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Redhead
(Die Rote)

Olaf Möller in Conversation with Eric Rentschler
Screening on Film
Directed by Helmut Käutner.
With Ruth Leuwerik, Rossano Brazzi, Giorgio Albertazzi.
West Germany/Italy, 1962, 35mm, black & white, 100 min.
German with English subtitles.
Print source: Deutsche Kinemathek

Die Rote marks another unhappy meeting between Young German Literature and cinema’s Altbranche (as the movie establishment was derisorily called). Only that the stakes here were higher than in the case of Der gläserne Turm. Here, major public figures clashed. Alfred Andersch, the author of Die Rote, was one of the most vociferous and politically opinionated characters in the Federal Republic’s literary scene at the time, while Helmut Käutner, arguably the best known and respected director around, was one of the few figures of his trade the average viewer would be able to recognize and, most likely, respond to with positive feelings. When the film premiered at the Berlinale ’62, Andersch attacked Käutner at the press conference, complaining about the dialogues, to which Käutner reportedly only replied: But you wrote them…! Nevertheless: The ‘62 intellectual set’s sympathies were with Andersch; Käutner didn’t stand a chance. He was merely a remnant from a dead world. This broodingly existentialist-cum-cosmopolitan mood piece about a woman leaving a useless man behind while getting drawn into a perverse game of cat-and-mouse between a shady Western allies-affiliated operator and a flamboyantly jovial Nazi in hiding became a critical as well as box office disaster and saw to Käutner’s slow withdrawal from cinema; his major works thereafter were created for television.

Redhead (Die Rote) introduction and post-screening discussion with Haden Guest, Olaf Möller and Eric Rentschler.

PRECEDED BY

  • To All the Lonely Ones (Den Einsamen allen)

    Directed by Franz Schömbs.
    1962, 35mm, color, 8 min.

Part of film series

Read more

Mapping Gray Zones.
The Inexact Beauty of Early West German Cinema, 1949 – 1963