Mädchen in Uniform (1958) Poster

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7/10
very interesting
George6523 February 2008
'It's a Romy Schneider film!', my mum said happily when she read the announcement in her TV guide. It is indeed, but I didn't quite dare inform my mum of the contents, seeing as she knew Romy only by the Sissi films. I love this film. I immediately fell in love with Lilli Palmer. Perhaps not as important or shocking as the 1931 version (yes, I have seen it) but still an interesting film. I especially like the outdoors shots in this film. The scene where Fräulein Von Bernburg gives Manuela one of her own shirts is lovely. I understood Romy Schneider was attempting to lose her Sissi image at the time. She succeeded in my opinion. My mum was somewhat surprised after watching it, but in the end she decided she liked it after all. So do I. Seven points out of ten.
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7/10
An estimable remake .
ulicknormanowen12 June 2020
Leontine Sagan's 1931 classic movie underwent some changes: the military side was sweetened and the patriotic hymns turned canticles ; the thirst of vengeance after WW1 was intense and girls were always remembered that they were soldiers ' daughters and future soldiers' mothers.The zeitgeist was different in the late fifties .

Yet Geza Radvanyi 's remake was useful because many people would never have watched the black and white version ;and thanks to the two principals ,this is a good remake ;Lili Palmer gives a restrained but extremely sensitive performance .As for Romy Schneider ,it was an act of self-renewal :sick and tired of her schmaltzy Sissi saga ,she wanted to get rid of this nice empress's clothes , her shirt of Nessus ,and the part of a girl who falls in love with her (female ) teacher was a godsend.She is extremely attractive ,in Romeo's clothes (Sagan 's Schiller was replaced by Shakespeare ,not a bad choice,because the English playwright's work depicts a doomed love )

Radvanyi would direct Schneider again ,this time in a mushy comedy " Ein Engel auf Erde" ;but it does not matter ; with "Mädchen " ,the actress had begun her move towards brighter horizons.
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6/10
Quality remake, as good as the original
Horst_In_Translation11 March 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Géza von Radványi's "Mädchen in Uniform" or "Girls in Uniform" is a German 1958 film, so this one is soon 60 years old. It is a remake and while the original was made shortly before the Nazi rise to power, when this one here was made, World War II had already been over for a decade. The main difference is probably that this one here has color. And it also runs for roughly 8 minutes longer. I liked the original and I also like this one. The slight changes, for example in the ending with the Oberin being compassionate or the Oberin's assistant were all solid addition that elevated the original material. Still, despite Romy Schneider playing the main character, this film here is probably still not as famous as the old black-and-white film. The reason, however, is not that this one here is worse, but that the old film back then was just very brave in terms of the political climate shortly before the Nazis' rise to power.

But lets speak a bit more about this one here. The acting was good from everybody involved and I never had a moment during these 90 minutes when I felt bored. Romy Schneider, shortly after her Sissi trilogy, looks incredibly stunning as always and received a German Film Award performance for her portrayal here. Same goes for her co-lead Lilli Palmer and Blandine Ebinger, who plays the main antagonist in her supporting role here. There were many weak, pretty cringeworthy films from Germany in the 1950s, but this is certainly not one of them. A really good watch with an interesting story about love, coming-of-age, teenage dreams and authority. The movie certainly has a message. I recommend seeing it. Thumbs up for this convincing remake.
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Splendid
smoothhoney126530 July 2003
Before watching "Mädchen in Uniform" I knew Romy Schneider only as "Sissi" and had absolutely no clue who Lilli Palmer was. First, I was suspicious: A German movie from the fifties? Should be another ridiculous comedy with a lot of colourful pictures and "funny" music. But what a surprise the drama was!

First of all: It was very courageous. If you think at the time the movie was shot in I find it courageus to make a drama about homosexuality and furthermore about a forbidden passion between a teacher and a student.

And then of course: Romy Schneider. In her young years she is best known for such ridiculous films as "Sissi" or "Wenn der weiße Flieder wieder blüht". But "Mädchen in Uniform" is the most remarkable one. There she shows: I am much more and more serious than you think and I am not just a nice little girl always looking pretty, lovely and smiling into the camera. I think, after she made this movie it was clear that she would make a great career because she is a gifted, exceptional actress.

