[1]Pillars of Society (German: Stützen der Gesellschaft) is a 1935 German drama film directed by Detlef Sierck (later known as Douglas Sirk) and starring Heinrich George, Maria Krahn and Albrecht Schoenhals.[2][1] It is based on the eponymous play by Henrik Ibsen.[3]

Quick Facts Directed by, Written by ...
Pillars of Society
Thumb
Directed byDetlef Sierck
Written byKarl Peter Gillmann
Georg C. Klaren
Based onThe Pillars of Society by Henrik Ibsen
Produced byErnst Krüger
Fred Lyssa
Robert Neppach
Hans Herbert Ulrich
StarringHeinrich George
Maria Krahn
Albrecht Schoenhals
CinematographyCarl Drews
Edited byFriedel Buckow
Music byFranz R. Friedl
Production
company
Distributed byUFA
Release date
  • 21 December 1935 (1935-12-21)
Running time
85 minutes
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman
Close

The film's sets were designed by the art directors Otto Guelstorff and Hans Minzloff. It was shot at the Babelsberg Studios in Berlin and on location in Hamburg and the Danish island of Bornholm.

Synopsis

In America, at the turn of the twentieth century, Norwegian immigrant Johann Tonnessen is a successful farmer. A friend of his, who manages a circus, invites Johann to travel with the circus on their upcoming tour of Norway and return to the town Johann emigrated from twenty years before.

Meanwhile, in Johann's hometown in Norway, Consul Karsten Bernick is one of the wealthiest, most celebrated citizens. He rules the town and owns a shipyard, which he intends to hand down eventually to his beloved young son Olaf, who is obsessed with America and the Wild West. Consul Bernick's wife Betty is Johann's sister. The Bernicks also have a young woman living with them named Dina, an orphan they adopted as a child. Bernick treats Dina with kindness, but his wife treats her like a maid.

When the circus arrives in town, Dina and Olaf are thrilled and excited to meet Johann, but the rest of the town reacts coolly to him. It turns out they all believe Dina is Johann's illegitimate child, which Dina has been kept unaware of. As Dina and Johann get to know each other, an attraction grows. Dina hates the town, and Johann invites Dina to come to America with him to work on his farm and start a new life.

Consul Bernick visits Johann and admits that he has been telling the town Dina is Johann's illegitimate daughter, when she is actually Bernick's own illegitimate daughter. Bernick promises to tell Dina this, but before he has a chance, Betty scolds her for taking Olaf to the circus, where they both spent time with Johann. Betty thinks this is scandalous. Dina runs back to the circus, where she reveals to Johann that Bernick has also been telling the entire town for years that Johann embezzled a large sum of money from Bernick's company, before leaving for America twenty years before. Johann confronts Bernick about this additional lie. Bernick admits he felt the lie about the embezzlement was necessary to cover his own business failures and maintain his place in society until he could reestablish his fortune.

Meanwhile, Dina finally learns that Bernick is her father. Johann and Dina demand Bernick reveal the whole truth to the town, but Bernick begs for time. His railroad line, on which he has bet his entire fortune, will be completed in two months. Bernick wants to protect his business empire, in order to hand it to his son. Johann and Dina agree to leave for two months, but promise to return. If Bernick has not told the town the truth by then, Johann threatens to reveal the whole truth himself.

Terrified of being revealed as a liar, Bernick arranges for the ship Johann and Dina plan to sail on to depart overloaded, in the middle of a serious storm, hoping it will sink. However, Johann and Dina leave the ship at the last minute, due to the storm, and stay in the town. Meanwhile, young Olaf secretly stows away on the ship, desperate to see America with his uncle Johann and Dina, since he has been dreaming of it his whole life.

As the storm hits the town and the ship fires distress flares, Bernick and his wife discover Olaf has run away and is on the ship. Johann goes out in a boat with local fishermen to rescue people from the sinking ship and succeeds in saving Olaf. Meanwhile, Bernick nearly drowns attempting to crawl out onto the rocks in the storm to save Olaf. As Bernick lies dying, Johann reunites Olaf with his father. Bernick names Johann as his heir to run the company, then dies.

Some time later, Johann, Dina and Olaf launch the first new ship whose construction Johann has overseen, which they christen “Happy Future.”

Appearance dates and deviating film titles

The film was premiered in Berlin on 21 December 1935 in Germany. In the US, he had his premiere about a year later, on November 6, 1936. The film also appeared in France under the title Les Piliers de la Société, in Italy under the title Le Colonne della Società and in Portugal under title Pilares Sociedade.[4]

Production notes

Filming took place in September and October 1935. The filming locations were Potsdam, Hamburg and Bornholm (in Denmark). Hans Minzloff and Otto Gülstorff were responsible for the film construction. Fred Lyssa held the production and manufacturing line.[4]

Cast

References

Bibliography

Wikiwand in your browser!

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.

Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.