Kuhle Wampe or Who Owns the World? (1932) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
7 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
The Difficult Life of the Working Class in Berlin
claudio_carvalho14 November 2010
In 1931, in Berlin, the desperate brother of Anni (Hertha Thiele) can not find a job and is pressed by his unemployed father Franz Bönke. He commits suicide and sooner his family is evicted for nonpayment of rent. Anni's boyfriend Fritz (Ernst Busch) helps them to move to the summer camp Kuhle Wampe that had become a homeless camp, in the outskirt of Berlin. When Anni gets pregnant, Fritz promises to marry her, but he calls off the wedding after the party. Anni aborts and moves back to Berlin, where she finds a job with other youths in an association that promotes sports.

"Kuhle Wampe oder: Wem gehört die Welt?" is an interesting film that shows the difficult life of the working class in Berlin in times of the Great Depression. I have just watched this film on a DVD released by the Brazilian Distributor Versátil and I found difficult to understand parts of the narrative. However, the running time of the foregoing DVD is only 68:30 minutes and in accordance with the information of the IMDb, the original version has 80 minutes running time; the German censored version has 76 minutes; and the American version has 71 minutes. Therefore, it would be unfair to criticize the fragmented narrative that was cut from the film of the director Slatan Dudow. I read that this film was censored in 1932 and banned by the Nazis in 1933 accused of communist tendencies. My vote is eight.

Title (Brazil): "Kuhle Wampe ou A Quem Pertence o Mundo?" ("Kuhle Wampe or To Whom the World Belongs")
15 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
A historical document about cultural socialism
eabakkum17 December 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Kuhle Wampe is a classic German film. It was made in 1932, in the middle of the Great Depression, and narrates an episode of the life in a workers family. The story was written by the famous German writer Bertold Brecht, who at the time was part of the European labor movement (since 1933 he temporarily move to the USA in order to escape from fascism). Therefore the film takes a critical perspective on the contemporary society. One of the main character is the well-known socialist singer Ernst Busch. The film even contains several of his songs, for instance the Solidatitaets Lied. So Kuhle Wampe may definitely be praised as a historical document. There are many shots of the mass activities by workers organizations, such as the contemporary sport associations, the theater societies and the political branches (newspapers etc.). Their aim was to provide the unemployed workers with useful activities, in order to prevent their moral decay. Personally I like the camera work, which uses an attitude of social realism. At first the film was banned by the German board of film censors. Later a shorter version was allowed to be released, but this decision was again reversed a few months later, when the fascists gained control. The DVD contains the shortened version, so apparently the original has been lost. Which is a shame. The actual story appears to be instrumental to the political message. Kuhle Wampe is a camping place for the expelled families. First we see the suicide of a young worker, being desperate because of a lasting unemployment and his lethargic parents. It portrays the waste of resources in capitalism. Then the family is expelled from their apartment. Subsequently the young working daughter gets involved in a failing relation with another worker. She resorts to abortion. Here the message is unclear. If one wishes to criticize the film, perhaps the abundance of artistic quality should be mentioned. Brecht wrote for intellectuals, and his stories are never easy. Actually he had his greatest successes and achievements in operas (for instance "The Three Penny Opera"! Also "Rise and Fall of the City of Mahoganny" (located in the USA), "The Yes-sayer" etc.). This is mirrored in the film, where the dialogs are somewhat pompous, or at least make an artificial impression. This classifies the film as a cultural milestone, giving a profound insight into the life style within the labor movement of the thirties. This era has often been described as cultural socialism, using mass plays, chants etc. The greatest happiness was being a part of the harmonious crowd. This idea has become obsolete in our present culture, which gives room to personal happiness. The DVD of Suhrkamp Verlag also contains the Dudow documentary "Wie der Berliner Arbeiter wohnt" ("The lives of Berlin workers") and the play "Feigenblatt fuer Kuhle Wampe". Have a look to see my review. If you are interested in social films, you may want to look at all my reviews.
8 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
"One Unemployed Less"!!
kidboots6 January 2015
Warning: Spoilers
"Kuhle Wampe" was shown in America under the title "Wither Germany?" and was one of the last German films which embraced a utilitarian viewpoint. It was a true free lance film with thousands of members of such leftist groups as Labor Sports Union, Worker's Theatre Unit and Worker's Chorus of Greater Berlin volunteering for the crowd scenes. Bertolt Brecht did the script, Hans Eisler composed the music but the filming (Slatan Dudow directed) was forever running into difficulties because of the overt Communistic grounds the film took. It was banned because of it's negative depiction of the law, religion and morals and was a very bleak film.

Unemployment is rife and Anni (Hertha Thiele) is the only person in her family who has a job. Father is embittered and, remembering a time when jobs were plentiful, clings to the belief that hard work and politeness are the things employers are looking for. Mother has only old fashioned proverbs which adorn her kitchen. The son commits suicide (taking care to remove his wristwatch which the family could probably sell) and an elderly neighbour comments "one unemployed less"!! - but the family are too despondent to care.

