Rot ist die Liebe (1957) Poster

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6/10
LÖNS' LIFE EXCUSE FOR A HEIMATFILM
J. Steed9 November 1999
The life of German journalist/writer/poet Hermann Löns is supposed to be the subject of the film; well, to be honest, the credits already warn that the film is based on "ideas taken from the biography by Dr. Wilhelm Deimann". The life of Löns is a poor excuse for a slightly above average Heimatfilm with the standard ingredients of plenty of landscape, sentimental love stories and a couple of folklore songs and dances and very little of the life, let alone an insight in the literature, of Löns. One wonders how much time Löns could have had for writing his prose, poetry and being a journalist if so much of his time is used for keeping his marriage intact.

There are some enormous discrepancies between this Löns and the real Löns. I can not think of any other reason than the average conventional German mentality of the 50's that made the makers decide to let him keep his marriage until 1914. In fact his wife Lisa left him in 1910 after which Löns had a nervous breakdown and traveled through Europe for about 2 years. In this film he never leaves the moor and only has a slight attack of fever. From 1912 he lived together with Ernestin Sassenberg in Hannover, that is: without being married and that would have been a problem in a mainstream German film in the 50's.

This is still an entertaining film though. The cast is fine and director Karl Hartl has good control over the material and avoids it resulting into exaggerated sentimentality. Good cinematography, ditto music and pacing. (6/10)
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4/10
Generic 1950s movie from Germany Warning: Spoilers
"Rot ist die Liebe" or "Love is red" is an almost 60-year-old film from West Germany. The director and writer is Austrian Karl Hartl and he adapted an autobiographical novel for these slightly under 1.5 hours. It was one of Hartls last project, even if he lived a long time after this and had only been nominated in Cannes the year before. He made movies already before the Nazis gained power in Germany. A similarly abrupt ending applies to Lithuanian-born lead actress Cornell Borchers who seemed to have a great career coming up starring next to the likes of Hollywood stars like Flynn and Clift and winning a BAFTA not too long ago and yet this was one of her last movies. She died almost exactly a year ago. The rest of the cast I am not really familiar with although i believe I heard of Borsche already.

This film has all the ingredients you would expect, some drinking, some nature, some Heimat, several love stories including one with a married man, some music, some drama about a disappearance and so on. It's all very generic and not too different compared to other German films from the 1950s. If you like these, you will probably like this one too. The only difference that came for me was that it's almost entirely drama, not much comedy in this film and that, in the same tone, the ending was not really a positive one (but one that improved the movie considerably over a 100% harmonic last scene) which we owe Löns' life and novel I guess as this movie ends exactly when World War I is about to begin. The male central character leaves for War and this is where he died as well.
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