Film Review
Well into the second phase of his German filmmaking career, Robert
Siodmak applied his considerable talents to this compelling adaptation
of a hard-hitting play by the Nobel Prize winning author Gerhard
Hauptmann. As in his earlier Hauptmann adaptation,
Die
Ratten (1955), Siodmak downplays the earthier aspects of the
original play and employs some of the stylistic devices he used on his
memorable Hollywood film noir offerings to create a stifling mood of
fatalism. In a similar vein to the early German expressionist
filmmakers, Siodmak is more concerned with the psychological condition
of his characters than in delivering a naturalistic portrayal of their
external world. To that end, high contrast lighting and camera
positioning are used, very effectively to convey the sense of the
entrapment which the heroine experiences as her world closes in on her
through the malign workings of Fate (or male chauvenism, to give it
its modern name).
Although slow paced and entirely predictable,
Dorothea Angermann is a film that
holds our attention, mainly on the strength of its central performance
from Ruth Leuwerik. The latter had recently found national and
international fame through Wolfgang Liebeneiner's Trapp Family diptych,
Die Trapp-Familie (1956) and
Die Trapp-Familie in Amerika
(1958), playing the role that Julie Andrews would later claim as her
own in the film version of
The Sound of Music
(1965). Cast opposite Leuwerik as a thoroughly nasty piece
of work (one who bears an uncanny resemblance to a young Richard
Attenborough) is Kurt Meisel, a distinguished Austrian actor who was
also a prolific and talented film director. A suitably measured
performance from Alfred Schieske (playing the heroine's seemingly
stone-hearted father) and touchingly humane contributions from Bert
Sotlar and Alfred Balthoff add lustre to the film and prevent it from
being the kind of dry and dowdy melodrama that was quite
prevalent in German cinema at this time.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Robert Siodmak film:
Katia (1959)
Film Synopsis
Late one evening, a young woman walks out of a bar and confesses to the
murder of her husband. At her trial, Dorothea Angermann looks
back on the events that have brought her to this tragic outcome.
It all began when her father, a prim country priest, sent her away from
home to start her own life. At the restaurant where she worked,
she attracted the attentions of a womanising chef named Mario. It
wasn't long before Mario managed to force his attentions on her.
The result: an unwelcome pregnancy. When Dorothea's father heard
of this, he forced Mario to marry her, but that merely added to her
misery. Mario was not a man any self-respecting woman would
choose as a husband....
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.