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The Sinner
(Die Sünderin)

Screening on Film
Directed by Willi Forst.
With Gustav Fröhlich, Hildegard Knef.
West Germany, 1950, 35mm, black & white, 87 min.
German with English subtitles.

When it was released in 1950, The Sinner inspired vigorous protests and caused huge controversy for a film industry just getting back on its feet. Its tale of a young woman who survives as a prostitute after the war and later falls in love with a dying artist shocked conservatives and religious authorities. A popular actor and director of comedies since the 1920s, director Forst, in his first postwar movie, reveals a considerable feeling for melodrama. His narration proceeds without any sensationalism, and the theme of a great, ill-fated love is skillfully developed through the unfolding memories of the woman. Hildegard Knef, who had left Germany for Hollywood, returned to make The Sinner and subsequently became one of the German cinema’s biggest stars.

Part of film series

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After the War/Before the Wall: German Film 1945–1960

Current and upcoming film series

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The Reincarnations of Delphine Seyrig