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Zu neuen Ufern

  • 1937
  • 1 Std. 46 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,7/10
514
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Zu neuen Ufern (1937)
Drama

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuIn 1846 the actress Gloria Vane is performing at the Adelphi Theatre, London. She is in love with the destitute nobleman Albert Finsbury, who is shortly departing to Australia to become an o... Alles lesenIn 1846 the actress Gloria Vane is performing at the Adelphi Theatre, London. She is in love with the destitute nobleman Albert Finsbury, who is shortly departing to Australia to become an officer in the Queen's regiment. He is supposed to pay his debts before leaving and uses an... Alles lesenIn 1846 the actress Gloria Vane is performing at the Adelphi Theatre, London. She is in love with the destitute nobleman Albert Finsbury, who is shortly departing to Australia to become an officer in the Queen's regiment. He is supposed to pay his debts before leaving and uses an altered cheque to do so. After Finsbury has left, the forgery is discovered. To protect h... Alles lesen

  • Regie
    • Douglas Sirk
  • Drehbuch
    • Lovis Hans Lorenz
    • Kurt Heuser
    • Douglas Sirk
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Zarah Leander
    • Willy Birgel
    • Edwin Jürgensen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,7/10
    514
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Douglas Sirk
    • Drehbuch
      • Lovis Hans Lorenz
      • Kurt Heuser
      • Douglas Sirk
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Zarah Leander
      • Willy Birgel
      • Edwin Jürgensen
    • 10Benutzerrezensionen
    • 6Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
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    Zarah Leander
    Zarah Leander
    • Gloria Vane
    Willy Birgel
    Willy Birgel
    • Sir Albert Finsbury
    Edwin Jürgensen
    • Gouverneur Jones
    Carola Höhn
    Carola Höhn
    • Mary Jones
    Viktor Staal
    Viktor Staal
    • Henry Hoyer
    Erich Ziegel
    • Dr. Magnus Hoyer
    Hilde von Stolz
    Hilde von Stolz
    • Fanny Hoyer
    Jakob Tiedtke
    Jakob Tiedtke
    • Käsefabrikant Wells
    Robert Dorsay
    Robert Dorsay
    • Bobby Wells
    Ernst Legal
    • Stout
    Siegfried Schürenberg
    • Kapitän Gilbert
    Lina Lossen
    • Zuchthausvorsteherin in Paramatta
    Lissy Arna
    Lissy Arna
    • Gefangene Nelly
    Herbert Hübner
    Herbert Hübner
    • Casino-Direktor
    Mady Rahl
    Mady Rahl
    • Soubrette
    Lina Carstens
    Lina Carstens
    • Bänkelsängerin
    Paul Bildt
    Paul Bildt
    • Pfarrer und Friseur
    Boris Alekin
    • Kellner Jim
    • Regie
      • Douglas Sirk
    • Drehbuch
      • Lovis Hans Lorenz
      • Kurt Heuser
      • Douglas Sirk
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
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    8frankde-jong

    Not a film by Douglas Sirk but by Detlef Sierck

    Douglas Sirk (original name Hans Detlef Sierck) is mostly remembered for his American films, and even these ones were long viewed as cheap commercial successes.

    But he also made some (largely forgotten) films in Germany. I don't know why his German films are seldom seen. Is it because one suspects a Nazi flavour? This is not realy the case. Sierck left Nazi Germany relatively late (1937) but his second wife was Jewish and politically he was certainly no supporter of National Socialism. Is it because his German films are real melodrama's? Could be. In his American films beneath the melodrama there is a second layer with hidden criticism on bourgeois moralism. This second layer is absent in his German films if only because they do not play in bourgeois circles but more often in aristocratic circles with their own codes of honor.

