Seven Journeys (1947) Poster

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6/10
The "Aufarbeitung" begins
Horst_In_Translation21 June 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"In jenen Tagen" or "Seven Journeys" or "In jenen Tagen Geschichten eines Autos" is a German black-and-white film from 1947, so this film will have its 70th anniversary next year. But actually, like the English title already states, it is seven films in one. The common denominator here is the car that appears in all seven short films. The entire film runs for approximately 95 minutes, at least in the version I saw, so the average short film length here is a bit under 15 minutes. This film came out two years after World War II and if you wonder what the word "Aufarbeitung" in the title of my review means, it stands for coming to terms with what happened. But this is only partially true as this film is not really about the political and military elite of Nazi Germany, but about the normal people from the population and their struggles and characters during these darkest years in German history. Many of the still prove they are good people. All in all, there were some interesting segments and some not so interesting. It probably depends on your personal taste which segments you like the most. My favorite was maybe the final segment with the young mother and the man who helps her. The writer and director here is Helmut Käutner and this is an early career effort by him. He went on to become one of the most impactful German filmmakers in the 1950s, maybe the number one. With "In jenen Tagen", he gives us already an early display of his talent. I recommend the watch.
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dpauni3 June 2007
Wonderful film with back pictures of the remains of the war, almost no scenery but a deep and secret feeling of sorrow. The car is telling the story but humanity is involved in the philosophical Kerry of every character. You can see "normal" people behaving in normal ways under irrational circumstances. War is only behind of the story but you can see, smell and listen at the back of every detail . The last story, a sort of holy family (Mary, Joseph and a baby) are the future of Germany in a little and unknown village with a church. Wonderful piece of art! What a story without dark tones. I liked the couple of mixed races who sees the Kristalnacht
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4/10
A Historical curiosity.
Dwolvesbane5 October 2008
Produced shortly after the Second World War in Germany, In Those Days is a film about the lives of ordinary people in Germany during the lead up to and duration of the war. The story begins with two mechanics disassembling a car after the war, and continues when the car itself begins to narrate the events of its life, meaning that most of the film is told in flashback. This device, of an object narrating its own past, is an interesting one at best. While it does allow for a quite broad and neutral perspective toward history, it is a bit too strange to really convey the plot without distracting from it. The car in question is also far too overtly personified to act in the role of a reliable, neutral narrator, instead it seems to have a personality and human point of view. The narration leads into a series of flashbacks telling the story of successive owners of the car. A problematic aspect of this device is that the car changes owners in successive stories with little to no explanation about the change of ownership. Taking this with the fact that a few of the actors in the early sections of the movie look somewhat similar to one another and it leads to a very confusing early section of the movie. More than once it is quite possible to assume that one character is another from a previous vignette, only to realize that the character is merely portrayed by a similar looking actor. Eventually you begin to assume that characters appear in only one story, and just as this fact has made itself comfortable… a character from an earlier story makes an appearance in a later one. The disconnected nature of the stories causes the film to read more as a series of vignettes, with the car as a loose unifying theme, than as a solid narrative. Unfortunately the stories vary extremely in their ability to entertain, or even hold interest. One story will be quite interesting and well paced, while the next will be slow, ill-paced, and quite frankly boring. One of the few areas in which this film does excel is in portraying the slow slippery slope of the Nazi rise to power. Each story moves its characters further into the restrictive policies of the Third Reich. At first it is simply a man fleeing the country, then a composer whose music has been banned, a Jewish woman whose store is destroyed.

All in all this film seems to be best considered a curiosity, a so-so movie centered on an interesting, though poorly executed, plot vehicle. An interesting viewing, but best left for the curious and historically interested.
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