Thea von Harbou Movies

Screenwriting came third on Thea von Harbou's list of successful careers, after actress and bestselling novelist, but it is her film writing for which she is remembered. Indeed, she is one of the most renowned and one of the most reviled figures in the history of German cinema, depending upon which decade of her film career one is talking about. Von Harbou was born in 1888 in Tauperlitz, to an aristocratic Prussian family with military and civil service ties as well as a smattering of members of low-level noble rank. Educated in a convent school and later by private tutors, von Harbou was a precocious child who became fluent in several languages and showed special talents in music and literature. An avid reader of classics, drama, and philosophical texts as well as poetry, she wrote and sold her first piece of short fiction before she'd reached her teens. At 13, von Harbou published a volume of deeply philosophical poems and bidded fair to enjoy a literary career. First, however, she chose to earn a living as soon as she'd reached an appropriate age, and at 18 -- after overcoming the objections of her outraged father -- set out on an acting career. Toward this end, her knowledge of drama and whatever talent she possessed was aided and abetted by her other great asset -- von Harbou was a beautiful girl in the classic German mold, with blond hair, blue eyes, and an imposing presence despite a modest five-and-a-half foot height.

She made her stage debut in Dusseldorf in 1906, and later worked in Weimar and Aachen. In 1910, at age 22, while still doing theatrical work in Weimar, she published her first book, a romance novel entitled Die Nach uns Kommen, which became a bestseller. She followed this up with short works such as Die Krieg und Die Frauen, which were also successful. She continued acting and, in the early teens at Aachen, crossed paths with the actor Rudolf Klein-Rogge, who became her mentor and, in 1917, her first husband. She'd followed up her first book with a string of short stories that covered all genres and seemed to possess a strong philosophical bent. Following the outbreak of the First World War, she also wrote works in a strongly nationalistic vein. According to Fritz Lang biographer Patrick McGilligan, it was after von Harbou's marriage to Klein-Rogge that she gave up acting to pursue writing full-time. It was almost by accident that von Harbou entered the movie industry; the news that producer Joe May had bought the film rights to one of her books caused her to get in touch with May, who ended up hiring her as a screenwriter for his production company, not only to adapt her own work but to work on original screenplays. It was a little later, while working on the screenplay for Das Indische Grabmal (based on one of her novels), that she first met Lang; the two were attracted to each other from the start, both intellectually and romantically. At the time, however, she was married to Klein-Rogge and Lang was married to his first wife, Lisa Rosenthal, but they did enter into a fruitful professional relationship.

Beginning with Das Wandernde Bild in 1920 and continuing through 1933's Das Testament des Dr. Mabuse, von Harbou wrote the screenplays to every one of Lang's movies. She also authored the scripts for other directors, most notably F.W. Murnau's Phantom (1922) and Die Finanzen des Grossherzogs (1924), and Carl Theodor Dreyer's Mikael (1924), but it was Lang with whom she became most closely associated, both professionally and personally. By 1920, she and Klein-Rogge had separated, and their marriage would soon be dissolved. Lang's marital situation -- which didn't prevent him from setting up housekeeping with von Harbou -- resolved itself in a manner more befitting one of his later Hollywood-era screenplays. According to what Lang told actor Howard Vernon (as recalled by McGilligan in his book Fritz Lang: Nature of the Beast), his first wife encountered Lang and von Harbou in a sexual encounter, went to another floor of the house, and shot herself to death with a pistol that Lang had held onto from his World War I military service in the Austrian army. It was the summer of 1922 before Lang and von Harbou became husband and wife. His films were without peer during this period, not just in Germany but internationally, and were also among the most influential in the entire world, not only attracting and delighting audiences on four continents but serving as an inspiration for the next generation of directors.