    This is not to say that his German films are not worth watching. His two films with the Swedish star Zarah Leander ("Habanera" and "Zu neuen Ufern", both of 1937) are certainly entertaining. Of this two films I prefer "Zu neuen Ufern", in which Zarah Leander plays a tragic woman who seems to fall for the wrong man. The film does have a touch of Brecht in it, and this is not by chance because a few years earlier Sierck directed "The threepenny opera" for stage.
    wlkrrch

    Zarah Leander at her heart-rending best

    Nobody in German cinema ever did melodramatic suffering quite like Zarah Leander, and this - her debut film for UFA in 1937 - shows her at the peak of her allure. She plays a glamorous stage diva, and we first see her on stage in London singing her flirtatious number 'Yes, Sir'. She then takes the wrap for a fraud committed by her British officer lover (played by Willy Birgel) who is on the verge of sailing for Australia, and for her pains she is transported to Australia herself, as a convict.

    In prison, accompanied by her fellow female inmates, she sings a beautiful, sad song directed to her rascally lover: 'I have such a deep longing for you'. She is released from Paramatta prison in order to marry a handsome farmer (played by Viktor Staal) - but she runs away from him, only to discover that the Birgel character is on the verge of marrying the governor's daughter.

    Heartbroken, she tries to return to prison, then to the stage, but is booed by the Australian audience for her gloomy act - a real irony this, since the song she's singing, 'I'm standing in the Rain' is a real beauty, haunting and melancholy, making full use of Leander's lovely contralto voice. Zu Neuen Ufern is a very emotionally involving film, a pointer to the films Detlev Sierck would later make in the US under his anglicised name, Douglas Sirk. Perfect for a rainy Sunday, and proof of the star power of Zarah Leander.
    7agboone7

    A quality effort from German director Douglas Sirk prior to his arrival in America

    Douglas Sirk isn't a director I've explored much. Having only seen a few of his '50s American melodramas, and knowing he had roots as a German filmmaker, I wanted to go back and get a feel for that part of his career. I'd also never seen any films (by any director) made in Germany during the reign of the Nazi regime (i.e. 1933 to 1945), other than "Triumph of the Will", the infamous mega-propaganda documentary by Leni Riefenstahl. So this film had a lot of historical interest for me. What I did not expect, however, was a quality film in its own right. And interestingly, that's exactly what it turned out to be.

    "To New Shores" was a 1937 film directed by Sirk when he was still known by his real name, Detlef Sierck. He had directed seven features and three shorts prior to this film, all for the famous German film studio Universum Film AG (or UFA, for short). The history of UFA is dark and controversial, as they became deeply entrenched in the Nazi machine. Prior to the rise of National Socialism in Germany in 1933, UFA had produced some great films, namely the films of Fritz Lang, such as "Dr. Mabuse: The Gambler", "Die Nibelungen", and "Metropolis". When the Nazis came into power, UFA benefited heavily from it. The Nazis' fascist modus operandi extended to the film industry as well, where they essentially made UFA the official film studio of Nazi Germany (UFA churned out the country's propaganda films, including "Triumph of the Will" in 1935), and forced out the other film studios, leaving UFA with little to no competition in the German film industry. Additionally, the Germans' conquering and occupation of so many other countries across Europe was opening new markets to UFA. In a country under German occupation, the influx of cultural materials, such as films, was heavily regulated by the occupying government, so the Nazis could control exactly what films were available to the people of an occupied nation. And, of course, they made sure that UFA's films were everywhere. Put simply, UFA profited immensely from the Nazis' tyranny in Europe during those years. So, naturally, there's often a sense of moral corruption associated with this particular film studio in terms of its complicity with the Nazis during this part of history.

    Douglas Sirk, too, could be criticized for his contributions to the Nazi machine. Filmmakers like Fritz Lang and Billy Wilder (a screenwriter at the time) bailed out of Germany upon Hitler's rise to power, while directors like Ernst Lubitsch and F.W. Murnau were already working in America. But Sirk didn't leave, at least not right away. For a time he stayed and worked for UFA and, by extension, for the Nazis. That being said, in 1937 (after this film and one more), he finally left Germany, supposedly because of political sentiments and because of his Jewish wife. It's also worth noting that, when he got to America, he made "Hitler's Madman", and overtly anti-Nazi film.

    "To New Shores" stars Zarah Leander, a Swedish singer who apparently was Germany's biggest star actress during the Nazi years, and this, her first film with UFA, was evidently the film that propelled her to stardom (along with Sirk's next film, "La Habanera", which also starred Leander). Admittedly, it's a strong performance. She does quite well.

    Interestingly, the propaganda in this film is actually minimal, all things considered. I found myself surprised that the Nazi government let a film be produced with so little propaganda value. Of course, it was 1937, and the war hadn't begun yet, but still, there's not much here in terms of propaganda. The film is a criticism of social injustice, like much of Sirk's work seems to be ("All That Heaven Allows" is the main example that comes to mind, though, as I said, I haven't seen many of his films). Presumably in order to get the film past the censors, Sirk had to set the film in England, and so all the characters are English, despite speaking German. As a result, the social injustice and cultural decadence depicted in the film can be seen as a criticism of English society specifically, which I'm sure is what the censors were counting on when they passed the film. I do not think, however, that this is how Sirk intended the film to be interpreted. I think Sirk was concerned with social injustice in general and, if anything, in Germany specifically, although he could obviously never convey that kind of message under the strict regulation of the Nazi censors. Nevertheless, much of the cultural criticism in the film has far more implications for Germany than it does for England, and the prison camp to which the female protagonist is sent will inevitably evoke associations with Nazi concentration camps during the war.

    Watching "To New Shores", I was reminded very much of Roberto Rossellini's 1942 film "A Pilot Returns". Both films were made in collaboration with the fascist government that ran their respective countries. Furthermore, the films are very similar in style and tone. "To New Shores" has much less in common with the German cinema of the '20s and even early '30s than it does with, for instance, the concurrent French poetic realism films by directors like Marcel Carné, Jean Renoir, and Julien Duvivier.

    Overall, it's a quality film with solid entertainment value and a fairly engaging narrative. I never expected that UFA would have churned out a real film like this in the years just before the war. In comparison to Sirk's later work in Hollywood, "To New Shores" lacks both the stylized aesthetic and the intense melodrama that marked those films. It's definitely a melodrama, but it's more subtle and understated than films like "All That Heaven Allows" and "Magnificent Obsession". It's not great cinema, but it's a respectable effort that is probably well worth the watch.

    RATING: 6.67 out of 10 stars
    9mdm-11

    Queen of Nazi Germany's Cinema in her best-remembered role

    Zarah Leander, Swedish Import to the German Cinema of the 1930s & 40s, is best known for her stunning beauty and her deep singing voice, both of which would light up a movie screen. Often cast in the role of a suffering, unappreciated woman, this film could be her lifetime signature performance.

    Mistreated by her lover, she nonetheless takes the blame for his criminal activity, accepting a prison sentence, in dim hopes of reuniting with the scoundrel years later. A twist of fate allows her to leave prison, but of course at a price. The predictable plot moves along, including 2 memorable songs, the heartbreaking "Ich steh' I'm Regen" and the up-tempo "Yes, Sir!", both becoming Leander trademarks.

    Like Joan Crawford, Marlene Dietrich, Bette Davis and other Classic Cinema Divas, Zarah Leander has achieved cult status. "Zu neuen Ufern" would be the first film to be mentioned by any fan. Enjoy the drama, and enjoy the queen...the Drama Queen of Old German Cinema at her best!
    8marcin_kukuczka

    At New Shores

    The 1930s was an altogether interesting yet stormy period. Cinema saw that contradiction, too. With 1933, not only did the Hays Code strongly influence the American film industry but so did the Nazi regime in Germany, the country where Expressionism was actually born. With Ufa studios as the center, one had to be correct with the regime's demands and, at the same time, by using some skills and clever methods, one could deliver something powerful enough to absorb a variety of audiences. This movie, the meaningful title of which can be translated as "At New Shores" is a clear manifestation of such an attempt. Made by Detlef Sierck (better known to Americans as Douglas Sirk, a master of Hollywood Melodrama just to name IMITATION OF LIFE), AT NEW SHORES is not only a wonderful mixture of comedy, drama and musical but, foremost, a vehicle for an eminent actress, the name that aroused certain 'discomforts' even for monstrous Goebbels himself, Zarah Leander.

