Blum Affair
- 3 December 1948 (1948-12-03)
Blum Affair (German: Affaire Blum) is a 1948 German drama film directed by Erich Engel and starring Hans Christian Blech, Ernst Waldow and Karin Evans. It is based on a real 1926 case in Magdeburg in which a German Jewish industrialist is tried for murder.[1] The film was produced in the future East Germany and produced by DEFA. It was shot at the Babelsberg Studios and Althoff Studios in the Soviet zone. The film's sets were designed by the art director Emil Hasler.
Cast
- Hans Christian Blech as Karlheinz Gabler
- Ernst Waldow as Kriminalkommissar Schwerdtfeger
- Paul Bildt as Untersuchungsrichter Konrat
- Karin Evans as Sabine Blum
- Helmuth Rudolph as Wilschinsky - Regierungspräsident
- Alfred Schieske as Kriminalkommissar Otto Bonte
- Gisela Trowe as Christina Burman
- Kurt Ehrhardt as Dr. Jakob Blum
- Gerhard Bienert as Karl Bremer
- Herbert Hübner as Landgerichtsdirektor Hecht
- Friedrich Maurer as Lawyer Dr. Gerhard Wormser
- Klaus Becker [de] as Hans Fischer - Gutsvolontär
- Arno Paulsen as Wilhelm Platzer
- Hilde Adolphi as Alma - das 'süße' Mädchen
- Maly Delschaft as Anna Platzer
- Hugo Kalthoff as Kriminalassistent Lorenz
- Blandine Ebinger as Lucie Schmerschneider
- Reinhard Kolldehoff as Max Tischbein - Lehrer
- Emmy Burg as Therese
- Renée Stobrawa as Frieda Bremer
- Jean Brahn as Fritz Merkel
- Albert Venohr as Waffenhändler
- Gertrud Boll as Dienstmädchen bei Dr. Blum
- Otto Matthies as Reporter
- Herbert Malsbender as Redakteur
- Werner Peters as Egon Konrad
- Margarete Schön as Sophie Konrad
- Eva Bodden as Sekretärin bei Wilschninsky
- Arthur Schröder as Landtagsabgeordneter von Hinkeldey
- Richard Drosten as Zahnarzt
- Lili Schoenborn-Anspach as Patientin
- Margarete Salbach as Ruth Tischbein
Reception
Bosley Crowther, critic for The New York Times, praised it as "a trenchant dramatic exposition of the way in which an innocent German Jew is almost destroyed by nascent Nazis—back in 1926."[2]
The film sold more than 4,330,000 tickets, making it one of DEFA's all-time most successful productions.[3]
References
- ^ "The Blum Affair (Affaire Blum): Synopsis". DEFA Film Library, University of Massachusetts Amherst. Retrieved 25 May 2015.
- ^ Bosley Crowther (October 18, 1949). "The Screen; German Drama at World". The New York Times.
- ^ List of the 50 highest-grossing DEFA films.
External links
- Blum Affair at IMDb
- v
- t
- e
- Love Is the Power of Women (1924)
- Who Takes Love Seriously? (1931)
- Five from the Jazz Band (1932)
- Inge and the Millions (1933)
- Hard Luck Mary (1934)
- The Secret of Cavelli (1934)
- ... nur ein Komödiant 1935)
- Pygmalion (1935)
- The Night With the Emperor (1936)
- Victoria in Dover (1936)
- A Wedding Dream (1936)
- Dangerous Game (1937)
- The Muzzle (1938)
- A Hopeless Case (1938)
- Hotel Sacher (1939)
- Our Miss Doctor (1940)
- Nanette (1940)
- Much Ado About Nixi (1942)
- Blum Affair (1948)
- Journey to Happiness (1948)
- The Beaver Coat (1949)
- Under the Thousand Lanterns (1952)
- The Merry Vineyard (1952)
- Consul Strotthoff (1954)
- The Man of My Life (1954)
- Before God and Man (1955)
- Love Without Illusions (1955)
![]() | This article related to a German film of the 1940s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e