Von Harbou as a screenwriter displayed an extraordinary talent for storytelling and an ear for compellingly realistic dialogue and finely drawn, complex character relationships. She was also a serious, deeply philosophical writer, her work encompassing conflicts that reflected larger meanings and social themes. Lang later claimed that von Harbou was overrated as a screenwriter, and seldom was able to comprehend the depth of the relationships between her characters. A close look at the best of her screenplays for Lang, however, would seem to contradict this suggestion; certainly in Metropolis, in its original form, the character relationships are nearly as fascinating as the visuals. Indeed, one of the reasons that Metropolis, as written, worked so well was because it had a screenplay that matched the dazzling special effects with its depth -- and sometimes even outdid those visuals in complexity. Metropolis (1927) was von Harbou's most ambitious work, and she wrote it as both a novel and a screenplay. Her script at times reads like a philosophical treatise as much as a dramatic work, and that side of the movie, in the restored version, seems the most arch and artificial -- not that those sections would necessarily have been fatal to the movie, but to producers seeking a commercially successful release in a hurry, especially those outside of Germany, they were the most easily dispensable parts of the movie. Metropolis was modified and shortened, and its text simplified by cutting -- removing some of the philosophical elements as well as chopping out character elements and plot -- almost immediately after the movie's German premiere, and was tampered with even more severely in the versions prepared for distribution in the United States and the rest of the world. The novel reveals the seriousness with which von Harbou took the original tale, with all of its sociological, philosophical, and religious overtones -- elements that were recaptured in the late '90s restoration of the retrievable elements of the original film.

By the early '30s, Lang and von Harbou's marriage was in trouble, although they continued working together right up to 1932 and The Testament of Dr. Mabuse, which was a daring exercise in topical filmmaking in which the words of Adolf Hitler were given to the criminal mastermind villain of the piece. There had been personal stresses and infidelities on both sides, but the main breaking point between them was von Harbou's increasingly visible support for the soon-to-be-ascendant Nazi Party. As early as 1931, she was expressing admiration for Hitler and his intended way of reshaping Germany. Strangely enough, during this same period, Lang was being lionized by the party over such works as the crime thriller M and his 1920s films Siegfried and Kriemhild's Revenge, with their basis in German mythology. As it happened, there was no chance that Lang would or could remain in Germany under their rule, once they came to power. Apart from his lack of sympathy to their cause or ideology, and the fact that many of the people to whom he was closest professionally were Jewish, his own family background was a source of anti-Semitic rumblings and rumor that could easily have destroyed him. In later years, he alleged that von Harbou turned him in to the authorities, denouncing him and providing evidence against him to Dr. Josef Goebbels, the propaganda minister, who controlled all lawful cultural activities in Germany. They were divorced in the spring of 1933, and Lang left the country later that year. The subsequent arcs of their respective careers sharply diverged from there.

Von Harbou was elected to lead the association of German screenwriters, lending her credibility to the Nazi regime, and she chose to move into the director's chair for two movies, Elisabeth und der Narr and Hanneles Himmelfahrt, which she also wrote. Both movies were held up from release for a time by the government censors, and marked her only efforts as a filmmaker. Over the ensuing 11 years, von Harbou rewrote some of the more ham-fisted propaganda scripts presented for filmming, in addition to authoring more than a dozen screenplays for various filmmakers, most of them heavily steeped in pro-Nazi propaganda. In 1938, she also very quietly married Ayi Tendulkar, an Indian-born mathematics and engineering graduate, with whom she'd been having an affair since the early '30s. For all of von Harbou's success in collaboration with Lang, none of her Nazi-era work achieved either popularity or any significant critical acceptance, and in collaborating with Hitler's regime, she sacrificed whatever artistic and moral credibility she had acquired over the preceding 15 years. Meanwhile, after a few rough moments in the 1930s (mostly at MGM, where he made his most highly regarded American movie, Fury), Lang found a profitable, if not entirely comfortable, home in Hollywood. Despite an often unpleasant, autocratic manner and a reputation for harshness in dealing with his actors and, even more so, with producers, he remained fully employed and made a string of mostly good (and occasionally great) movies over the 25 years following his departure from Germany.

