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Thomas Muentzer (film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thomas Muentzer
Directed byMartin Hellberg
Written byFriedrich Wolf
Produced byPaul Ramacher
StarringWolfgang Stumpf
CinematographyGötz Neumann
Edited byLieselotte Johl
Music byErnst Roters
Distributed byProgress Film
Release date
  • 17 May 1956 (1956-05-17)
Running time
119 minutes
CountryEast Germany
LanguageGerman

Thomas Muentzer is a 1956 East German film about the life of the 16th-century Protestant theologian and peasant leader Thomas Muentzer, directed by Martin Hellberg.

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Transcription

Plot

In 1519, the teachings of Martin Luther sweep through the German principalities. They are welcomed by the peasants, who hope that the new doctrines will help to liberate them from the oppressive yoke of the nobility and the magistrates. The young pastor Thomas Muentzer embraces Lutheranism, but he is more radical in his support for the peasants.

In 1523, Muentzer arrives in Allstedt to assume the office of the local pastor. When a local villager is arrested after assaulting an overseer who tried to rape his sister, the priest helps him escape. He also carries a first Mass in German rather than Latin, and preaches his flock to destroy all the saints' icons in the local chapel, which he deems to be heretical. The people burn it down. The local baron retaliates by destroying the village. The priest now realizes that he is no longer a follower of Luther, who called to refrain from violence. He flees to southern Germany, where he and his friend Heinrich Pfeiffer take over the city of Muehlhausen and form a peasant rebel army, intending to liberate the people. But betrayal and the schemes of the nobility bring about their defeat in the Battle of Frankenhausen. Muentzer is captured; as he is tortured, he refuses to deny his religious doctrines and is then executed.

Selected cast

Production

The communist leadership of East Germany, in its attempts to create a unifying narrative for the citizens of their country, attempted to portray the history of the land as a chain of events which developed according to the rules of Marxism-Leninism, leading unavoidably to the consolidation of socialist power in the state. The figure of the preacher Thomas Muentzer held an especially important status in the eyes of the establishment, both because of his radical theology that was regarded as a precursor to communism and his recognition by Friedrich Engels, who viewed him as a revolutionary leader - as stated in Engels' book, The Peasant War in Germany.[1]

The film was one of 13 'heritage films' created by the DEFA studio during the 1950s about important historical characters whose legacy was deemed important by the state, like Johannes Kepler and Georg Buechner.[2] Author Friedrich Wolf began working on the scenario in the late 1940s, and director Hellberg requested the DEFA board to authorize a film about Muentzer in 1952.[3] 200 actors and 2000 extras, the latter mostly servicemen of the Barracked People's Police and apprentices, were involved in the filming, which took place in the town of Quedlinburg. The picture was shot using Agfacolor reels.[4]

Reception

The film had its premiere on 17 May 1956, on the tenth anniversary to DEFA's founding.[5] It was commercially released on the following day. The Der Spiegel film critic wrote that the picture was "intended to depict the 16th-Century Iconoclast as Walter Ulbricht's ideological predecessor" and that its plot culminated in "a complete confusion."[4] West Germany's Catholic Film Service described it as "an immense production... with a superficial and biased interpretation of history... in spite of the expensive crowd scenes, it is anemic."[6] In 1970, a review of the German Film Studies' Institute noted that for uncertain reasons, Martin Luther was not seen in the film at all.[7]

In 2005, the picture was released on DVD format by the company Icestorm Entertainment. In a special 13-minutes-long supplement to the new edition, historian Susanne Galley noted several inaccuracies in the plot: Muentzer is shown to have held to his beliefs under torture, while in reality he agreed to deny them before his execution; the peasants' defeat in the Battle of Frankenhausen is attributed to betrayal and sabotage, rather than to the weakness of their army. Galley believed that the plot was affected by the government's ideological tendencies.[8]

References

  1. ^ Robert Walinski-Kiehl. History, Politics, and East German Film: The Thomas Muentzer (1956) Socialist Epic. Central European History (2006), Conference Group for Central European History of the American Historical Association. Volume 39, pages 30-55. See excerpt.
  2. ^ Julian Preece, Frank Finlay, Ruth J. Owen. New German Literature: Life-Writing And Dialogue With the Arts. Peter Lang (2007). ISBN 978-3-03911-384-2. Page 79.
  3. ^ Thomas Heimann. DEFA, Künstler und SED-Kulturpolitik. Vistas (1994). ISBN 978-3-89158-112-4. Page 350.
  4. ^ a b A review on Der Spiegel, 11 July 1956.
  5. ^ Thomas Muentzer on DEFA Foundation's website.
  6. ^ The critic, quoted on film-zeit.de.
  7. ^ Institut für Filmwissenschaft. Spielfilme der DEFA im Urteil der Kritik. Henschel Verlag (1970). ASIN B0040ZY5FW. Page 124.
  8. ^ The DVD edition on icestorm.de. The supplement is in the extended package.

External links

Thomas Muentzer on the IMDb.

This page was last edited on 8 May 2024, at 00:28
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