And of course Lilli Palmer: Beautiful, proud, very lady-like, elegant and full of seriousness but very young at the same time. I'm out of words if it comes to describing her talent. But I think, you all agree if I say that she is one of the greatest German actresses.

A great movie, definetely one of the most important German dramas od the fifties and always worth remembering and watching it over and over again. Besides: There is some good taste of humour in it.
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7/10
A fine remake with varied relative results
I_Ailurophile5 September 2021
As a remake of the 1931 film, 'Mädchen in uniform' largely echoes its antecedent - the same broad story beats and dialogue, a similarly austere interior setting. There are also distinct differences though, presumably bolstered by a larger budget. The narrative and characters are slightly more developed, and some aspects are altered to make this 1958 rendition the film-makers' own. We get exterior scenes, and a wardrobe - while still pointedly drab - that seems more carefully considered. The mere fact of being a color film, with more advanced equipment, means the image is more sharp and clear, revealing greater detail, and the technical craft that was somewhat inconsistent before is realized with no small clarity here.

The same themes present in this tightly regimented boarding school, but perhaps with a marginally different slant. Where dialogue in the 1931 film spoke of "ennoblement" through the cruelty of school policies, in this version, the headmistress hypocritically emphasizes dissolution of her charges' agency. "I'm not a believer in a child's right to be an individual," she says, amidst additional dialogue asserting that the girls' only purpose is to become good wives of husbands and mothers of soldiers. Still, this is more for flavor - the feature is focused less on thematic content and more on narrative progression.

While the cast of 1931's 'Mädchen in uniform' was quite fine, the greatest character writing was devoted to those few most prominent figures, and only the most prominent actors were able to demonstrate their skill. The 1958 screenplay lends greater personality to more supporting characters, and great personality to the primary roles, too. Lilli Palmer carries noteworthy matronly poise as Fräulein Elisabeth von Bernburg, perhaps more evenhanded than Dorothea Wieck in the 1931 version. Romy Schneider, as Manuela, matches the nuance and emotive range of Hertha Thiele, if anything leaning even further into the most bombastic aspects of the protagonist.

The end result is a picture that largely reflects its established forebear, yet is sufficiently different from its predecessor, and still of a high quality, to merit consideration even with that familiarity. There are elements that are stronger in 1958 than they were in 1931, and other elements that are perhaps weaker. I don't think one film is wholly better than the other, and it all comes down to personal preference. Either way, just as the earlier film was enjoyable, 1958's 'Mädchen in uniform' is a fine, entertaining feature, worth checking out if you come across it.
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7/10
Needless remake but has its moments
gridoon202414 March 2022
Needless (very close, with a few more exterior shots) remake that doesn't have the impact or the passion of the 1931 film (for one thing, there are too few closeups), but does have its moments (I actually liked the new "first kiss" and found it more fitting) and retains its progressive, anti-establishment spirit. The original remains the priority viewing, but this remake is far from a disgrace. *** out of 4.
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10/10
Mädchen in Uniform
austrianmoviebuff9 July 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This remake of a classic from the early 1930s clearly remains one of the most unusual and bold films made in post-war Germany, brought to life by three remarkable actresses: Romy Schneider, Lilli Palmer and Therese Giehse.

The story of an orphaned teenager (Schneider) whose passionate love for her teacher (Palmer) becomes scandalous and culminates into a tragedy was by no means a critical or commercial success when it came to the screen in 1958. I guess the homosexual (lesbian) content was too much to take for an audience which was used to more common and likable subjects. Today, "Mädchen in Uniform" deserves to be rediscovered and cherished as a minor masterpiece. The acting alone is of sheer brilliance; Blandine Ebinger, Sabine Sinjen, Christine Kaufmann and Adelheid Seeck support the three leading ladies superbly.

Stage veteran Therese Giehse, muse to writers like Brecht and Dürrenmatt and long-time lover of Erika Mann, is electrifying in one of her few movie appearances. Lilli Palmer, who began her career in Hitchcock's "Secret Agent" and became a Broadway and Hollywood star in the 1940s, puts all her charm into her enchanting portrayal of Fräulein von Bernburg, the understanding teacher whose tender loving care is misunderstood disastrously. Romy Schneider surprised everybody including herself with her performance which for the first time required her to do a little more than being just the sweet, innocent Viennese girl. After this, her 13th film, she went abroad to become an internationally acclaimed character actress, working with directors like Visconti, Welles, Preminger, Dassin, and, later, Claude Sautet.
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10/10
In love with this film
Berger19836 December 2011
Warning: Spoilers
I got to know this film through an extract of the famous kiss scene, but I felt this short part already so powerful and sensual that I immediately wanted to see all of it.

A film should be valued for what it is, independently of the fact that is a remake or not. The original Madchen in Uniform was banned and censored for decades, most of the copies were even destroyed by Nazis; we are not even sure today that the remaining material is fully the original one. Making a remake of it, in color, with contemporary and appreciated actresses, was absolutely topical and courageous, and the resulting indignation showed perfectly that the main theme was not only taboo in 1910 and 1931… but still in 1958.

For me, this film is much more about love than about sexuality between women. In this boarding school, where the only man is a small photography in one of the lockers, who wouldn't love the only kind and understanding person? At least a loving „mother" for all the children (think about the good night kiss scene), but much more for a few of the girls. By nature, homosexuality is indeed a logical response to the monosexuality of this place, and for Manuela, women seem the only gender she has ever known. For Ms. Bernburg, young and obviously missing a sentimental relation, it's rather the only present gender, and Manuela is the first person to declare love to her.

Romy Schneider, already a star after Sissi's landmark role, was brave to opt for such a mature theme and talent-requiring character. Beautiful, captivating, and at the same time so naturally innocent and childish.

Therese Gieshe is gruesomely perfect in her oppressive Prussian headmaster role, determined to raise entire generations of tenacious housewifes for the forthcoming days and wars.

Lilli Palmer, in constant tearing between her institutional teacher and childminder role, is simply outstanding. And how not to discern all the little signs of how deeply she is affected? From the closure of her eyes during the kiss to the pauses she has to take, her embarrassment in many of the scenes and at the end the sadness in her eyes combined with the slowness she takes to leave… but these feelings are not accepted in the school where she is imprisoned too.

Original German language adds to the Prussian harshness feeling, scenic sequences are followed by ingenious shadows & lights parts, but above all it's the eminent acting that enchants the viewer, making us completely forget that the often so important soundtrack is simply missing. Take time for the film, many sequences are worth watching and analyzing several times. Madchen in Uniform is not only a must see… it's a must have!
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10/10
Remarkable
marijapeshikan11 October 2018
The plot of the movie revolves around the romantic feelings that schoolgirl Manuela develops for her same-sex teacher Madame (Freulein) Elizabeth von Bernburg in 1910 in a catholic boarding school in Prussia. Based on a biographically inspired play by German author Crista Winsloe it is foremost a critic of the old fashioned conservative beliefs that uses the unusual love story as the perfect all-in-one solution to reveal their ugly face. The schoolgirls, their hair tightly restrained, are marching in grey uniforms which are a sort of hybrid between a cooking apron and a military uniform. Deprivation from normal size meals and icy- toned communication are ways by which the Headmistress wants to achieve "zucht, ordnung und abhärtung". (Discipline, order and toughening up). She, the "Madame Superior", is a discipline fanatic that genuinely believes that if she is to fail in maintaining this rigorous regime with the girls, Prussia's own integrity will be at stake one day and anarchy will come to rein. Neither Manuela, nor Madame von Bernburg adhere to this ideology and so their mutual complicity is born. Manuela, the feeble, emotional child, that griefs over her recently deceased mother is the complete opposite of the expected "product" from this strict educational style. The authoritarian teacher is expected to produce though but obedient and submissive women which will make good wives and mothers of soldiers! (Ironically enough, the generation of young women that inspired the original story grew to become mothers of the Nazi soldiers in reality). Madame von Bernburg, on the other hand, is sensitive to the girls need for compassion and support. She shows affection in order to change the old ways that she was also submitted to when being a schoolgirl herself. In the historical era where this story takes place (the Weimar Republic), love between two women was unimaginable, let alone one between a student and it's teacher. The director Géza von Rdvanyi adds the age difference to this "outrageous story" by casting Romy Schneider (Manuela) and Lilli Palmer (Elizabeth von Bernburg) that have 22 years in between. The kiss, the steamy looks and the seemingly wide spread homosexuality subtly implied in most of the conversations between the girls is masterfully disguised as an innocent coming-of-age story. The attention is mainly put on the internal emotional experiences of Manuela, hers "head over hills" for the teacher, the admiration and love that can be divined from her every gesture and word. On the other hand, Ms. Von Bernburg character is more reserved and ambiguous. The Script is perfectly fitted, with no unnecessary ornaments and actresses are made to act naturally, which they do perfectly, with no displaced overdone drama that was common for the movies in the 60's. A noticeable decor in the movie are the quotes of famous authors inscribed as a sort of posters on the otherwise quite empty interior walls of the School. An excellent graphical display of the School's principles. "People exist on this world not to be happy, but to do their duty" "The School of life has no holydays" "We are here to become, not to be" "As the effort, so the harvest" The only one missing from the walls is "Kinder, Kirche, Küche" (Child, Church, Kitchen) presented as the correct destiny of women by the Headmistress. This unique film with its humor, drama and subtleness criticizes conservative practices, homophobia and even nationalism. It is a remarkable piece of art, which, with its modernity resembles to the contemporary movies in every aspect and seems to have been simply misplaced in time.
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Good movie
yvettehier29 September 2006
I have no summary for the movie; I think the persons above me have already summarized it. I just wanted to say that this movie really touched me and that I disagree with some of the comments about Lily Palmer and Romy Schneider not doing a good job on this movie. I was really impressed by the way they acted and I was really pulled into the movie. There is no need for beautiful sets or great effects around it if the actors do such a good job! You could really see how Lily Palmer portrayed a woman who wanted to help but also had to be firm in a way to stay at the school. And also how Romy Schneider portrayed her role as such an innocent and vulnerable child who has just lost her mother and her struggles with this.
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10/10
excellent remake
cynthiahost12 January 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I have yet to see the original version of," Madchen in uniform",but this version is great. The beautiful Eastman color photography and the art direction and the lighting makes it look like a painting , almost like Technicolor cinema photography . The acting is great too. I'm surprise that the academy of motion picture of arts and science, at the time didn't have it nominated as the best foreign picture. The plot poor Maneuala's parents are dead and has been living with an aunt, a strict one.She's send off a world's toughest private school for girl's. The principle is mean. The rules are too rough. There is a sign in front of the hall way of the school that read's " you are not put here to be happy, ecetra. Well eventually Manuela meets her teacher , played by Lilie Palmer, Elizabeth Burnberg. She'a very sympathetic to the girls and Manuela eventually discovers her lesbian self when she is practicing a kiss scene , with M.s.Burnberg ,in a rehearsal for the Sheakspearian play "Romeo and Juliette", for a school play being put on for the principle's birthday,discovering her love for her teacher.When after the play the girls are given hurricanes to drink ,Rum Punch, that she reveals to her school mates her love for her teacher all hell breaks loose A young Christine Kaufmann, who would later be the lead in Town without a pity and later marry Tony Curtis, makes her film appearance as one of the students.What's really surprising is that this DVD version does include sub titles in English, in spite of the fact it's a German disk. The original producer, who's interviewed , reveals the possibility that Romy and Lillie might have been involved with each other out side camera , maybe? Or it could have been just staying in character in order to be authentic for the film. This is available in the U. S. A. on zero region at German video.net also on VHS as well as on pal 2 DVD at amazon.de both have subtitles in English except for VHS version, maybe.
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10/10
Outstanding performances in a touching dramatic story about love
irenetimoleon2 July 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Where to even begin to review this film! From the exceptional casting for all parts involved (every single part was well thought out and casted impeccably), to the beautiful photography, the slightly nostalgic colours or the way the director masterfully added depth where words could not? I've seen some reviews doubting Lilli Palmer's talent and I was really surprised! Perhaps whomever said "she thought she could do anything" missed the immense body of work both film AND theater globally Lilli Palmer has done! Her performance here is not an exception as it is so poignant! Every look and expression plays a huge part in the interpretation of the character where the words in the script are lacking. This version does not offer everything on a silver platter, but rather it let the viewer read between the lines and this can only be accomplished but what the actors convey. Elizabeth von Bernburg finds herself feeling drawn and especially protective of the new student. She's trying really hard to balance being aloof and yet trying to be a friend to her students. To inspire them and urge them to follow their hearts and talents rather than succumb to a future of just being a soldier's wife or mother! She in fact does not reject Manuela's kiss! She saw it coming and accepted it when she could have avoided it very easily. Her eyes close when it happens and she reluctantly backs away realizing that things have gone too far as Manuela is indeed her student and a minor. The producer Mr. Brauer in his interview states that they went into great efforts to make this movie tasteful and sensitive rather than tawdry and in that he succeeded whilst maintaining the undertone. Romy Schneider gives an truly amazing and believable performance. Though it is obvious she's not 14 (as the character should be as per the book, however nor did the actress in the original look 14 at all) she has a way of conveying innocence in several scenes, her tears feeling very much real and her distress heartfelt. This is not a great romance of the erotic kind. This is a much more complicated story. Whereas it is understood that Manuela's feelings are not platonic at the same time they are not fully erotic either. Elizabeth is not rejecting her love but rather treats it with understanding, however she is forced to leave the school for Manuela's sake rather than her own when Manuela naively in her drunken state openly shares not only her feelings but also her thoughts about how her feelings are reciprocated by her teacher. As we can see in the beginning of the movie nobody (students or staff) is surprised that pupils have been crazy with Elizabeth in the past and in the present. The difference is that they were doing so in silence whereas Manuela yells it from the rooftops so to speak.