Von Harbou's output slackened considerably after 1940 and came to a halt with the Allied victory in 1945. She and her family later claimed that her involvement with the Hitler government and support of the Nazi Party had been patriotic rather than ideological, but Lang insisted otherwise. The occupying and postwar German authorities were also more suspicious of von Harbou than they were of many others, as two of the movies based on her screenplays, Fahrt ins Glück and Via Mala, were withheld from release until three years after the end of the war, while a third, Erzieherin Gesucht, didn't reach the public until 1950. She didn't resume screenwriting until that year, with Es Kommt Ein Tag. Another production, Angelika, followed the next year, and she closed out her movie career in 1953 with Dein Herz Ist Meine Heimat. She also wrote a small handful of literary works following World War II, Das Dieb von Bagdad (1949) and Gartenstrasse (1952).

Von Harbou occasionally spoke in public during her final years and wrote articles about her work, but was largely eclipsed professionally, shunned by a German literary community and a reading public that despised her Nazi-era activities, and rejected by a German film industry eager to regain commercial and moral credibility after freeing itself of the Nazi taint. Lang himself denounced her sympathies and reputation in later years, though he also did a new screen adaptation of Das Indische Grabmal in 1959. Despite his dispute of von Harbou's abilities, she and Lang remain joined at the hip -- von Harbou's greatest literary visibility in the years after her death came through the reprinting of her novel Metropolis, while the restoration of various 1920s Lang films inevitably raised her profile among cineastes too young to have known her work in her own lifetime. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
1959  
 
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This unrealistic, routine drama is the second half of a story that began with Der Tiger von Eschnapur. This sequel was later cut slightly, combined with the first story then released in English as Journey to the Lost City. Both halves were written by Thea von Harbou and the 1959 films are both directed by Fritz Lang, von Harbou's former husband. In this continuation, Seetha (Debra Paget) and the architect Harald (Paul Hubschmid) have fallen in love. The biggest stumbling block to their romance is Chandra, the Maharaja of Eshnapur (Walther Reyer). He wants Seetha for himself. Because of that, the lovers fled from Eshnapur and are now being hunted by the Maharaja's henchmen. That leads to inevitable killings, cruelties, and inhuman conduct until the Maharaja himself is the only one left who can right the situation. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Debra PagetPaul Christian, (more)
1958  
 
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This is the third and least successful version of screenwriter Thea von Harbou's original story, Das Indische Grabmal, written around 1919. Her ex-husband, Fritz Lang directs this routine, outdated drama about an exotic dancer named Seetha (Debra Paget) who is hired by Chandra (Walther Reyer), an Indian maharaja. Chandra is having problems keeping his domain in order and his subjects are on the verge of rebellion. To make matters worse, Seetha is not interested in him but in Harald Berger (Paul Hubschmid), an architect. Harald is there to construct colonial-style architecture, but between the rebellious peasants and the Maharaja, he and Seetha have dim prospects for a future here. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Debra PagetPaul Hubschmid, (more)
1954  
 
Maria Schell, who attained international stardom with her performance in The Last Bridge, essays the title role in Angelika. Based on a popular radio serial, the story revolves around the incurably ill daughter of wealthy Herr Alberti (Carl Wery). Angelika falls in love with her doctor, a young man named Holl (Dieter Borsche), who marries the girl out of pity. Only after developing a miracle serum that will save Angelika's life does Dr. Holl truly fall in love with her. The couple's future happiness is threatened by the presence of Holl's disgruntled fiancee Helga (Heidemaire Hatheyeer). Angelika was scripted by Thea von Harbou, best known for her 1920s and 1930s collaborations with her ex-husband, director Fritz Lang. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Maria SchellHeidemarie Hatheyer, (more)
1945  
 
Believed to be the costliest German film ever made, this propaganda film chronicles the determination and courage of Kolberg, a little Prussian town, to deflect the oncoming French troops during the Napoleonic Wars. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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1938  
 
