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A Lively Christmas Eve

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A Lively Christmas Eve
Directed byGünter Reisch
Written byVratislav Blažek (original play), Hermann Kant
Produced byHans Mahlich
StarringErwin Geschonneck
Narrated byGerry Wolff
CinematographyHorst E. Brandt
Edited byLena Neumann
Music byHelmut Nier
Production
company
Distributed byProgress Film
Release date
  • October 12, 1962 (1962-10-12)
Running time
94 minutes
CountryEast Germany
LanguageGerman

A Lively Christmas Eve (German: Ach, du fröhliche...; literally, Oh, You Merry One...)[1] is an East German comedy Christmas film, directed by Günter Reisch. It was released in 1962.

Plot

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Dresden, Christmas Eve. Veteran communist and factory director Walter Lörke is told by his daughter Anne that she became pregnant by a young man named Thomas Ostermann, whom she intends to marry. Thomas is revealed to be a sharp critic of the government. Enraged, Walter leaves the house. Outside, he begins to inquire about his would-be son-in-law. After a clumsy voyage in the streets of the city, during which he encounters many absurd phenomena, he discovers that Thomas had a friend whose parents escaped to West Germany. The friend was ostracized by society, but Thomas did not shun him, and was therefore barred from entering university. Walter returns home and talks to Thomas, who realizes that although he suffered injustices, he remains true to the ideals of the party. The two reconcile.

Cast

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  • Erwin Geschonneck - Walter Lörke
  • Mathilde Danegger - grandmother
  • Karin Schröder - Anne Lörke
  • Arno Wyzniewski - Thomas Ostermann
  • Günter Junghans - Karl Lörke
  • Rosemarie Schelenz - Peggy
  • Herwart Grosse - Mr. Ostermann
  • Marianne Wünscher - Mrs. Klinkhöfer
  • Walter Jupé - Mr. Klinkhöfer
  • Karla Runkehl - Mr. Siebkorn
  • Fred Delmare - taxi driver
  • Gerd Ehlers - drunken butcher
  • Walter E. Fuß - Professor Flimrich
  • Horst Giese - Gisse

Production

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The film was part of a wave of comedies, relatively free from political restrictions, that were produced by DEFA at the early 1960s. At the time, the anti-Stalinist approach espoused by the Soviet Union allowed a more relaxed cultural climate, that came to an end in the 1965 XI Plenum of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany. The script was adapted from a Czechoslovak play; director Günter Reisch received the authorization to make the picture after using the influence of the leading actor Erwin Geschonneck on the members of the State Cinema Committee.[2]

Reception

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The German Film Lexicon defined Ach, du Fröhliche... as a "better than average comedy, with barbed satire against dogmatic beliefs... with brilliant acting".[3]

East German cinema expert Joshua Feinstein wrote that the film was one of the "more outlandish" made at the time, that reminded him of Guess Who's Coming to Dinner. He also noted that it was the only pre-1989 East German picture to make a satirical reference to the Stasi.[4]

Joe Perry, who researched the Christmas costumes in Germany, considered Ach, du Fröhliche... as an example to the SED's attempt to uphold the holiday's traditions as a time of familial bonding while completely rejecting any religious connotation. A "Socialist miracle" of reconciliation between oneself and the leading ideology replaced the Christian-inspired one. The film presented the Christmas costumes of East Germany, that were a readjustment of the old tradition: the fir tree, for example, was decorated by little sputniks. Perry interpreted the film as a typical "happy end Christmas story" with a communist setting.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Ach, du fröhliche... on DEFA-Stiftung.
  2. ^ Dagmar Schittly. Zwischen Regie und Regime. Die Filmpolitik der SED im Spiegel der DEFA-Produktionen. ISBN 978-3-86153-262-0. Page 122.
  3. ^ Ach, du fröhliche... German Film Lexicon.
  4. ^ Joshua Feinstein. The Triumph of the Ordinary: Depictions of Daily Life in the East German Cinema, 1949-1989. ISBN 978-0-8078-5385-6. Page 106.
  5. ^ Joe Perry. Christmas in Germany: A Cultural History. University of North Carolina Press (2010). ISBN 978-0-8078-3364-3. Pages 265-266.
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