Die_goldene_Stadt

<i>Die goldene Stadt</i>

Die goldene Stadt

1941 film


Die goldene Stadt (English: The Golden City), is a 1942 German color film directed by Veit Harlan, starring Kristina Söderbaum, who won the Volpi Cup for Best Actress.[2]

Quick Facts Die goldene Stadt, Directed by ...

Plot

Anna, a young, innocent country girl (a Sudeten German[3]), whose mother drowned in the swamp, dreams of visiting the golden city of Prague. After she falls in love with a surveyor, she runs away from the countryside near České Budějovice to Prague to find him. She is instead seduced and later abandoned by her cousin (a Czech). She attempts to return home, but her father rejects her, so she drowns herself in the same swamp where her mother died.

Cast

Sources

The movie is based on drama Der Gigant by Austrian writer Richard Billinger [de].[3] In the novel, however, it is the heart-broken father who commits suicide; the Nazi Propaganda Ministry, in particular Joseph Goebbels, insisted that it be the daughter rather than the father who dies.[4]

Motifs

Anna's fate and drowning are clearly represented as the natural consequence of her failure to appreciate the countryside and her longings for the city.[5] This harmonizes with the preference for the countryside of the Blood and Soil doctrine.


Citations

  1. Noack, p. 203.
  2. Hal Erickson (2012). "Die Goldene Stadt (1942)". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 3 November 2012.
  3. Rhodes, p. 20.
  4. Grunberger, p. 382.
  5. Romani, p. 86.

References



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