Director Veit Harlan, one of the most conspicuous banner-wavers for the Third Reich, manages to suppress his political beliefs in the straightforward mystery melodrama Verwehte Spuren (Covered Tracks). The film is based on a true story, wherein all traces of the existence of a bubonic-plague carrier were obliterated by the nervous authrorities so as not to endanger the success of the 1867 Paris World Exposition. When the mother of Serphine Lawrence (played by Harlan's wife Kristina Soederbaum) mysteriously vanishes while attending the Exposition, Madeleine makes a beeline to the gendarmes. Upon returning to her hotel, Madeleine is told that she and her mother never checked in-and when she goes to her room, she finds that the furnishings and even the wallpaper are entirely different! On the verge of madness, Madeleine is finally able to discern the truth about her "nonexistent" mother. The same story served as the basic for the 1949 British film So Long at the Fair. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1938  
 
Variete Csillagai (Stars of Variety) is a backstage melodrama with intrigue to spare. The plot is motivated by the hatred between vaudeville sharpshooter Carrey (Paul Javor) and famed magician Keats (Antal Pager). The main bone of contention is the fact that Carrey's stage partner Sylvia (Bella Bordy) is Keats' ex-wife. When Carrey accidentally shoots Sylvia during a performance, Keats pounces upon him, claiming that he intended to murder the girl. The key to the mystery is Sylvia herself, whose last-reel revelation ties up innumerable loose plot ends. Written by Thea Von Harbou (of Metropolis fame), Variete Csillagai was filmed in both Hungarianand German-language versions. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Antal Pager
1938  
 
Though it was accepted as standard entertainment upon its first release, the German Jugend (Youth) has in recent years been perceived as an implicitly pro-Nazi tract. Adapted by Thea Von Harbou from a controversial 19th century play by Max Hulls, the story concerns a young girl named Annchen (Kristina Soderbaum), who from childhood onward has had her judgment warped by the self-righteous proclamations of a fanatical priest (Eugene Klopfer). After her first sexual experience, Annchen is so overwhelmed by guilt that she commits suicide, profoundly affecting the lives of those closest to her. Some critics have suggested that the film advises its audience to beware false prophets-except those wearing brown shirts and armbands, who will lead the populace from the opiate of religion to the glories of National Socialism. The fact that Jugend was directed by Kristina Soderbaum's husband Viet Harlan, one of the German film industry's leading torch-bearers for the Third Reich, has not been a point in its favor. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Kristina Soderbaum
1938  
 
This Italian-German co-production was released in English-speaking countries as Mother Song. Italian opera favorites Beniamino Gigli and Maria Cebotari star in this tale about the romance between two temperamental singing stars. Highlights include a lengthy selection from Faust, with Gigli making a most impressive Mephistopheles. The plot takes a melodramatic turn towards the climax, with the lives of the characters mirrored in their on-stage behavior. Director Carmine Gallone was something of an expert in the field of filmed opera, as witness his Tosca, Rigoletto and Il Trovatore. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Beniamino GigliMaria Cebotari, (more)
1937  
 
Also known as Promise Me Nothing, this labyrinthine drama was adapted from a long-running stage play by Thea von Harbou of Metropolis and Dr. Mabuse fame. Viktor de Kowa stars as impoverished artist Martin Pratt, who is so preoccupied by his work that he fails to notice that his wife Monika (Luise Ullrich) is literally starving to death. Making matters worse, Martin cares nothing for money, refusing to sell his paintings because he feels they aren't yet good enough for public consumption. In desperation, Monika pretends that Martin's painting were completed by her, thereby allowing her to peddle them on her own. Soon, of course, Monika is being hailed as the foremost artistic genius of the age -- while Martin, seething with jealousy but too proud to expose his wife as a fraud, retreats further and further into himself. Eventually, Monika's conscience gets the better of her, and she confesses that the paintings were the handiwork of her husband. Rather amazingly, this leads to a happy ending for both hero and heroine, indicating that anything's possible in the movies. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Luise UllrichViktor de Kowa, (more)
1937  
 
