Αγγλικά Τίτλος: The Burning Secret Γαλλικά Τίτλος: Fin de saison Ρωσική τίτλος: Жгучая тайна Πρωτότυπος τίτλος: Brennendes Geheimnis
Παραλλαγές εναλλακτικών τίτλων: To mystikon pou kaiei / Das brennende Geheimnis
Drama – Deutsches Reich, Österreich Έτος παραγωγής: 1932 Διάρκεια: 92 λεπτά
Σκηνοθεσία: Robert Siodmak Σεναριογράφος: Stefan Zweig, Friedrich Kohner Κάμερα: Robert Baberske, Richard Angst Μουσική: Allan Gray
Υπόθεση:
Brennendes Geheimnis is the last film that Robert Siodmak made in Germany before the Nazis came to power, forcing him to leave the country and pursue his filmmaking career elsewhere (first France, then America). Siodmak is best known for his atmospheric film noir thrillers and dramas, whereas this is quite a different kind of film – a poignant coming-of-age drama, with a striking realism and intimacy, lightened by a few musical interludes and some deliciously tongue-in-cheek comedy.
Adapted from a story by Stefan Zweig, the film recounts a teenage boy’s painful first steps towards adulthood. The certainties of childhood, the boy’s absolute confidence in grown-ups, his firm belief in the goodness of the world, are brutally shaken when he realises he is complicit in his mother’s adultery. Siodmak captures brilliantly not just the humour of the situation (as seen by an adults), but also the tragic dimension (as experienced by the boy). There’s also a stunning, and actually rather sinister, dream sequence mid-way through the film in which the director pays homage to German expressionism of the 1920s.
»Brennendes Geheimnis« is one of the Siodmak’s most poetic and engaging films, exploring the frailties of human nature with genuine compassion, insight and more than a touch of irony. The psychology is very sophisticated for a film of this era, with a daringly subversive subtext that suggests Edgar’s future emotional life could be very traumatic indeed. It’s revealing that Edgar is less hurt by his mother’s betrayal than by the fact that the stranger he has come to idolise should prefer his mother’s company to his. It’s not too hard to see why the Nazis decided to ban the film.