Anna Susanna is an East German drama film directed by Richard Nicolas. It was released in 1953.

Anna Susanna
Directed byRichard Nicolas
Written byRichard Nicolas
Produced byAdolf Hannemann
StarringGünther Simon
CinematographyEmil Schünemann, Wolf Göthe
Edited byLieselotte Johl
Music byHorst Hanns Sieber
Production
company
Distributed byProgress Film
Release date
  • 27 February 1953 (1953-02-27)
Running time
92 minutes
CountryEast Germany
LanguageGerman

Plot edit

During the Great Depression, a rich businessman named Brinkmann decides sink his ship, Anna Susanna, so he would be compensated by the insurance. He orders its captain, Kleiers, to sabotage it while at sea. When Kleiers carries out his instructions, several sailors and passengers notice him. In a fight that ensues, the captain is killed, but not before he manage to shipwreck Anna Susanna. Only a handful of people survive the incident. After they return home, they discover that Brinkmann's insurance fraud worked and he was compensated. They sue him at court and manage to have him indicted.

Cast edit

Production edit

During 1952, as the government control over DEFA tightened, the studio produced only six films, all of them influenced by the Cold War and dedicated to the ideological struggle between capitalism and socialism. Anna Susanna was one of those.[1] Although the film had a plot suiting the government's policy, the DEFA Board was very reluctant to allow Richard Nicolas, for whom the picture was his debut as a director, to make Anna Susanna. Nicolas had threatened to resign if he would not be allowed to direct it, and was eventually granted permission.[2] The film was also noted for being one of the first DEFA pictures to employ primitive special effects, such as building a miniature ship model that was wrecked in an aquarium.[3]

Reception edit

Heinz Kersten quoted an East German official who told that "the times in which pictures like Anna Susanna, that damaged the image of DEFA in the eyes of the people... should not return."[4] The West German Catholic Film Service described it as "rather well-developed, thrilling crime film... but filled with typical criticism of the capitalist system."[5]

References edit

  1. ^ Sylvia Klötzer. Satire und Macht: Film, Zeitung, Kabarett in der DDR. Böhlau Verlag (2005). ISBN 978-3-412-15005-1. Page 28.
  2. ^ Ralf Schenk. Das zweite Leben der Filmstadt Babelsberg. DEFA- Spielfilme 1946–1992. ISBN 978-3-89487-175-8. Page 67.
  3. ^ Werner Reff, István Vásárhelyi. Der Filmtrick und der Trickfilm. Fotokinoverlag VEB (1963). ASIN B0000BT6IC. Pages 21–22.
  4. ^ Heinz Kersten. Das Filmwesen in der Sowjetischen Besatzungszone Deutschlands. Bundesministerium für Gesamtdeutsche Fragen (1963). ASIN B0000BK48Q. page 38.
  5. ^ Anna Susanna on the German Film Lexicon.

External links edit