As someone who has watched both the original, the remake and the Mexican version and knowing that the original is closer to the book, I still love this 1958 version more because of its subtlety and because of the cast.

This movie is a must watch, a must have as it is a classic and also one that begs for closer attention and study. 10/10.
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10/10
Being gay before the war!
M1racl3sHapp3n13 May 2018
Life of girls in a boarding school in pre-world war II Germany. Adolescent love in a time of austerity of the heart where being gay is considered sinful. This is a remake of the original movie which came out in 1931. Outstanding interpretation by all the characters.
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TRIVIAL AND UNINSPIRED REMAKE OF A CLASSIC
J. Steed8 August 1999
In the endless row of remakes in the 50's of successes of the 20' and 30's this one may have been the oddest. What is basically a harsh, sensitive but never sentimental play, qualities that remained in the remarkable film version of 1931, has become a trivial drama. It starts with the credits; in it it is stated that the film is based on a play by Winsloe called "Rittter Nerestani"; this original title was already obsolete at the Berlin premiere and changed into "Gestern und Morgen", thereby stressing the object of the play: a plea for a more liberal society. But in the 50's German society of Adenauer's credo "No experiments" this plea was not possible.

Some odd changes have been made vis-à-vis the play and the film version of 1931. The character of Von Kenten, symbol of the fear for authority, has been replaced by a nondescript character who hates Elisabeth von Bernburg; why she hates her, is not made clear at all. Frau Oberin was changed from a symbol of Prussian authority into a bitter old lady who is only the way she is, because she had some bitter experiences in life. The scandal that arises when Manuela is drunk and speaks out, is brought about by petty jealousy of one of the girls (Alexandra). Noteworthy is also that, when Ilse is banned from partaking in Romeo and Juliet, she cheerfully helps another girl to learn the part, in stead of, as in the 1931 version, packing her suitcase to leave the institution; in other words: hardly any rebellion here. The reconciliation near the end is just silly. What this all amounts to is that the play in this adaptation is melodrama. However, unlike some critics, I do not think the lesbian theme is further toned-down, it is simply represented in another way to be acceptable to an 1950's mainstream audience.