Though the witty, epigrammatic style of Oscar Wilde would seem best suited to the rhythms of the English language, a surprising number of Wilde's plays and short stories were filmed in Europe. The German Ein Idealer Gatte is a fairly faithful adaptation of Wilde's 1895 play An Ideal Husband. The title character is Lord Chiltern (Carl Ludwig Diehl), a prosperous steel magnate. Blackmailed by an old flame, Gloria Chevney (Sybille Schmitz), Lord C. is at last rescued by the real brains of the Chiltern family, his loyal, supportive and eminently courageous wife (Brigitte Helm). Film buffs take note: Ein Ideal Gatte affords a rare opportunity to see Metropolis star Brigitte Helm and Vampyr star Sybille Schmitz in the same picture. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Karl Ludwig DiehlBrigitte Helm, (more)
1937  
 
Solo per Te (Only For You) is an adequate showcase for the rich tenor voice of Beniamino Gigli. The star plays an opera singer who is married to what used to be known as "a woman with a history" (Maria Cebotari). When that history catches up with her in the form of her villainous ex-lover (Michael Bohnen), the result is murder. Accused of the crime, the heroine is cleared by one of those deathbed confessions so common to backstage melodramas of this nature. Seemingly oblivious to all these intrigues, Beniamino Gigli sings magnificently throughout the film. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1937  
 
Tiger von Eschnapur is a remake of Joe May's 1919 silent film of the same name. Both versions were based on a novel by Thea von Harbou, at one time the wife of director Fritz Lang (and before that the wife of actor Rudolf Klein-Rogge). Hans Stüwe stars as Peter Fürbringer, a young architect who stumbles upon the "lost" Indian city of Eschnapur. Here he becomes embroiled in the feud between two brothers, the Maharaja of Eschnapur (La Jana) and Prince Ramigani (Alexander Golling). He also falls in love with the Maharaja's alluring bride (played by blonde American actress Kitty Janssen). This was part one of a two-part production; the second half, Das Indische Grabmal (The Indian Tomb) was likewise a remake of a 1919 Joe May production. In turn, both Tiger von Eschnapur and Das Indische Grabmal were remade in 1959 by Fritz Lang. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Alice FieldPola Illery, (more)
1936  
 
A popular novel by Richard Henry Savage was the springboard for Seine Offizielle Frau (My Official Wife). The story is set in 1910 with the action evenly divided between Paris and St. Petersburg. Basically a comedy, the story concerns a high-ranking British official named Colonel Lenox (George Alexander) who is forced by diplomatic circumstances to pretend that one Mme. Helene (Renate Muller) is his wife. All well and good -- except that the Colonel is already married! My Official Wife was first filmed by Vitagraph in 1916 -- and, contrary to popular belief, did not feature Bolshevik leader Leon Trotsky in the cast. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Renate MuellerGeorge Alexander, (more)
1936  
 
Eine Frau Ohne Bedeutung was adapted by Thea von Harbou from the 1893 Oscar Wilde comedy A Woman of No Importance. Though updated to the 1930s, the story, concerning a reconciliation between an estranged father and son as orchestrated by an "unimportant" woman, remains the same. Perhaps Wilde had not intended his third act to be quite so melodramatic, but it must be remembered that von Harbou previously worked on such films as Dr. Mabuse and Metropolis. Without a thorough knowledge of German, one is hard-pressed to determine whether or not Wilde's epigrammatic dialogue survived intact. Still, audiences in 1936 were satisfied, as were the producers when Eine Frau Ohne Bedeutung turned out to be a success. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Hans LeibeltKäthe Dorsch, (more)
1934  
 
Author and screenwriter Thea von Harbou, one of the more prominent film writers in Germany to embrace the Hitler regime, briefly tried her hand at movie directing with this and her next project. Elisabeth und der Narr (Elizabeth and the Fool) was based on a story by Walter Reimann, and starred German ingenue Hertha Thiele in a tale of a woman's religious devotion. It was released in January of 1934 after several months in the hands of government censors. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

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1934  
 
The second and last movie directed by screenwriter Thea von Harbou was based on the work of author, poet, and a playwright Gerhart Hauptmann (1862-1946), whose career lasted from the 1880s until just before the Nazi era in Germany. He deliberately ceased writing and withdrew from public life upon Hitler's rise to power -- in turn, ironically, the German film industry immediately seized upon his novella for this adaptation. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

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