Slums of Berlin
Slums of Berlin is a 1925 German silent drama film directed by Gerhard Lamprecht, based on the experiences of Heinrich Zille. Featuring performances by Aud Egede-Nissen, Bernhard Goetzke, and Mady Christians, it is one of three 'milieu' films by Lamprecht, often referred to as Zille films in homage to their inspiration. Originally intended to be titled Der fünfte Stand, the film was renamed after its completion. The intertitle card displays Die Verrufenen with Der fünfte Stand shown in brackets and smaller text. The film was shot at the Marienfelde Studios in Berlin, with sets designed by the art director Otto Moldenhauer. It was both produced and distributed by National Film.
Set in Berlin in the aftermath of the First World War, the film depicts the lives of two men released from prison. One resumes his life as a petty criminal, picking up where he left off prior to incarceration, and is reaccepted by his social circle. The other, however, faces rejection by both society and his family and must forge a new existence for himself. This is the only film in which Zille himself appeared.
Plot
After being released from prison, the engineer Robert Kramer struggles to reintegrate into bourgeois life. Having taken the fall for a crime committed by his fiancée, he served four years in prison, only to discover upon his release that she has since married a wealthy man. Rejected both by society and his own family, he finds himself unable to secure work, as people everywhere treat him with suspicion. Consumed by despair, he contemplates ending his life. However, he is saved by a street girl named Emma, a sympathetic prostitute who takes him in and helps him regain hope.When Emma and her brother Gustav become entangled in a robbery-murder and must flee from the police, Robert steps in to assist them. Gradually, his life begins to take a positive turn: he finds employment and a mentor, eventually earning a managerial position at a factory in Düsseldorf. Yet, when he returns to Berlin to reunite with Emma, he finds her on her deathbed and must bid her a poignant farewell.
Production
The film's production was initiated and supported by Adolf Heilborn, the brother of Lamprecht's collaborator Luise Heilborn-Körbitz, who was a doctor, writer, and a personal friend of Heinrich Zille. While Erich Pommer of "Decla-Bioscop" and the producers at "Gloria" considered the subject matter unpopular and hesitated to pursue it, Lamprecht found an ally in Franz Vogel, whom he knew from Eiko Film and who, in 1925, was a producer at National Film. Production at National Film A.G. was overseen by Ernst Körner.The film's sets were created by Otto Moldenhauer, and the cinematography was by Karl Hasselmann. The film was made at the "Terra-Glashaus" studios in Marienfelde, Berlin-Tempelhof, and was submitted for censorship review on 20 July 1925. Its premiere took place on 28 August 1925 at the "Tauentzien-Palast" and simultaneously at the "Union-Theater" Turmstraße. According to Zglinicki, it was "one of the most dazzling premieres Berlin had ever seen." The premiere music at the Tauentzien-Palast was conducted by Giuseppe Becce.
The film reached the United States two years later, on 25 January 1927, where it was titled "Slums of Berlin." It also achieved great success abroad, and was shown in France, Spain, Finland, and Japan.
Reception
In the biography of Zille, Heinrich Zille himself comments on Lamprecht's film Der fünfte Stand: "One day, my friend Dr. Heilborn picked me up to view the recordings that had been so carefully made based on my drawings and oral explanations. I watched in amazement as a man, who is neither a painter nor a draftsman, so skilfully draws and paints with photography. Like a child, I delighted in how well Lamprecht understood my drawn pictures...".Lamprecht observes a growing weariness of American films among German cinema audiences, which he attributes to "the strong success of genuinely human, non-sentimental subjects that are not kitschy due to cinematic effects".
The film Die Verrufenen, Lamprecht's portrayal of the slums of the poorest—showing the courtyards, dilapidated basements, and homeless shelters based on the records of the Berlin painter Heinrich Zille—was claimed by both a sentimentally apolitical Berlin folkloristic milieu cinema and the proletarian film. Following its 1925 premiere in the elegant west of Berlin, the Social Democratic newspaper Vorwärts described it as carrying "the significance of a gospel": "These are all people like you, people who really live, who live under these conditions; children grow up here, in 'homes' so damp that young kittens perish in them..."
Unfortunately, the "milieu" that Lamprecht and Zille approached with "palpable sincerity of intent" was quickly shamelessly exploited by opportunistic imitators, who turned the term "Zillefilm" into a questionable label.