They are then evicted and move to "Kuhle Wampe", Germany's oldest weekend colony which as the title said, in 1931, had 100s of people living there in tents and shacks. Anni had been told of it by her lover Fritz but when she becomes pregnant and her family insist on an engagement - Fritz's selfish nature is revealed. He doesn't want to be tied down so Anni moves back into town with her friend Gerda. There are some symbolic scenes - Anni's parents are discussing Mata Hari in all her lurid detail, the high fees she commanded for her favours while in the background are pictures of bread, milk and meat, for sale at the same price as an evening with Mata Hari.

The last part of the film shows Gerda and Anni's involvement with the Red Games - this has a very hopeful look. It is the young and the strong who are going to bring about change "the people who will fix the world are those who don't like it". It doesn't have a lot of hope in workers as a whole - the older people are shown as set in their ways, clinging to old fashioned ideals. The engagement party (where did the money come from for all that food and beer) shows the drunken carousing of the older generation - when Anni asks her parents to go back with her to the city, they refuse and actually give solace to Fritz!! Later when Anni is reunited with Fritz during the games, she finds he has lost his job and the final sequence takes place on a train with an in-depth economic discussion between the youthful workers and the bourgeois. Whenever Anni's group try to talk up the revolution - "think hard, forward, never relax", their opponents turn nationalistic and talk generalities. There is a feeling that Anni and Fritz may be reconciled but Anni is determined not to be apart of the morass that engulfs society.

In real life Hertha Thiele was a radical who refused requests from Goebbels to direct National Socialist propaganda.

Highly Recommended.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Historical classic that's blissfully unaware of future horrors.
sub_mish16 September 2010
Warning: Spoilers
This film strikes a real chord with me in 2010; like Weimar-era Germans we are suffering from a terrible recession, and like them (but unlike this film) we have a vague sense that something terrible is about to happen.

Interestingly there's no mention of the Nazis in this film, even though they were very much a presence in Germany in 1932. Hitler was getting well into his stride in that year and there were huge street battles between Nazis and "Sozis" yet they are conspicuous by their absence in this film.

All in all Kuhle Wampe gives the impression of a society that's entirely unaware of the nightmare that's about to begin. They're so damn downtrodden yet optimistic, but if half the people who were in this film knew what was about to befall them they'd probably kill themselves too. Hell, even when the Communists got their shot at running things in the DDR after WW2 the result was a police state. Those poor sods.

I really hope we can keep things more civilised this time round.

PS. Look out for the cu-tie in the Kraftwerk outfit - a young lady in a skirt, shirt and tie ensemble - she is totally HOT.
7 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Slatan Dudow's film classic not to be missed
wmartin79 April 2007
This is a great film, an early example of fiction film-making that is responsive to social and political circumstances, but that doesn't get bogged down in the naturalist pessimism of, say, Piel Jutzi's contemporary "Mutter Krausens Fahrt ins Glück." The cinematography may not be the most compelling, but it is sensitive, considered, and bears the mark of Dudow's admiration for Eisenstein. Brecht was only one of the collaborators on the script -- together with the reportage-novelist Ernst Ottwalt, even if he was its most outspoken defender in the censorship proceedings; and the idea for the film was Dudow's, a Bulgarian-born theater and film director who had made one documentary prior to "Kuhle Wampe" and would go on to co-found the East German studio, DEFA.
15 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Fails to really make an impact
Horst_In_Translation20 June 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"Kuhle Wampe oder: Wem gehört die Welt?" or "To Whom Does the World Belong?" or just "Kuhle Wampe" is a German movie from the early 1930s and this one will have its 85th anniversary next year and actually came out one year before the Nazis came into power in Germany. The strongly left-wing messages from this movie make it no surprise that it got banned right away then. It is a black-and-white film still, but it has sound, which was not a given by 1932, but fairly common already. Pretty much all the Nazi films afterward have sound, many of them color as well. It is a bit tough for me to properly evaluate this film. First of all, "Kuhle Wampe" is an area here in Berlin, but I must say the term is really unknown today and people talking about a "Wampe" are mostly referring to a big belly somebody has. In general, looking at the title, this film is not half as impactful in terms of the Berlin areas it depicts and is about as I hoped it would be. Other than that, I had problems with the film starting as a drama with a main character committing suicide, but then, the longer it goes, it moves more and more into documentary territory and especially the last scene with the talk about coffee could be seen as 100% documentary-style (if the line delivery by some had not been that bad). This development also takes away from the emotional impact. It was really difficult to care for Herta Thiele's character or anybody from the supporting cast. Luckily the film only runs for slightly over an hour, so it does not drag that much. Still, this does not make it a good film either. I do not recommend the watch.
1 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed