Max Guelstorff Movies
Also known as General House Cleaning, this is the story of an enterprising young girl who starts a housekeeping service. While plying her trade in a high-toned mansion, she makes the acquaintance of a wealthy young man, dressed up as common laborer for a masquerade. Never guessing the lad's true identity, our heroine falls in love with him on the spot, leading to complications that should be familiar to any fan of screwball comedy. The American salability of Gross Reinemachen was enhanced by the fact that its star, Anny Ondra, was the wife of former heavyweight champion Max Schmeling. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Marianne Hoppe, Fita Benkhoff, (more)
Susanne im Bade (A Study in Suzanne) is all about art professor Peter (Hans Brausewetter), who while relaxing at the beach sketches a quick picture of bathing beauty Gussy (Manja Behrens). He redoes the sketch in oil in his studio, and in the process the girl on the canvas loses her swimsuit (Peter has a vivid, and surprisingly accurate, imagination). When the painting shows up at an exhibition, rumors spread that Gussy posed in the nude for Peter. An attempt to clear Gussy's name is scotched by Peter's jealous sweetheart Erika (Erika von Thelmann), leaving our innocent hero at the mercy of Gussy's far-from-understanding daddy (Max Guelstorff). One wonders if the harmless Susanne im Bade was the sort of German entertainment fare that such art experts as Hermann Goering and Paul Goebbels would deride as decadent. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Max Guelstorff, Erich Fiedler, (more)
Crudely retitled Kidnapped Ladies for American consumption, Raub der Sabinerinnem is a comical spin on the legendary abduction of the Sabine Women. A bookish college professor (Max Guelstorff) is busily staging a theatrical production based on the story of the Sabines when a two-bit theatrical producer (Bernhard Wildenhain) catches a rehearsal. Inspired, the producer talks the professor into converting his serious drama into a farce comedy, complete with a tap-dancing finale. Somehow this enables the mild-mannered professor to win the love of the heroine, a cabaret dancer. Raud der Sabinerinnem was adapted from a popular stage comedy by the Schoenthan Brothers. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Max Guelstorff, Maria Koppenhofer, (more)
Per its title, the plotline of this film is motivated by a counterfeit $50 bill. The funny money is passed to shopgirl Christa (Lucie Englisch), who, fearful of being arrested, hides it in a baby's piggy bank at her home. In dire need of money, Christa's sister "robs" the bank and puts the bill into circulation. Eventually, the faux banknote falls into the hands of Frau Lehmann (Kathe Haack), the mother of a banker (Theo Lindgren); the banker just happens to be in love with Christa. The plot alone is enough to induce chuckles, but the producers of Ein Falscher Fuffzinger felt the need to truckle to the lowest common denominator by throwing in a whole bunch of gratuitous slapstick. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Theo Lingen, Kaethe Haack, (more)
Annette (Ursula Grabley) finds herself an overnight millionairess when she inherits a thriving factory town. Rather than assume ownership by right of blood, Annette elects to learn the factory's business from the ground up, thus she takes a job as typist for chairman-of-the-board Bertuch (Max Guelstorff). The remainder of the story is a romantic tug of war as Annette is courted by both Bertuch and humble employee Siebert (Hans Soenker). The musical numbers seem to have been put together on an assembly line and accordingly are performed in the most perfunctory manner possible. Not one of the better German tunefests of the 1930s, Annette Im Paradies still managed to turn a neat profit. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Ursula Grabley, Hans Söhnker, (more)
The English-language title of this German comedy is Dissatisfied Woman. That's putting it mildly: Lisa Brandt (Fita Benkoff) is not only dissatisfied but downright contemptuous of her old-fashioned husband Paul (Johannes Riemann). She wants to modernize their home, but he can't bear to part with such vestiges of the past as a worn-out radio, an ancient car, and the gas stove in the bathroom. On the advice of her friends, Lisa tries to "cure" her husband by pretending she doesn't recognize him any more and by treating him as a total stranger. When wifey caps her deception by pretending to make love to the family doctor, hubby is snapped out of his antiquated ways immediately! ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Fita Benkhoff, Wolfgang Liebeneiner, (more)
