Gerhard Scheumann

  • Walter Heynowski & Gerhard Scheumann – I Was, I Am, I Shall Be (1974)

    1971-1980DocumentaryGerhard ScheumannGermanyPoliticsWalter Heynowski

    Quote:
    In the spring of 1974, a camera team from Studio H&S succeeded against the explicit orders of the Chilean Junta’s Chancellery, entered into two large concentration camps in the north of the country — Chacabuco and Pisagua — leaving with filmed sequences and sound recordings.

    1974 Special Jury Prize, Leipzig Documentary and Short Film Week
    1974 Jury Prize, Grenoble International Documentary Film Festival
    1974 Silver Sestertius, Nyon International Documentary Film FestivalRead More »

  • Walter Heynowski & Gerhard Scheumann – Piloten im Pyjama (1968)

    1961-1970DocumentaryGerhard ScheumannGermanyPoliticsWalter Heynowski

    “This film, actually several feature films combined into one, consists entirely of interviews with American POWs in North Vietnam. The Americans talk at great length about their lives, values, and Vietnam experiences, in consistently fascinating exchanges with the invisible interviewers. In the process, more is revealed than intended, on both sides. The American testimonies should be published in the West for light they throw on the new impersonal, ‘remote-control’ killers of our day: ‘honourable men’, all of them. But the East German revelation is equally fascinating; for the obscene but quite serious premise of this film, in their eyes, is that these were freely conducted interviews among equals.Read More »

  • Walter Heynowski & Gerhard Scheumann – Der lachende Mann – Bekenntnisse eines Mörders (1966)

    1961-1970Amos Vogel: Film as a Subversive ArtDocumentaryGerhard ScheumannGermanyPoliticsWalter Heynowski

    Amos Vogel, Film as a Subversive Art:
    Posing as a West German TV production crew, the two East German directors of this film persuaded a former leading German mercenary of the Congo civil war (one of many!) to discuss his activities and heroic achievements in what is surely one of the most sensational exposés of its kind. Continually smiling or laughing, this man, a self-acknowledged Nazi, proudly reveals that he went to the Congo to save Western civilization from Bolshevism – to complete the work of the Nazis. Dressed in his military jungle uniform (with his Second World War decorations) he waxes eloquent about the ‘colours’ of South Africa, ‘explains’ apartheid, and freely discusses his ‘adventures’. Shots of corpses, tortures, and executions of Blacks are intercut. It is not often that one can see and hear a real, ‘live’ Nazi in action, talking (more or less) freely because he presumed himself to be among friends instead of with two of the most clever political propagandists of our time, working for the other side.Read More »

  • Walter Heynowski – O.K. (1964)

    1961-1970Amos Vogel: Film as a Subversive ArtDocumentaryGermanyPoliticsWalter Heynowski

    Quote:
    This fascinating and unique film is unfortunately almost entirely unknown in the West. The girl Doris S. leaves East Germany in 1961 to join her father in West Germany. Three years later, she returns and tells the camera why she returned. The reason is simple: West Germany is a country or moral and sexual corruption, full of bars, American soldiers, American cars, alcohol, and prostitution. Doris S. succumbed to both commercial sex and drinking, but finally decided to return to clean living in East Germany. Clearly designed to discourage actual or potential emigration from East into West Germany, the film nevertheless operates on a second, unintended level as well. For in this lengthy interview, Doris reveals non-verbal and unmistakable signs of fear and coercion, reinforced by the stentorian, Prussian style of the interviewer (rather, cross-examiner).Read More »

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