38 - Auch das War Wien
International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers
|
2001
|
|
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company. (Hide copyright information)
Copyright
38 - AUCH DAS WAR WIEN
(38 - Vienna Before the Fall)
Austria, 1986
Director: Wolfgang Glück
Production: SATEL-Fernseh-und Filmproduktionsges.m.b.H, Vienna/Almaro Film Munich; color, 35 mm, running time: 97 minutes. Released 4 September 1986 in Venice ("Venezia speciali").
Producers: Michael Wolkenstein, Boris Otto Dworak; screenplay: Wolfgang Glück, Lida Winiewicz (collaboration on dialogues), based on the novel by Friedrich Torberg, Auch das war Wien; photography: Gerhard Vandenberg; editor: Heidi Handorf; art director: Herwig Libowitzky; music arranger: Bert Grund; sound: Werner Böhm.
Cast: Tobias Engel (Martin Hofmann ); Sunnyi Melles (Carola Hell ); Heinz Trixner (Toni Drechsler ); Romuald Pekny (Sovary ); Ingrid Burkhard (Frau Schostal ); Lukas Resetarits (cab driver ); Lotte Ledl (Carola's mother ).
Awards: Academy Award nomination for best foreign language film, 1986; Austrian Film Prize, 1987.
Publications
Books:
Ernst, Gustav, and Gerhard Schedl, editors, Nahaufnahmen: Zur Situation des österreichischen Kinofilms, Vienna and Zurich, 1992.
Articles:
Austrian Film Commission, Austrian Films 1981–1986 and Ten Selected Films 1976–80, Vienna, 1988.
* * *
The Austrian director Wolfgang Glück (born 1929) created 38 at a time when it was not yet common in film or literature for Austrians to address the Nazi past. Except for Peter Turrini's six-part television series Alpensaga (1976–1980), the topic was generally avoided since Austria had been deemed the first victim of Hitler, obviating any need to discuss the issue of war guilt. In this sense the film, released in 1986, served as prelude to the widespread media coverage and the many books, articles, and international conferences that appeared in 1988, on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of the Anschluss (the political unification of Nazi Germany and Austria).
Glück's filmscript, written with Lida Winiewiecz, is based on the novel Auch das war Wien by Friedrich Torberg (1908–1979). (Glück had made a very successful television film from Torberg's most famous novel, Der Schüler Gerber in 1981.) Torberg had emigrated to the United States during World War II and returned to become one of the most influential personalities in Austrian cultural life. A fervent anti-Communist, he joined with Hans Weigel during the Cold War to mount the infamous "Brecht Boykott." Later it was found that his magazine Forum was secretly financed by the United States. Torberg had written Auch das war Wien before he left Austria, but he decided against publishing this book, which was critical of Vienna, because he planned to return and work in Austria. His widow discovered the manuscript after his death and published it.
The film presents the political events surrounding the Anschluss in March of 1938 through the lives of Carola Hell, a popular young actress at the prestigious Theater in der Josefstadt, and Martin Hofmann, the Jewish journalist she plans to marry. When we encounter the couple in the lovely springtime weather their future is full of promise. They are determined to stay clear of politics. Yet in the climate of the time, nobody of her prominence or his religion can remain apolitical. Although Martin's journalist friend, Drechsler, calls to inform them that the Nazis plan to take over Austria soon, they concentrate on their work and their private happiness and dismiss the warnings.
As they did with many writers, artists, and film people, the Nazis try to win Carola over to their cause by showing her the benefits of cooperation. They invite her to make a film and to perform in Berlin, and, despite her misgivings, she feels she must oblige them in the interest of her career, for the Nazis control the theaters in Austria. She is treated royally in Berlin and yet knows she is constantly under surveillance. She gets a taste of Nazi power when she openly criticizes the harassment of Jews and is detained for an educational "briefing," which includes the suggestion that it is not advisable for her to have a Jewish friend.
The film shows Chancellor Schuschnigg's efforts to forestall Hitler by calling for a national referendum on the question of the Anschluss on March 13. Despite his efforts, the occupation begins on March 11. Carola, who has disclosed that she is pregnant, and Martin are attending a cabaret with friends when the news comes, and they discover the Nazis taking over the city. The film reaches its dramatic climax in scenes showing the panicked and frenetic attempts of Austrians to flee the country before the borders are closed. Glück excellently conveys the incredible rapidity of the takeover, thanks to the lengthy preparation and cooperation of Austrian National Socialists, who now no longer have to hide their affiliation. Carola and Martin head for the train station to travel to Prague, still a free city. She is allowed to board the train, but he is prevented from accompanying her. Guards haul him away and beat him. He seeks refuge with friends, but while all are sympathetic, they are too afraid to help him. Martin accepts his fate and walks along the streets until he is arrested.
1938 effectively dramatizes the events leading up to the German annexation of Austria, showing how the Nazis infiltrated the country's organizations, bribed the writers and artists, undermined the government, and intimidated the populace to prepare the way for the takeover. It also shows how the public tried to ignore the Nazi threat, and the way many Jews overlooked the increasingly anti-Semitic atmosphere and actions, until it was too late to stop the German occupation.
—Gertraud Steiner Daviau
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
The death of Polycrates. (poem)
Magazine article from: The American Poetry Review; 5/1/1993; ; 454 words
; ...opposite. He writhed like a snake nailed to a post. Some of his Greeks no doubt watched and some, lighting fires, rejoiced. Polycrates could see from where he hung the city he had ruled the strong walls of the harbor the great aqueduct the goddess' temple...
|
|
Cliche's: Getting to the Heart of the Matter
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 8/28/1987; ; 700+ words
; ...general Mardonius) and the Thebians (led by general Polycrates) in 471 B.C. Mardonius was supposed to have hidden...treasure under his tent, but when he was defeated, Polycrates couldn't find it. When he consulted the Oracle at...
|
|
THEN AND NOW Journey With Herodotus
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 1/11/2009; 700+ words
; ...additions), which was built during the rule of the tyrant Polycrates. One can visit the twin underground tunnels of Eupalinos (one right above the other), ordered by Polycrates so enemies could not cut off the water supply to the ancient...
|
|
The Johannine Corpus in the Early Church
Magazine article from: Journal of Biblical Literature; 4/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...section, that would be Theophilus, Athenagoras, the Epistle of Vienne and Lyons, Irenaeus, Hegesippus, the Sibyllines, Polycrates, Victor of Rome, Clement of Alexandria, the Muratorian Fragment, Apollonius of Ephesus, Tertullian, Perpetua and Felicitas...
|
|
Will it be Pope Arinze I or Pengo II?
Magazine article from: New African; 6/1/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...Resurrection, observed Easter on the Sunday following the day of Passover." But when the Quarterdecimans under the leadership of Polycrates (the bishop of Ephesus) refused to obey Victor, he dealt with them harshly by excommunicating them, although he later...
|
|
THE BEST OF EUROPE
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 5/9/2002; ; 435 words
; ...red carpet treatment this week, with film showings, talks and music, including performances from his operas Der Ring des Polycrates and Das Wunder der Heliane. Venues across Brno, Czech Republic (information on 00 42 054 232 1285) to 11 May BRUSSELS...
|
|
The Testimony of the Beloved Disciple: Narrative, History, and Theology in the Gospel of John
Magazine article from: Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society; 9/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...though not one of the Twelve), who served as high priest for a short time. Chapter 2 inspects external evidence from Polycrates and Papias, while chapter 3 turns to internal evidence, commending an understanding of the beloved disciple not as ideal...
|
|
The Chinese government has announced that March 28 will henceforth be celebrated as Serf Liberation Day in Tibet, commemorating the day in 1959 when China took full control of Tibet, sweeping away the evils of the old clerico-feudal order and bringing all the blessings of Communism and Mao Tsetung Thought to the long-suffering Tibetan peasantry.(The Week)(Brief article)
Magazine article from: National Review; 2/9/2009; 677 words
; ...Turkish rule around 1790, looks back wistfully to a predecessor in the golden age of 500 B.C.: "He served--but served Polycrates--/ A tyrant; but our masters then / Were still, at least, our countrymen ..." Tibetans have lived for half a century...
|
|
The Cardiff Team.
Magazine article from: The Review of Contemporary Fiction; 3/22/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...replaces them with a structure in which the characters relate happily, guiltlessly, and selflessly. Marc tells Cyril, "Polycrates burnt the gymnasiums of Samos because he knew that every friendship forged in them were two revolutionaries. Our real families...
|
|
MAKING ENDS MEET
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 2/19/1990; ; 700+ words
; ...once is speed, a tactic probably first adopted by the Greek engineer Eupalinus. Some 2,500 years ago, the Greek tyrant Polycrates engaged the services of Eupalinus to construct a 3400-foot tunnel through Mt. Castro on the island of Samos. The tunnel...
|
|
Polycrates
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Polycrates , d. c.522 BC, tyrant of Samos. He established Samian naval supremacy...crews revolted and, with Spartan aid, unsuccessfully warred against Polycrates. Oroetes, Persian satrap of Sardes, lured him to the mainland and crucified...
|
|
tyrant
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...son, Periander , of Corinth, and the 6th cent. BC was the time of the tyrants Cleisthenes of Sicyon in the Peloponnesus, Polycrates of Samos, and Pisistratus of Athens, followed by his sons Hipparchus and Hippias . The tyrants of Sicily were the products...
|
|
Ibycus
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...fragments of his work contain the earliest-known example of the triadic choral lyric. He spent some time at the court of Polycrates of Samos. The "cranes of Ibycus" as an expression of triumphant justice refers to the tale that Ibycus, murdered at sea...
|
|
Schiller and Psychoanalysis
Dictionary entry from: International Dictionary of Psychoanalysis
...to justify his avoidance of submersion in the maternal unconscious. Elsewhere, he used Schiller's poem "The Ring of Polycrates" as an illustration in "The Uncanny" (1919). Ultimately, Freud considered the age of Goethe to be a prehistory to psychoanalysis...
|
|
Pythagoras of Samos
Dictionary entry from: Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography
...tradition, 520 b.c.) he left Samos to settle in Croton, in southern Italy, perhaps because of his opposition to the tyrant Polycrates. At Croton he founded a religious and philosophical society that soon came to exert considerable political influence throughout...
|