Schabernack (Hoax) gets under way when heroine Eva (Trude Marlen) finds herself too broke to open her hotel for the season. Next door to Eva's establishment is a sanitarium, chock full of wealthy eccentrics. When the sanitarium burns down, its occupants move into Eva's hotel, whereupon it is assumed by the townsfolk that the girl is now in charge of a lunatic asylum. Thus it is that a wealthy and decidedly non-eccentric customer who checks in at the hotel is considered to be crazy and treated accordingly. All of this Marx Brothers-like zaniness is offset by the "normal" romance between Eva and her headwaiter Peter (Paul Hoerbiger). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Paul Hoerbiger, Trude Marlen, (more)
Heisses Blut (Hot Blood) is a vehicle for musical-comedy favorite Marika Roekk, who always did better with the public than she did with critics. Set in Hungary, the story centers on a once-wealthy family, now on their uppers. Heroine Marika von Koeroessy (Roekk) is willing to give up almost everything she has to keep her loved ones out of debtor's prison. But Marika draws the line at selling her beloved horse Satan, and it is this refusal that motivates the rest of the plot. Most of the songs in Heisses Blut are traditional Gypsy tunes, of a sort that would soon be banned by the racist Hitler regime. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Marika Rökk, Paul Kemp, (more)
Schwarze Walfisch (The Black Whale) is the German-language version of the Marcel Pagnol masterpiece Fanny. Replacing the virtually irreplaceable Raimu as philosophical innkeeper Panisse is Emil Jannings, no small talent in his own right. When Panisse's son Marius (Franz Nicklisch) goes off to sea, he leaves his pregnant sweetheart Fanny (Angela Sokker) to fend for herself. The old barkeep tries to patch things up by marrying off Fanny to his middle-aged friend Cesar (Max Guelstorff), who adopts the girl's baby as his own. Years later, Marius returns, demanding that both Fanny and the child return to him. But by now Fanny is loyal to her homely but faithful Cesar, and it is Marius who ends up empty-handed. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Emil Jannings, Max Guelstorff, (more)
Brigette Helm stars as a disillusioned movie extra who makes a speedy exit from a Viennese movie studio while still wearing her elegant costume. She heads off to a resort in Monte Cristo, where she poses as a wealthy countess (she's certainly dressed for it!) Jewel thief Gustaf Gruendgens and swindler Rudolf Forster help Helm carry off her masquerade for larcenous reasons of their own, but Forster spoils everyone's plans by falling in love with the girl. Graefin von Monte Cristo served as the basis for the 1934 Universal comedy The Countess of Monte Cristo, with Fay Wray in the starring role. The property was remade in 1948 as a musical vehicle for skating-star Sonja Henie. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Brigitte Helm, Rudolf Forster, (more)
Mensch Ohne Namen (Men Without Names) is a modernized adaptation of Honore de Balzac's Colonel Chabert. Long believed dead, WWI captain Heinrich Martin (Werner Kraus) returns to Berlin after a 16-year absence. Suffering from amnesia, Martin suddenly remembers that he has a wife and that he used to run a successful auto-manufacturing business. Not surprisingly, his wife has remarried, and his business is now the property of her second husband. Vainly, Martin battles the bureaucracy to regain ownership of his business but is forced to give up the fight. He starts life anew in a poor, provincial community, finding happiness with a pretty typist. Thanks to his new wife's business savvy, Martin is able to regain his status in the manufacturing world and becomes a millionaire all over again. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Werner Krauss, Mathias Wiemann, (more)
- Starring:
- Camilla Horn, Berthe Ostyn, (more)
Telegraph operator Hans Albers wins a fortune at the racetrack, immediately shooting his wad on a new wardrobe. It is Albers' hope to impress Kaethe Von Nagy, the daughter of a wealthy American banker. Even when he's lost all his money, our hero contrives to stay near the girl by hiring himself out as a gigolo in the hotel where she is staying. He ends up back where he started, manning the telegraph board -- and in this capacity he wins the girl by saving her father from financial ruin. Is it any surprise that the film's title translates as The Winner? (Incidentally, the film was ultimately released as Liebe ist Liebe). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Hans Albers, Kaethe von Nagy, (more)
Music, drama and comedy are neatly integrated in this low-key backstage romance. After a lengthy spell of unemployment, leading man Paul Hartwig (Willy Forst) and leading lady Lisa Brandes (Dolly Haas) prepare to open in a big-time stage musical. Is it any surprise that Paul and Lisa also manage to fall in love? Their story is but one of several leading to the inevitable "big opening"; other subplots involve the director, the composer, the supporting players, the chorus and the technical crew. So Ein Maedel Vergisst Man Nicht is one of the few "putting on a show" endeavors in which it appears that a real show is actually being put on. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Dolly Haas, Willi Forst, (more)
In this drama, set in Germany during the reign of Kaiser Wilhelm, a practical joker cons a town. It is based upon the true tale of a daring shoemaker who dons a captain's uniform and leads a troop of soldiers into a small town of Koepenick. He immediately places the mayor and the treasurer under arrest and absconds with the town coffer. When the townfolk learn that they have been the butt of a joke that criticized their blind acceptance of anyone in uniform they are angry. The cobbler confesses his action and is sent to prison. The Kaiser, a man with a sense of humor, gives him a pardon. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Max Adalbert, Willi Schur, (more)
- Starring:
- Emil Jannings, Renate Mueller, (more)
This German crime drama was based on a true story. Willy Forst stars as a poverty-stricken Italian glazier who falls in love with French hotel maid Rosa Valletti. Struck by the girl's resemblance to Leonardo Da Vinci's Mona Lisa, Forst manages to steal the painting from the Louvre in hopes of impressing his sweetheart. But when the girl proves to be a fickle sort, the crestfallen hero confesses his crime and is carted off to jail. Unwilling to admit that he'd been led astray by a woman, Forst claims that he stole the Mona Lisa to restore it to his native Italy, and as a result is hailed as a national hero! Raub der Mona Lisa was distributed in the U.S. by RKO Radio, under the title The Theft of the Mona Lisa. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Willi Forst, Trude von Molo, (more)
Also known as Darling of the Gods, this was Emil Jannings' second talkie appearance. Jannings stars as famed operatic singer Albert Winkelmann, who is greeted with cheers, applause and romantic propositions whenever he performs in his native Vienna. But when he embarks on a tour of South America, tragedy strikes. The sweltering climate causes Winkelmann to lose his voice on stage, a disaster met with hoots and cat-calls. Dispirited he returns to Europe, where he soon learns that no one is aware of what happened in South America. Intending to retire so as not to be exposed to further humiliation, Winkelmann is goaded back on stage -- where, miraculously, his gorgeous voice returns. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Emil Jannings, Renate Mueller, (more)
The German Mascottchen was inspired by the Bromme operetta of the same name. Had the producers waited a few months, they could have included Bromme's songs, and thus spared themselves the slings and arrows of abrasive music lovers. Kathe Von Nagy stars as a Budapest salesgirl who, through luck and pluck, becomes a celebrated musical comedy star. Along the way, she does her best to help her boyfriend, a two-bit ham actor. The "hero" repays her kindness by leaving her for another woman, but by the third-act curtain he comes to his senses and returns to Von Nagy. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Rudolf Rittner, Max Guelstorff, (more)
Upon the death of a mittel-European prime minister, baroness Olga Tschechowa, the minister's mistress, is unceremoniously booted from the royal palace. In retaliation, the baroness claims she has in her possession a copy of the late prime minister's memoirs, the publication of which will bring about the ruination of all her political enemies. Pretty soon, the hypocritical courtiers and politicians who'd expelled her from the palace are fawning all over the baroness, hoping to be spared her wrath. Grand duke Willy Fritsch suspects that the allegedly scandalous memoirs do not actually exist, but he cares not: by film's end, he's fallen madly in love with the crafty baroness. Some above-average cinematography distinguishes this hectic boudoir farce. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Max Hansen
A jealous husband becomes enraged with his dinner guests when they pretend to kiss the silhouetted shadow of his beautiful wife. Fritz Kortner, Ruth Weyher, Gustav Von Wagenheim, and Alexander Granach co-star in this German feature where a seemingly innocent romantic indiscretion is met with violent retribution. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide









