词条 | Everyone Dies Alone |
释义 |
| name = Everyone Dies Alone | image = Jeder stirbt für sich allein (1975).jpg | image size = 200px | border = | alt = Man and woman on trial (black & white photo) | caption = Courtroom scene: Carl Raddatz and Hildegard Knef as Otto and Anna Quangel | director = Alfred Vohrer | producer = Karl Spiehs | screenplay = Miodrag Cubelic Anton Cerwik | based on = {{based on|Every Man Dies Alone|Hans Fallada}} | narrator = | starring = Hildegard Knef Carl Raddatz | music = Gerhard Heinz | cinematography = Heinz Hölscher | editing = Jutta Hering | studio = | distributor = | released = {{film date|1976|1|21}} | runtime = 102 minutes | country = West Germany | language = German | budget = | gross = }} Everyone Dies Alone (Original title: Jeder stirbt für sich allein) is a 1976 West German drama film adapted from the Hans Fallada novel Every Man Dies Alone. The book was based on the story of two ordinary Germans, Otto and Elise Hampel, who committed acts of civil disobedience against the Third Reich, were caught and sentenced to death. SynopsisThe film takes place in Berlin in 1940, during World War II as Adolf Hitler is at the height of his power. Anna and Otto Quangel, a working class couple, live in Berlin in simple circumstances and are not particularly interested in politics. Then, their only son is killed in action during the Battle of France and as they grieve for their son, the desire to resist the Nazi regime grows within them. When a Jewish neighbor is also killed, Anna decides to join the German Resistance. She begins writing very personal flyers on postcards, which she at first alone and then with her husband, leaves in public places and slips into mailboxes. The two are discovered, arrested and eventually sentenced to death. Otto Quangel commits suicide in the courtroom with a cyanide pill; his wife is executed two months later. ReceptionThe Lexikon des deutschen Films published in 1995 by German publisher Reclam called the film Vohrer's most challenging work, stating further, "albeit somewhat sentimental, but without sensationalist moments, this film adaptation comes near Fallada's original. Especially haunting is the focused and unadorned performance by Hildegard Knef." Other screen versionsThere are two earlier screen adaptations of Fallada's book and one later. The first filmed version was Falk Harnack's 1962 television play, Jeder stirbt für sich allein produced and broadcast in West Germany. Anna and Otto Quangel were played by Edith Schultze-Westrum and Alfred Schieske. In 1970, DEFA produced a three-part miniseries, Jeder stirbt für sich allein in East Germany, directed by Hans-Joachim Kasprzik.[1] Elsa Grube-Deister and Erwin Geschonneck played the main roles and supported by Wolfgang Kieling and Fred Delmare among others. In 2004, a Czech version, I ve smrti sami, was produced as a television miniseries, directed by Dušan Kleina and broadcast in the Czech Republic.[2] Cast
See also
References1. ^Filmsterne biography of Erwin Geschonneck DEFA. Retrieved March 5, 2012 {{de icon}} 2. ^"Dobro a zlo u Dušana Kleina" Hospodářské Noviny (February 16, 2004). Retrieved March 4, 2012 {{cs icon}} 3. ^Biographie Carl Raddatz Film Museum Potsdam. Retrieved March 5, 2012 {{de icon}} Sources
External links
10 : 1976 films|1970s drama films|German drama films|West German films|German-language films|Films set in Berlin|Films based on German novels|Films about the German Resistance|Films about capital punishment|Films directed by Alfred Vohrer |
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