52 Weeks Make A Year

52 Wochen sind ein Jahr
Directed by Richard Groschopp
Produced by Hans-Joachim Schoeppe
Written by Richard Groschopp
Jurij Brezan
Starring Hans Wehrl
Music by Hans Hendrik Wehding
Cinematography Joachim Hasler, Erich Gusko
Edited by Waltraut von Zehmen-Heinicke
Production
company
Distributed by Progress Film
Release date
  • 17 November 1955 (1955-11-17)
Running time
88 minutes
Country East Germany
Language German

52 Weeks Make A Year (German: 52 Wochen sind ein Jahr) is an East German film directed by Richard Groschopp. It was released in 1955.

Plot

In a little Sorbian village in East Germany, old farmer Krestan owns a little land and few animals, which he intends to inherit to his daughter Lena. When the government announces a plan to collectivize all the farms, Krestan is reluctant to hand over his property, and his neighbors share his sentiments. But when they realize the great advantages of collective ownership, they happily join in.

Cast

  • Hans Wehrl as Krestan Serbin
  • Lotte Loebinger as Serbinowa
  • Irene Korb as Lena
  • Kurt Oligmüller as Peter
  • Erich Franz as Gessner
  • Fritz Schlegel as Ladusch
  • Lore Frisch as Sonja
  • Fabian Wander as Herbert
  • Johannes Arpe as Müller
  • Dorothea Thiesing as Marta
  • Aribert Grimmer as Baumann
  • Hans Joachim Schölermann as Professor
  • William Gade as Kubank
  • Heinz Kammer as Rinke

Production

The film was adapted from Jurij Brězan's novel by the same name, published in 1953. 52 Weeks Make One Year was the first East German film about the collectivization of agriculture in the country.[1]

Reception

The Socialist Unity Party of Germany's magazine, Einheit, dubbed 52 Weeks as one of the films "that were completely supportive of the struggle for German unity and against imperialism and war."[2] Sylvia Klötzer wrote that the film was made in Socialist Realist style.[3] Johannes von Moltke noted that while "suffused with images of rural bliss... rhythms of nature and local tradition" typical to the genre of Homeland films, 52 Weeks "is not entirely irreconcilable with the belief in progress" and is an example to the East German agrarian pictures that focused on the benefits of the collectivization.[4] The Catholic Film Service called it "formalistic, but with good acting."[5]

References

  1. 52 Wochen sind ein Jahr on DEFA Foundation's website.
  2. Zentralkomitee der Sozialistischen Einheitspartei Deutschlands. Einheit, 1956. p. 638.
  3. Sylvia Klötzer. Satire und Macht: Film, Zeitung, Kabarett in der DDR. Böhlau Verlag (2005). ISBN 978-3-412-15005-1. p. 91.
  4. Johannes von Moltke. No Place Like Home: Locations of Heimat in German Cinema. University of California Press (2005). ISBN 978-0-520-24410-8. pp. 171-172.
  5. 52 Wochen sind ein Jahr on the German Film Lexicon.
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