    Most aspects appear to be authentic here and delivered in a fragile manner by the cast but there are actually, to this day, two people who make their portrayals worth deeper analysis: Willi Birgel as Sir Albert and Zarah Leander as Gloria Vane. Let me make some points about them before I move to the artistic aspect of the movie.

    As a matter of fact, this is a movie which made the Swedish actress a star at Ufa Studios after her first German film PREMIERE (which was not at Ufa). A debut at the studio and a true ZARAH LEANDER film at first sight. As a newcomer at the time (1937), she makes her entrance as an artistic personality, a character capable of loving and waiting, a suffering 'product to identify with' for female audiences bringing to light certain mechanisms of social hypocrites (mind you that the story is not set in Germany in order not to evoke some controversial interpretations or misunderstanding but... in England and, foremost, in Australia – the safest choice of locale seen as a 'new land'). She is a character of a typical woman of her films, echoes certain features widespread at the time bringing everything to pinnacle of melancholy. The Paramatta sequence as well as the trial accurately address the social conventions and question their morality. It is, however, foremost afflicted and influenced by women's emancipation, women's rights - a handkerchief for sensitive female viewers necessary. Here, Zarah's Gloria Vane draws parallels to many femme fatales of the time, including ROMANZE IN MOLL or DER WEG INS FREIE (Way To Freedom) which clearly draws parallels to this film along with its title. More to say, the camera seems to celebrate her face (as it was in case of Garbo at Hollywood). And yet...Zarah is twice an artist: with her deep voice, she does not play so memorably as she sings memorably (I will develop this aspect with music of the film).

    It is, however, not the woman who suffers most and jerks our tears to the very end. It is Sir Albert, a seemingly noble man of prospects in life, of promising marriage with beautiful Mary and, despite everything, a character of strong personal conflicts, destructive torments. Willi Birgel, being Zarah's favorite co-star, delivers a unique portrayal of shadowed character never remaining in the shadow of our attention. Although we mostly see him from her pretentious perspective, the actor manages to draw a vibrant personality. Now let me move to general artistic merits of the film.

    Great cinematography supplies a viewer with exceptional visual experience. Wolfgang Paul in Der Tagesspiegel (1974) and Thomas Kramer in Reclams Lexikon Des Deutschen Films (1995) observe certain details on that point. The cinematography, strongly influenced by German Expressionism, makes a lot of scenes memorably echo haunting whispers within the screen art introduced by Murnau or Pabst. Mind you the shadows at Alfred's tragic night or his leave for Australia and Zarah's image at the harbor, practically the iconic image of the movie's content. Two more aspects, actually, serve undeniable aid in evoking the film's mood: MUSIC and RAIN.

    Music is in the hands of Zarah Leander, she delivers her lines in singing, her songs aid the melancholy of the whole atmosphere as well as provoke contradictions. Additionally, the costumes deliver visual taste. Mind you two songs end with an almost religious reference to Alleluia and Amen. The song the film is probably most famous for, "Yes Sir" clearly delivers the sentiments of the time (the 1930s) rather than the 19th century when the action of the film is set. But...no need for historical accuracy in a movie like this. And rain...something typical for romantic sorrows, tear-jerking sentimentality, soap opera-like impressions. In one of her songs, she sings about standing in the rain drawing a clear metaphor to tormented states of mind and heart. That bears resemblance with the storytelling of many of her films, not only this one.

    All in all, an interesting film to see, an important work of art from the historical and dramatic standpoint. The hidden meaning within the name 'Gloria' along with the surprising and jubilant conclusion at the finale still lead the viewer towards the new shores of classical movie viewing and its interpretation.

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    • Wissenswertes
      German censorship visa # B. 45781 delivered on 20-7-1937.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Hitlers Frauen: Zarah Leander - Die Sängerin (2001)
    • Soundtracks
      Yes Sir
      Music by Ralph Benatzky

      Lyrics by Ralph Benatzky

      Performed by Elfriede Datzig

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 5. September 1937 (Finnland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Deutschland
    • Sprache
      • Deutsch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • To New Shores
    • Drehorte
      • Ufa-Atelier, Neubabelsberg, Brandenburg, Deutschland
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Universum Film (UFA)
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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 46 Minuten
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      • Black and White
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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