of restoration of the previous social order.

    In Germany, Year Zero, masculinity fails completely. In a family with two men, one dies while

    the other refuses to find work. The women and a little boy, Edmund, must provide for the

    family. In the final shot of the film, after Edmund had committed suicide, the menacing rubble

    fills the screen space as an enduring symbol of despair. There is no indication that the rubble

    will be cleared away, or that Edmunds family can ever be restored.

    Though Rosselini worked closely with DEFA to produce the film, Germany, Year Zero is

    more frequently classified as an Italian neorealist film than as a rubble film. Despite notable

    similarities, such as the rubble mise-en-scne and the destabilizing of gender and social

    hierarchies, the rubble films attempt to resurrect and justify the old social order whereas

    Rosselini tried to reveal its inadequacy. The German rubble films never garnered the

    international acclaim enjoyed by Italian neorealism. Though the rubble films initially looked as

    if they could rival Italian films in the arena of international postwar cinema, they quickly faded

    out.

    Replacing rubble films wereHeimatfilme, or homeland films, which celebrated

    traditional German purity and greatness. Gone was the anxious self-doubting introspection of

    the rubble films. The rubble films were meant to reconcile Germany with the rest of the world

    community, and international critics initially positive reception of the rubble films suggested

    that they could help reintegrate the nation into the global landscape. TheHeimatfilme, however,

    was produced for a domestic audience and found little positive reception outside of Germany.

    The difference in spatial settings underscores the change in focus, from international to domestic,

    for the urban settings of the rubble films are socially nearer to international cosmopolitanism

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    than the rural countryside of theHeimatfilme. Whereas the Trmmerfilme were based upon a

    fundamental loss of center or rootlessness, theHeimatfilme was a return to imagined German

    roots, based in the primitive and unadulterated soil of the rural homeland. Whereas the urban

    spaces of the confrontational rubble films induce claustrophobia, the rural spaces of the escapist

    Heimatfilme are wide and open. The spatial expansiveness of theHeimatfilme indicates a relapse

    into the Nazi spatial aesthetic. Indeed, films about the heimatwas common during the Nazi era.

    Thus, rotation or repetition can serve as a theme for this brief period of German film

    history. The Nazi cinematic aesthetic, though briefly interrupted by the rubble films, returned in

    the 1950s in a different form, asHeimatfilme. The rubble films were fairly ambitious, but the

    return of the repressed or frank dealing with gruesome war memories would not truly occur

    until decades after the war. The fact that the rubble films were produced at all can be partially

    attributed to the ideological goals and commitment of the Soviet-controlled DEFA. In the end,

    the dark and unstable rubble spaces of the films proved unappealing to an audience that had to

    deal with real rubble space outside the theater. Nonetheless, the rubble films have left a legacy

    of images images of destruction and folly. The rubble of Germany was a contested space that

    begged for some sort of meaning, and postwar filmmakers struggled to respond. Whether a

    symbol of despair over history or hope for a better future, the rubble image struck postwar

    Germany with its stark honesty both inside and outside of the theater.

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    Iris: A Journal of Theory on Image and Sound, No. 23, Spring 1997. Coralville, IA: Universityof Iowa.

    Kaes, Anton. From Hitlerto Heimat: The Return of History as Film. Cambridge,

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    Lieser, Erwin. Nazi Cinema. Trans. by Gertrud Mander and David Wilson. New York:

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    Manvell, Roger and Heinrich Fraenkel. The German Cinema. New York: Praeger Publishers,

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