The Austrians, Germans, and Swiss, like many of their
European neighbors, offer government subsidies to their filmmakers in an effort
to encourage domestic motion picture production. Europeans, including the
Germans, have traditionally tended to regard filmmaking as an art rather than a
business. Because the resulting European films are often limited-budget,
intellectually challenging productions that lack the Hollywood big-star, action/blockbuster
formula, their mass appeal has been limited.
German film awards such as Der goldene Bär (The Golden Bear)
awarded at theBerlin International Film Festival (Berlinale), as well as other
European awards (Cannes, the “Felix,” Venice), have been created in an attempt
to compete with the American Academy Awards (“Oscar”) and to call attention to
German and European film. The first Berlinale film awards took place in 1951.
But even the Berlinale features many US productions.
It is ironic that the German film diet of today is
predominantly American, especially in light of Germany’s historical role in
world cinema. Almost from the first days of motion pictures, both the Austrians
and Germans were at the cinematic forefront, exerting great influence over the
medium. Although the first paid public showing of a movie is generally credited
to the Lumière brothers in Paris in December 1895, the world’s first public
demonstration of moving pictures took place in Berlin almost two months
earlier. But German inventor Max Skladanowsky’s “Bioscop” would prove to be
impractical for widespread use. Nevertheless, Berlin soon became the center of
Germany’s fledgling film industry, and by 1905 there were 16 movie theaters in
the city. In 1907 “Der Kinematograph”—a weekly journal for “the entire art of
projection”—published its first issue, a tradition that endured until 1934.
Austrian and German film actors, cinematographers, and
directors were pioneers in the new film art. Hollywood would not be what it is
today without this Austrian and German impact. Even if non-German names like
Bergman, Fellini, Truffaut, and Kurosawa are more famous in the world of
international cinema, German and Austrian directors such as Fassbinder,
Sternberg, Lang, Lubitsch, Murnau, Petersen, Preminger, Wilder, Wenders, and
others (some of whom are still alive and working) have had an incalculable
effect on American movie making. The New German Cinema is known to many film
buffs, though there is no “school” of Fassbinder, Wenders, or Herzog as there
is of the French Truffaut or the Italian Fellini.
The three waves of Austrians, Germans and Swiss in Hollywood
In the dozen years between 1920 and 1932, the so-called
“Golden Age” of early German cinema, before the Nazis ruined its reputation,
German cinema led the way for future filmmakers. Beginning with the great
pioneering silent films of the 1920s, such as Metropolis, Nosferatu, and Das
Cabinet des Dr. Caligari, and continuing with the advent of sound after
1929—Der blaue Engel, Die Drei von der Tankstelle,M—German film became a model
for a distinctive technique and style of filmmaking. Borrowing from the
Germans, Hollywood adapted sound techniques, lighting, storytelling, and set
design. German expressionistic films such as Caligariand Metropolis, which
interestingly enough were not great commercial successes in their time, became
the artistic forerunners that led Hollywood from flat lighting and mundane
settings to what would become the more artistic light and shadow offilm noir.
In the 1920s and 1930s, directors like Ernst Lubitsch, Billy Wilder, and others
left Europe for Hollywood. Even today, lured by bigger budgets and better
opportunities, German directors continue to move to Hollywood after getting
started in Germany. Roland Emmerich (Independence Day, Stargate, Universal
Soldier) and Wolfgang Petersen (Outbreak, In the Line of Fire, Das Boot) are
two of the most successful.
Austria has contributed well-known actors like the bug-eyed
Peter Lorre (Maltese Falcon, Casablanca, 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea) and
great directors such asFritz Lang (Fury, M, Metropolis, Rancho Notorious), Otto
Preminger (Anatomy of a Murder, The Cardinal, Exodus, Laura), and Billy Wilder
(Double Indeminity, The Apartment, Some Like It Hot, Witness for the
Prosecution). Fred Astaire, born Frederick Austerlitz in Omaha, Nebraska, was
the son of Austrian parents.
The teutonic sex symbol Marlene Dietrich (1901-1992), who
became an American citizen in 1939, perhaps more than any other single figure,
exemplifies the vital role played by Germans and Austrians in the history of
film acting. Beginning in 1930, with her groundbreaking portrayal of the sultry
femme fatale in The Blue Angel (Der blaue Engel), Dietrich’s film career spanned
more than half a century from the earliest days of talking pictures into the
age of Technicolor and Cinemascope. Dietrich’s 1992 death in seclusion in Paris
came after a very public life that saw her starring in a western comedy with
Jimmy Stewart (Destry Rides Again, 1939), entertaining U.S. troops during World
War II, and performing on stage in Las Vegas in the 1950s—a flashback to her
early days on the cabaret stage in Berlin. The late German actor Gert Froebe
(1913-1988), best known as the villainous Goldfinger, and the Austrian Klaus
Maria Brandauer (You Only Live Twice,Out of Africa) have both enjoyed success
in German and American movies. Of course, the Austrian Arnold Schwarzenegger is
in a cinematic class all by himself.
Source: .german-way.com

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