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The Blue Angel

 
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The Blue Angel

  • Director: Josef von Sternberg
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Melodrama, Psychological Drama
  • Themes: Self-Destructive Romance
  • Main Cast: Emil Jannings, Marlene Dietrich, Kurt Gerron, Rose Valetti, Hans Albers
  • Release Year: 1930
  • Country: DE
  • Run Time: 103 minutes

Plot

Marlene Dietrich became an immediate international star on the strength of her performance as the temptress Lola Frohlich in Josef von Sternberg's classic tale of love and obsession. Professor Immanuel Rath (Emil Jannings) is a strict and humorless schoolmaster who is shocked when he discovers the boys in his class have been spending their time at a sleazy cabaret called The Blue Angel, where an entertainer named Lola (Dietrich) keeps the men in thrall and sells suggestive postcards of herself. Rath goes to the club in hopes of catching his students and giving them a severe dressing-down, but he instead finds himself entranced by the carefree atmosphere of the club, and is struck by Lola's earthy, sensual beauty. Rath finds himself strongly attracted to Lola, and she later entertains him in her dressing room. When word of Rath's infatuation with Lola spreads to his students, he is taunted mercilessly, and eventually Rath is dismissed from the school. While Lola agrees to marry Rath, she shows little affection for him and delights in humiliating him, making him her servant and forcing him to play a clown in her stage show. The Blue Angel was shot in both German and English language versions; the German is preferable, as most of the cast were obviously more expert in that tongue. Dietrich introduced her theme song, "Falling In Love Again", in this picture. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

Der Blaue Engel is one of the masterpieces of the early sound era, notable in using sound to enhance atmosphere and establish characterization. Germany in 1930 was in desperate economic turmoil from reparations following World War I, and the film mirrors the bleak, unhappy view of the future common in German society at that time. The story is a superb portrait of cruel, obsessive love and the unrelenting degradation that ensues. Director Josef Von Sternberg skillfully paces the film so that the descent of the Professor (Emil Jannings) is both believable and understandable. Indeed, it is clear that the camera adores Lola (Marlene Dietrich) every bit as much as does the professor. The film made an international star of Dietrich, and she is matched in performance by Jannings, in what is perhaps his best-remembered screen role. The film also launched the song "Falling in Love Again,"which, like the film itself, has amply stood the test of time. ~ Richard Gilliam, All Movie Guide

Cast

Karl Huszar-Puffy - Innkeeper; Eduard von Winterstein - Headmaster; Reinhold Bernt - The clown; Gerhard Bienert - Policeman; Wilhelm Diegelmann - Captain; Ilse Furstenberg - Rath's maid; Robert Klein-Lork - Goldstaub, a Student; Rolf Muller - Angst, a Student; Hans Roth - The janitor; Roland Varno - Pupil Lohmann; Carl Ballhaus - Pupil Ertzum

Credit

Roland Petit - Choreography, Smauel Lerner - Consultant/advisor, Josef von Sternberg - Director, S.K. Winston - Editor, Frederick Hollander - Composer (Music Score), Franz Waxman - Composer (Music Score), Frederick Hollander - Songwriter, Robert Liebmann - Songwriter, Emile Hasler - Production Designer, Otto Hunte - Production Designer, Günther Rittau - Cinematographer, Hans Schneeberger - Cinematographer, Erich Pommer - Producer, Emile Hasler - Set Designer, Otto Hunte - Set Designer, Fritz Thiery - Sound/Sound Designer, Robert Liebmann - Screenwriter, Carl Zuckmayer - Screenwriter, Karl Vollmoeller - Screenwriter, Heinrich Mann - Short Story Author

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Wikipedia: The Blue Angel
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The Blue Angel

film poster
Directed by Josef von Sternberg
Produced by Erich Pommer
Written by Heinrich Mann
(also novel)
Carl Zuckmayer
Karl Vollmöller
Robert Liebmann
Josef von Sternberg
Starring Emil Jannings
Marlene Dietrich
Kurt Gerron
Music by Friedrich Hollaender
Cinematography Günther Rittau
Editing by Walter Klee
Sam Winston
Distributed by UFA
Paramount Pictures
Release date(s) 1 April 1930 (Germany)
5 December 1930
(US premiere)
Running time 99 minutes
Country Germany
Language German/English

The Blue Angel (German: Der blaue Engel) is a film directed by Josef von Sternberg in 1930, based on Heinrich Mann's novel Professor Unrat. The film is considered to be the first major German sound film and it brought world fame to actress Marlene Dietrich.[1] In addition, it introduced her signature song, Friedrich Hollaender's "Falling in Love Again (Can't Help It)".

Contents

Plot

The Blue Angel follows Emmanuel Rath (Emil Jannings) through a transformation from esteemed educator at the local Gymnasium (college preparatory high school) to a destitute vagrant in pre-World War II Weimar Germany. Rath’s descent begins when he punishes several of his students for circulating photographs of the beautiful Lola Lola (Marlene Dietrich) the headliner for the local cabaret, The Blue Angel. Hoping to catch the boys at the club, Professor Rath goes to the club later that evening and meets his eventual downfall: Lola herself.

Consumed with desire and determined to remain at Lola’s side, Rath returns to the night club the following evening (to return a pair of panties that were smuggled into his coat by one of his students) and stays the night with her. The next morning, reeling from his night of passion, Rath arrives late to school to find his classroom in chaos and the principal furious with his behavior.

