Burg Theatre (1936) Poster

(1936)

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10/10
Ignored Austrian movie classic.
Mozjoukine9 January 2005
Unknown outside the German speaking world, this is one of the great Willi Forst's major works and one of the best films of it's day.

It's a toss-up whether the Vienna Burgtheater or it's about to retire star (anything but about to retire Krauss) has the lead here but we get the ambitious costumed movie staging of the German cinema, still a major world force, and Forst's trademark Viennese gentleness, irony and detachment.

Plot has to do with a girl giving Krauss' stolen reception invitation to a young actor, boosting his status, and Krauss mistaking her interest for something more personal while baroness Tschechowa does her most elegant number, making a duel imminent.

Admire rumor spread to music, the dissolve from the target, the staging of "Don Carlos" paralleling the film's action with the great theater climax, managed by Krauss in one of his best outings.

The film craft is impeccable.
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10/10
beautiful strudel
cynthiahost12 April 2012
Warning: Spoilers
I love strudel and Willi Forst makes the best Viennese strudel.Burg theater.This is Willi first production for his Vienna films.His fantasies about the good old days,that never existed.This was also Werner Krausses best performances ,the pathetic lonely aging Actor Friederich Mitterer,other than the role of Rabbi in Jude Sus .It was also an early Carl Esmond, under the name Willy Eichbuger ,before he fled, playing Josef Rainer a frustrated actor who wants to work in the burg theater.For some strange reason they got him dolled up.Eye shadow,fake lashes lipstick,and pencil eyes brows.He looks ridiculous.May be they were trying to makes his eyes look bigger? Carl did have a small face and small eyes or may be Willi was trying to emphasize him wanting to be an actor.Olga Tschecowa plays Baroness Seebach, frustrated neglected wife of Baron Seebach,played by Carl Gunther , in her sweet Adeline Schmitt 1900 hair do combo 1936 hair waves. Hans Moser, funny as ever,plays Souffluer, what Viennese joke!,an assistant to Friederich.He in good voice to when he sings a traditional Viennese folk song along with a Zither.The other cast includes Hortense Raky,also in a sweet Adeline Hairdo ,1936 style, as Leni Schindler.She plays Josephs girl friend who helps him get into the theater by seducing and teasing poor old Fred in getting a word for Joe.The rest of the cast Leni's parents played by Josephine Dora and Karl Skraup, who looks more like Leni's brother with painted white hair.Plot, Joe wants the part of Ferdinand in ,"Kabal and Liebe.His Girl Friend manages to steal an invitation that was for Fred, to the Baroness party, in hope may be he will get the part if he's introduced to the right people.The Baroness stunned by his appearance, decides to take advantage of it to get back at her husband neglect.Although innocent ,the husband finds out which lead to Joseph getting fired.This is one of the best of Willi Forst film ,besides Vienna Girls, by my standards.Unfortuantley your greedy corporate classic film distributors ,in the united states, won't distribute this nor your greedy classic film broadcasters, due to Hitler legacy, possibly.What ? This was 1936 Vienna?Well who was born in Austria ?They are probably fearful of the American audience getting mad at Carl Esmond for not leaving early.But good news a non digital print, with subtitles, of good quality over all, is available at alternate ,on line, shop ,Germanwarfilm.com 04/12/12
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Romantic Misunderstandings In Charming Vienna Theater Piece
lchadbou-326-2659228 September 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Burg Theater, made in Austria in 1936, is a fine example of the work of underrated director (also writer and actor) Willi Forst, who at his best had the stylish, charming touch of a Lubitsch or Ophuls. The film opens with scenes actually taken in that famous Viennese court theater of a fictitious veteran actor Mitterer (Werner Krauss) doing Goethe's Faust. Despite his popularity, Mitterer leaves the building after and wants to be by himself. Krauss is best known today to film buffs as Caligari in that landmark German silent, but had other strong roles such as this.During the play there had been a dissolve up to the peanut gallery where an aspiring actor Josef (the young Carl Esmond) yearns for such a role. Mitterer in a scene reminiscent of Faust itself sees a young woman, Leni, in church and is taken with her. She is his tailor's daughter and the girlfriend of the youth we'd just seen. Josef tries out as Romeo (in German translation) but is interrupted as the elegant Baroness(Olga Tschechowa) sweeps in. She is known for her "jours", a Friday salon at which the elite of Vienna's theater scene gather. Leni steals a salon invite the Baroness had sent the aloof Mitterer,to give Josef an opportunity to advance.When the youth shows instead, the guests think Mitterer deliberately gave his invite to another as a snub, but the Baroness turns it to her advantage to avoid embarrassment.At this point a nice song written for the film, "Servus," about the special Austro-Hungarian word for goodbye, is performed by the salon pianist and then passed along to different scenes: a coffee at the tailor's to which Mitterer and his prompter have been invited, and an outdoor cafe. Josef is happy he now has a small role in "Don Carlos," where Mitterer will play Philip.The youth is described several times as "stuermisch" (ardent) but Esmond overdoes it somewhat. The Baroness to whom he expresses thanks finds herself attracted to him, setting up a romantic rivalry. It's her he goes to in her period horse drawn carriage after the play, leaving Leni to go with the increasingly smitten Mitterer to hear a military band in a coffee garden (where two accordionists play "Servus" at their table.)Mitterer, thinking he's found happiness, now wants to retire. Meanwhile Josef is announced for the part of Ferdinand in Schiller's "Kabale Und Liebe," leading to a false rumor that he got the role because of a liaison with the Baroness (which makes the usually absent Baron husband jealous.)The Baron accuses Josef of cheating at cards.There's also an amusing in joke when the prompter, played by character actor Hans Moser who was notorious for his mumbled mutterings which even those fluent in German have trouble getting, tells the youth to speak more clearly! Meanwhile we see several scenes from the ongoing "Don Carlos," in which the elderly Krauss as a Spanish king about to be abandoned, displays a theatrical dignity worthy of Louis Jouvet or John Barrymore. After the play though he laughs taking off his makeup at the mirror when he sees a ring he'd given the prompter to seal a wedding engagement with Leni has been returned.Josef also has a disappointment when he loses his acting job due to the scandal. In the climax he goes to an upper level to kill himself, accidentally drops a charm with Leni's name on it that had brought him luck before, and is recognized by the lonely Mitterer in the darkness. The rivals finally meet and Mitterer encourages Josef by reciting lines from famous plays about the beauty of life. As the theme music returns, the jaded old actor slips out so the young lovers can reunite.The last scene is the camera moving in to a poster of Faust and we see Mitterer acting it once again as the lovers watch in the upper gallery. As a side note to this review, for those who want to learn more about the striking Tschechowa, whose closeups here are beautifully lit, check out the book on her by military historian Anthony Beevor. (Beevor's argument is that the actress, though a favorite of Hitler at the time, was actually a Soviet spy.)
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