Heißer Sommer (1968) Poster

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7/10
1960's Ostalgie
badger1216 October 2004
I first became aware of this movie from the excerpts presented in "East Side Story", a documentary about Eastern Block musicals. As an American

who's interested in East German pop culture, I found "Heißer Sommer" quite enjoyable -- the scenes set in Leipzig and Berlin showed the 1960's socialist architecture (mostly crumbling or demolished now) in new condition, and the Baltic scenes contrasted that with the traditional German architecture. Plus, there's Trabants galore throughout the picture, if you're a fan of that classic East German automobile. And the songs (particularly during the campfire scene) were actually quite good.
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7/10
East German Musical that is Interesting, but not Satisfying
kino19697 February 2012
I finally decided to watch this movie because I am highly interested in East German cinema (by DEFA). Most of the GDR's best-known movies are usually set during WWII or its after effects with heavy communist leanings. I have not had time to watch several "Red Westerns" that I own, but dramas such as "Jacob the Liar" and "Naked Among Wolves" were quite masterfully done, so I was eager to watch something different from the good ol' East German studio.

"Hot Summer" just seemed so strange: a teenage musical coming from a Communist country, one not completely known for being "fun" in any way, and I was surprised with this movie. Of what I have read (no, I haven't seen the documentary noted in other reviews), the lead actors in this movie had made several of these "beach musicals," all of which were popular, but banned from distribution by the state. I guess the authorities finally decided to produce a musical, and the restrictions are noticeable within the movie (the "law" student needed to remind the other teens about what is illegal, the co-ops reigning supreme, the equality between women and men with NO outward sex or strong forms of affection).

The movie has to do with a group of boys and girls going to the Baltic for summer break (not quite the Cote d'Azur!). Musical numbers fill and add to the narrative, which includes the story of a boy-crazy girl (Britt) who is being fought over by two of the boys. Other potential relationships are played-down or missing (after all, you need to be controlled, mentally and physically in such a country, so one can only present so much as not to be totally censored for going across the ideologic line).

The movie is set amongst agricultural cooperative and fishing community, of course. The music is quite good (the album was a huge seller in the GDR). The choreography was also excellent. The problem arises from the disjointed story, which is not quite timed right or told clearly (there is barely any real story). I had to replay several parts to understand what was happening. For example, the movie quickly changes from a song and dance musical about boys versus girls to a heavy drama. The mood changes so quickly, I didn't have a chance to truly enjoy the preceding number. After the movie ends, I realized that I wanted more, but, alas, I am watching it through Western eyes, and I have to remind myself it was made in East Germany.

Overall, the movie is more of a novelty, one from the era of a heavy handed government who attempted to make a movie that was far from reality, but maintaining ideological standards. After all, the GDR was not a wonderful utopia. Movies needed to conform to ideology, and individual auteur identity is greatly squelched here. The actors and actresses are quite attractive, but the audience needed those types (much like the USSR needed socialist realist figures), in order to show that "we aren't all that bad!" Historically, it is a fascinating movie!

To me, the best number is the song that really puts down Britt, after she is found to be playing the boys for suckers all along.

One mention: It is unfair to compare this movie to "Grease," and the Avalon/Funicello movies were way to comical and slapstick. This is a different movie, that owes a lot to those types of movies, though. Don't be suckered by the cover.

Not a horrible movie, by far, but not one of the greats from the GDR. The problems are mainly because of censorship and agenda, which restricted personal input and freedom of expression. It is for students of cinema and, perhaps, theatre people looking for ideas through the movie's great music and dance numbers, but not for this casual viewer. The casual viewer would probably want their life back.

6 of 10 for story; 9 of 10 for music and choreography.--------- E.
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Delightfully Bland
nobita22 December 1999
Well what can be said of the 'Socialist Musical'? When I saw this film advertised on Television, I was looking quite forward to it. I was expecting to sit down to 90 minutes of East Germans caroling their voices in soaring melodies extolling the heroic virtues of a glorious Socialist future, beaming faces carrying portraits of Lenin and Walter Ulbricht while farmers tilled the soil in song and factory workers rode out the latest Trabant Triumph. However, I was sadly disappointed.

Hot Summer, as it is called in English, is a delightfully bland East German musical made in 1967. The star of the film, Chris Doerk was somewhat of an East German pop star and this film was her vehicle. Basically Hot Summer deals with a group girls and a group of guys all off to the Baltic sea to enjoy their summer holidays. They've got the check-mini skirts, the patent leather shoes and these guys and girls are going to Rock and Roll their way into the 60's in East Germany. And it doesn't get much better.

The separate groups of guys and girls decide to have a competition and see who can arrive at the Baltic sea from Berlin first. I can't remember who won, but it wasn't important. What was important was the dramatic storyline. The guys decide to play tricks on the girls and then snogg (Kiss) them and vice versa. And there were the songs, slotted in at every available opportunity, and proceeded to become downright annoying. But hey, that's Socialism. The storyline was absolute drivel and dragged on considerably. I'm convinced the Production crew lost the script and ended up just re-using scenes. However, the scene where one of boys appears at the door to a barn wearing tight black jeans, plaid shirt, teddy boy hairdo and thumb firmly planted in his belt loop while his hips gyrate so fast it would have earned him an Order of Lenin singing some dreadful song is a scene definitely worth seeing.
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1/10
Cheap Commercialism is Not Indignant to Capitalism
pcarlson-226 February 2002
This is undoubtedly the worst movie I've ever seen. I can't get it through my brain how a director could seriously produce such rubbish. The film has no plot, there is no character development, the choreography is nothing better than third-grade mimicking, the throw-away music is absolutely atrocious and, well, whatever else needs to be considered when judging the quality of a film, is without a doubt terrible here too.

