Wolz - Life and Illusion of a German Anarchist (1974) Poster

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8/10
Amazingly accomplished German film from the Seventies
t-dooley-69-38691620 May 2016
This is one of those films that if you are a real cinephiles then you should have heard about – and I hadn't. It is about Ignaz Wolz who gets injured in World War I and meets medic Ludwig; who only has paper bandages as German industrialists are making more money using the lint to make ladies corsets than provide for the soldiers. Wolz in having a bout of righteous indignation he declares that he will avenge all the German blood left unstaunched because profits were put before people.

Move onto 1919 and he decides to do exactly what he promised and so he starts his own revolution, which is lacking in political dogma being more Robin Hood in its ambitions than real anarchy. As people flock to his cause so does an intelligent, socialist nurse and between Wolz, Agnes and Ludwig a sort of threesome form. The film follows the ups and downs of all of their exploits.

Now this is a real mix of a film. Part comedy at one point, part political statement and a definite swipe at National Socialism, it is very ambitious and it pulls it all off. It has a great musical score too and the music adds to the moods tenfold. The acting is superb and Regimantas Adomaitis as Wolz is a power house. The print is excellent too looking as fresh as a new film today; in German with good sub titles and at a run of 110 minutes – none of which are wasted, this is truly an exceptional film that I can thoroughly recommend.
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6/10
Left-wing debate society
JohnSeal9 April 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Lithuanian-born Regimantas Adomaitis stars as Ignaz Wolz, a revolutionary who learns his political theory in the trenches of World War I and can't abide the strictures placed upon 'the revolution' by the organizers, intellectuals, and bureaucrats dominating the leftist political scene in post-war Weimar Germany. This colorful, well-acted feature would be better if it could have spent less time sounding like an undergrad level discussion about the factional battles fought within the SPD and the development of the KPD and the Spartakists, but it's still quite watchable. History probably felt quite settled in 1974 East Germany, which probably explains the relative generosity of the film's attitude toward anarchism. Of course, history wasn't quite done with the DDR yet.
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