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The Rabbit Is Me

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Director
  
Kurt Maetzig

Duration
  

Language
  
German

7/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama, Romance

Country
  
East Germany

The Rabbit Is Me movie poster

Release date
  
26 October 1965 (1965-10-26)

Writer
  
Manfred Bieler (novel), Manfred Bieler (screenplay), Kurt Maetzig

Initial release
  
October 26, 1965 (East Germany)

Cast
  
Angelika Waller
(Maria Morzeck),
Alfred Müller
(Paul Deister),
Ilse Voigt
(Tante Hete),
Wolfgang Winkler
(Dieter Morzeck),
Carmen-Maja Antoni
(Schulfreundin),
Irma Münch
(Gabriele Deister)

Music director
  
Reiner Bredemeyer, Gerhard Rosenfeld

Screenplay
  
Kurt Maetzig, Manfred Bieler

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,
Berlin um die Ecke
,
Der Hauptmann von Köln
,
Der Fremde
,
Bumerang-Bumerang

Tagline
  
Drama Romance DEFA EastGermany Political Judge DDR

The Rabbit Is Me (German: Das Kaninchen bin ich) is an East German dramatic film directed by Kurt Maetzig. It was filmed in 1965, and based on the novel by Manfred Bieler.

Contents

The Rabbit Is Me movie scenes

Plot

The Rabbit Is Me movie scenes

Nineteen-year-old Maria Morzeck dreams of studying Slavistics, but her hopes are shattered when her brother, Dieter, is sent to prison after being convicted of sedition against the state. She cannot enter college, and becomes a waitress. Maria meets and falls in love with Paul Deister, an older, married man who turns out to be the judge who convicted her brother. Their affair ends when Deister is exposed as hypocritical and corrupt. After Dieter's release, he learns of his sister's relationship with the judge and assaults her. Eventually, Maria distances herself from both of them, and decides to pursue her forgotten dream.

Cast

The Rabbit Is Me movie scenes

  • Angelika Waller as Maria Morzeck
  • Alfred Müller as Paul Deister
  • Ilse Voigt as Aunt Hete
  • Wolfgang Winkler as Dieter Morzeck
  • Irma Münch as Gabriele Deister
  • Rudolf Ulrich as Grambov
  • Helmut Schellhardt as the mayor
  • Annemarie Esper as Edith
  • Willi Schrade as Ulli
  • Willi Narloch as Oscar
  • Production

    The Rabbit Is Me movie scenes

    The film was based on Manfred Bieler's book Maria Morzeck or the Rabbit is Me. It was made in the aftermath of the VI Party Congress of the Socialist Unity Party at January 1963, during which the establishment allowed a measure of liberalization in the cultural life of East Germany. Although Bieler's novel was highly critical of the court system, he and Maetzig took care to include several "alibi scenes" in the film that were intended to put the state in a better light and also prevent the banning of the picture. The scenes were also meant to present the judicial reforms that took place between 1961 and 1963.

    Reception

    The short era of liberalization ended gradually when Leonid Brezhnev took power in the Soviet Union and introduced a conservative, more repressive course on cultural questions. The film, alongside eleven other cinematic works that were deemed politically damaging, was banned by the Central Committee of the SED at its XI Plenum in December 1965. It was only made legal again in 1990. The banned films were known as "cellar films" or "rabbit films" - the second sobriquet having been derived from the film's title.

    At 1990, shortly before the collapse of the Eastern Bloc, the picture was released for public screening, and presented in the Berlin and Locarno film festivals. In 1995 it was elected as one of the 100 most important German films by a group of historians and critics.

    Daniela Berghahn noted that The Rabbit Is Me was unprecedented in its portrayal of judicial corruption, sexual themes and criticism of the East German establishment.

    Literature

  • Günter Adge (Hrsg.): Kahlschlag. Das 11. Plenum des ZK der SED. Studien und Dokumente. 2. erweiterte Auflage. Aufbau Taschenbuch, Berlin 2000, ISBN 3-7466-8045-X.
  • Christiane Mückenberger (Hrsg.): Prädikat: Besonders schädlich. Filmtexte. Henschel Verlag, Berlin 1990, ISBN 3-362-00478-4.
  • Ingrid Poss, Peter Warnecke (Hrsg.): Spur der Filme. Zeitzeugen über die DEFA. Links, Berlin 2006, ISBN 3-86153-401-0, (Schriftenreihe der DEFA-Stiftung).
  • Neues Deutschland, 6. Januar 1966.
  • Frankfurter Rundschau 1990.
  • References

    The Rabbit Is Me Wikipedia
    The Rabbit Is Me IMDb The Rabbit Is Me themoviedb.org


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