I wonder how the director was able to sleep to night.
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3/10
So bad that it's good.
DesiBaba15 June 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Saw this at a vintage theater in town that shows older movies every now and then. Usually they are great about picking movies. I went in without any idea on what to expect. It turned out to be totally boring musical, very awkward and amateurish. Every thing is under par in terms of quality, especially the dancing choreography, it was hilarious! Also the fight scenes make me laugh out loud (it was not meant to).

I'm not sure what this movie is doing out in the circuit today, with so many great movies around this one can stay in a cellar somewhere as far as I am concerned.
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8/10
Feel good teen movie with less GDR-related clichés one would expect
Julesen9 June 2005
If you like chick flicks and an adorable cast plus bubble gum entertainment, this might be a movie for you. It's a cult classic here in the Neue Bundesländer and my parents even owned the soundtrack back in the 1960s and 1970s. Don't expect so much GDR-stereotypes but Musical-stereotypes in general. The film was filmed in the region I grew up in so it's way nostalgia for me - even though I was born in 1981. The stars - Chris Doerk and Frank Schoebel - were an item back then and very popular actors/singers in the GDR. This movie has been turned into a stage musical for the summer 2005 season and it'll take place by the Baltic sea. I am sure that all the (old and new) fans are going to come out and enjoy the show.
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4/10
Only worth seeing for the music (if at all)
Horst_In_Translation13 August 2016
Warning: Spoilers
This is "Heißer Sommer" or "Hot Summer", a 1968 live action film from East Germany, which means it will soon have its 50th anniversary. This film can probably be described as the most known musical from the GDR and admittedly this has a lot to do with the fact that this genre was not common east of the border at all. I certainly is not because of any great quality here. But we'll come to that later. I see this is advertised as the "East German Grease", which is pretty awkward. I have not seen "Grease", but they really must have lacked with a comparable film if they choose to go for one from 10 years later. Anyway, the only cast member I know here is Frank Schöbel and I see that co-lead Chris Doerk was his wife wt that point already. Or maybe they are all supporting, I am not sure.

Anyway, lets talk a bit about the music. This is probably the best and worst about the film at the same time. Some songs and numbers are indeed catchy, especially the title song, which is great fun, but there are also moments and performances that were cringeworthy beyond belief and that is every time the case when the girls sing about the boys mostly. I generally felt that the girls were not as talented singers as the boys in here, but this was fine for the most part as the girls' songs did not require great range and were just catchy tunes, while the male singers seemed occasionally too talented for the material. Apart from that, I believe everybody was the same when it came to acting, mostly forgettable, sometimes really bad even and this film did never work apart from the musical moments. This had to do with the actors, but also with the plot and story. The writing was sufficient enough for a 45 minute film max. It was really uninteresting for the most part and the lack of talent from everybody involved felt especially painful during the more dramatic scenes. This film was certainly something different, but not in a good way for the most part. It resembled the 1960s version of a Mario Barth comedy. Watch something else instead.
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8/10
groovy
aa119 December 2001
"Hot summer" will appeal to those who are fans of retro "Frankie and Annette" movies. The East Germans made a valliant attempt to create a "go go" sixties movie. The singing and dancing was lead by East German heart throbs: Frank Schoebel and Chris Doerk. Their voices were amazing and the choreography was comparable to Hollywood standards. Furthermore, it is a curiosity to see how the East Germans "party". Although the plot is weak and corny, "Hot Summer" is a feel-good movie full of 60's nostalgia. The songs are fun and the guys and girls are cool.
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8/10
Frankie and Annette go Commie!
jgriffin-427 February 2001
Imagine Frankie and Annette taking a vacation with nine guys and 10 girls. Now imagine them as Communist youth, spreading the joys of collectivism and the freedom to have sex with whomever they please! Unbelievably catchy songs, surreal choreography (including dancing haystacks), and a kitschy script make this a must-see for anyone who loves tractor musicals.
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8/10
hidden agenda
cmp4x17 June 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Spoilers: I don't think calling this one the "Grease" of East Germany does it justice. In fact, I was not sold on it until halfway through--at first it seemed to me totally unredeemed twaddle, until the scene when the glasses-wearing girl is trying to seduce the sailor boy with a conversation about Brecht and the V-effect (or what we'd call the alienation effect)--this comes hard on the heels of the most BANAL song number in the whole film, the beach guitar ballad sung by the love-struck second male lead with his unjustified emotions and even worse sentimental lyrics and melody--alienation indeed. At that point it all made sense to me that this movie is supposed to be a deadly uncanny parable about empty 'values.' But there is more than that: the girls and boys are from the outset in this strange bind where they are attracted and repulsed by one another at the same time. And the whole mise-en-scene is orchestrated by the near-lesbian lead girl who never gets with a boy, has her hair cropped, leads all the songs criticizing boys for not being 'men', and disapproves most strongly of all of Brit's 'success in the barn': "Love is not a piñata, you're not supposed to throw the pieces everywhere" (or something to that effect, she says). There is evidently a documentary of these socialist musicals called "East Side Story."
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