Rath subsequently resigns his position at the academy to marry Lola, but their happiness is short-lived, as they soon fritter away the teacher's meager savings and Rath is forced to take a position as a clown in Lola’s cabaret troupe to pay the bills. His growing insecurities about Lola’s profession as a “shared woman” eventually reduce him to a mere shell of the man he used to be, consumed by his lust and jealousy. The troupe returns to his hometown, where he is ridiculed and berated by the Blue Angel patrons, the very people he himself used to deride. As Rath performs his last act, he witnesses his wife embrace, and kiss, one of her former lovers, and Rath is enraged to the point of insanity. He attempts to strangle Lola, but is beaten down by the other members of the troupe and locked in a straight jacket.

Later that night, Rath is set free, and makes his way towards his old classroom. Rejected, humiliated, and destitute, he passes away in remorse, clenching the desk from where he once taught.

Cast

  • Emil Jannings—Prof. Emmanuel Rath
  • Marlene Dietrich—Lola Lola
  • Kurt Gerron—Kiepert (the magician)
  • Rosa Valetti—Guste (the magician's wife)
  • Hans Albers—Mazeppa (the strongman)
  • Reinhold Bernt—The clown
  • Eduard von Winterstein—The director of school (as Eduard V. Winterstein)
  • Hans Roth—The caretaker of the secondary school
  • Rolf Müller—Pupil Angst
  • Roland Varno—Pupil Lohmann (as Rolant Varno)
  • Carl Balhaus—Pupil Ertzum (as Karl Balhaus)
  • Robert Klein-Lörk—Pupil Goldstaub

Production history

Von Sternberg calls the story “the downfall of an enamored man” (Sternberg, 11) and calls Rath “...a figure of self-satisfied dignity brought low.” (Wakeman, 1045). Some critics saw the film as an allegory for pre-war Germany, but von Sternberg is very clear that he did not intend to make a political stand: “The year was 1929, Germany was undivided, although the real Germany, its schools and other places pictured in the film were not German and reality failed to interest me.” (Wakeman, 1046; Sternberg, 13).

Marlene Dietrich’s portrayal of a liberated night club performer not only cemented her stardom, but also established a modern embodiment of a vixen. Lola Lola’s lusty songs (written by Friedrich Hollaender, Robert Liebmann and Sam Winston) slither their way into Rath’s heart, entrapping him and sealing his fate. The story's melancholy simplicity adds to the beauty of von Sternberg’s most famous work and undoubtedly was a factor in its feverish success, in both Germany and America.

Emil Jannings had asked Sternberg to direct him in his first sound picture, Sternberg and Jannings had clashed on the set of their previous collaboration The Last Command (1928), and von Sternberg had vowed never to work with the actor again. The following year, however, he and Jannings reconciled and they began to collaborate on a film about Rasputin for UFA-Paramount. Sternberg was less than intrigued by this prospect, however, and as an alternative he was offered the idea of an adaptation of the Heinrich Mann story Professor Unrat. Sternberg restructured the story to fit his tastes; simplifying moral themes and emphasizing the anguish of the teacher. (Sternberg, 9-11)

The Blue Angel is famous for introducing the world to von Sternberg’s ingénue, Marlene Dietrich. Her radiant sensuality might be blamed for the censorship the film faced in Pasadena, California (Black, 50). C.V. Cowan, censor for Pasadena, found offensive (though Jason Joy, the nation's censor, did not) and chose to remove many scenes (Black, 50). Reception of the re-cut film was not good. Both the German and English versions are widely considered classics.

The film was banned in Nazi Germany in 1933, as were all the works of Heinrich Mann and Carl Zuckmayer. Yet it is known that Hitler often viewed the film in his private cinema[citation needed], and was mortified[citation needed] when Dietrich crossed the Rhine in American Army uniform a few days before his suicide.

Lola Lola's nightclub act has been parodied on film by Danny Kaye (in drag) as Fraulein Lilli in On the Double, Madeline Kahn as Lili von Schtupp in Blazing Saddles, and Helmut Berger in Luchino Visconti's The Damned.

A stage adaptation by Romanian playwright Razvan Mazilu premiered in 2001 at the Odeon Theatre in Bucharest, starring Florin Zamfirescu as the professor and Maia Morgenstern as Lola Lola.

The simultaneously-filmed English language version was considered a lost film for many years until a print was discovered in a German film archive and restored. This restored print of the English version had its U.S. premiere at the Castro Theatre in San Francisco on 19 January 2009 as part of the "Berlin and Beyond" film festival.[2]

Rath's transformation has been interpreted as symbolic of Carl Jung's description of a man's infatuation with his anima. According to Jung, the anima is a man's idealized version of woman. For women, such a projection is described as the animus.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Bordwell, David; Kristin Thompson (2003) [1994]. "The Introduction of Sound". Film History: An Introduction (2nd Edition ed.). New York City: McGraw-Hill. p. 204. ISBN 978-0071151412. 
  2. ^ http://www.berlinandbeyond.com/pages/e-classic.html

References

  • Gregory D. Black, Hollywood Censored (Cambridge University Press, 1994)
  • Andrew Sarris, The Films of Josef von Sternberg (New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1966)
  • Josef von Sternberg, The Blue Angel (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1968)
  • John Wakeman, World Film Directors Vol. 1 (The H.W. Wilson Company, 1987)

External links


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