There is nothing against an stirring melodrama, but also in this department the film fails. That is: Radvanyi's direction is adequate but without inspiration. At moments he tries to give scenes extra strength with shadows and light (there is a nice shot of Schneider in the dark on her bed), but it is not sufficient. He is not helped much by the two leading actresses. Romy Schneider has her moments (her first serious part after the Sissi-series), but in general fails to convey any emotion and she surely plays quite another Manuela than Hertha Thiele in the 1931 version. Lilli Palmer, who thought she could do anything, is a terrible mis-cast as Von Bernburg: she is not the woman in her mid-20's having trouble with her emotions. All scenes between Schneider and Palmer miss spark.
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10/10
But it's nothing lesbian!
RodrigAndrisan5 June 2021
Manuela (Romy Schneider) looks like an angel, like a being of unreal beauty, an alien lost among ugly, evil, false beings. The exception being Elisabeth von Bernburg (Lilli Palmer), whom you can't help but fall in love with, she's of divine beauty and goodness. Even the old scorpion Headmistress (Therese Giehse) finally gives in, giving her justice. But it's too late, too much injustice has already happened. Excellent film made by Géza von Radványi, without any male character, not even one male actor plays in this production.
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8/10
kind of spoiler alert?
hhatdog-220374 May 2023
Warning: Spoilers
This was nothing romantic but rather sad. A lonely girl whose mother just died, her aunt is cold and pale as she describe. Desperate for affection but was ignored. She was infatuated to her teacher, a woman. She's strict yet caring. The teacher took care of her which mislead the girl thinking that the relationship between them was more than a student and teacher.

I understand the girl's feeling. When she knew that the teacher will leave, she felt like there's no one left in her side anymore. Her last option was to end her life. But it didn't happen, luckily. Over all this was a great movie!!!!
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10/10
the most surprising thing...
riama-019827 March 2022
Warning: Spoilers
...to me about this movie was that the 1931-version was definitely more "lesbian" than the version of 1958. While in the version of 1931 we still see Ms. V. Bernburg kissing Manuela straight on the mouth (with her actually making the first move which is totally unusual in itself, especially considering the timescale in which the movie was made), we see it a bit differently in the 1958 - version (here Manuela makes the first move to kiss the teacher on the mouth, but the teacher rejects it).

The 1958 version seems to totally excuse the obvious lesbian/homosexual aspect with the fact that Manuela only recently lost her mother. Everything is explained with the sudden death of the mother and Manuela needing a "hand" which can lead her to the right path. This is also explained at the end of the movie with the Oberin holding Manuela's hand and this being the solution of it all. The point is that this version still finds excuses for the definite homosexuality of at least the character of Manuela (here we don't know for sure about Fräulein v. Bernburg's sexual orientation although it is to be asumed that she most probably is a heterosexual). It is to be asumed that Manuela and all the other girls really are heterosexuals only misled and on the wrong path by the circumstances and the situation as a whole (which is the message that the movie is giving).

In the 1931 version things develop on a totally different level - here we see a definitely gay Ms. Von Bernburg who definitely prefers one girl over all the others by chosing her and kissing her straight on the mouth. Here nothing is "excused" and the gayness and homosexuality is more than one time definitely pointed out, for example by the headmistress saying that the contact between student and teacher needs to be stopped immediately. In this version there are no excuses. Both teacher & student are definitely gay & lesbian (it is quite obvious), not just some misled characters on the wrong path. I am convinced that in this version they would have ended up together (if it was made today), but it was a drama and therefore it couldn't be this way.

Anyway both versions are true classics and always worth to watch, a true piece of art. Always 10 of 10 points for both versions - and incredible acting (and actresses).
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A monumental waste of talent
jandewitt12 February 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Like 'Immer wenn der Tag beginnt' this strange mix of drama and coming-of-age story deals with the tribulations of school teachers and stars a top box-office draw in the lead (Lilli Palmer vs. Ruth Leuwerik), but otherwise they differ widely. While 'Immer wenn der Tag beginnt' is sensitive, delicate and poignant this horrible remake of a classic masterpiece misses all the way.

Miss Palmer, who just wowed critics and public alike with her wonderful 'Anstasia - Die letzte Zarentochter', is much too young and much to elegant for the requirements of the part. Her scenes with Romy Schneider, desperate to escape the saccharine and schmaltzy 'Sissi' trilogy, miss sparkle and their heavily hyped 'kiss' is as shocking as a milk-shake. The chilling social comment, that made the original version in 1932 an all time classic is now completely passé and all that's left is just a beautifully photographed ante-bellum frou-frou about a gaggle of glamour girls. They laugh, they cry and after 90 minutes of tame misunderstandings the nonplussed viewer is left with a 'So what?' feeling.
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