Blum Affair (original) (raw)

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1948 film

Blum Affair
Directed by Erich Engel
Written by Robert A. Stemmle
Produced by Herbert Uhlich
Starring Hans Christian Blech Ernst Waldow Karin Evans
Cinematography Friedl Behn-Grund Karl Plintzner
Edited by Lilian Seng
Music by Herbert Trantow
Productioncompany DEFA
Release date 3 December 1948 (1948-12-03)
Running time 109 minutes
Country East Germany
Language German

Blum Affair (German: Affaire Blum) is a 1948 East German drama film directed by Erich Engel and starring Hans Christian Blech, Ernst Waldow and Karin Evans. It is based on a real 1926 case in Magdeburg in which a German Jewish industrialist is tried for murder.[1] The film was produced in the future East Germany and produced by DEFA. It was shot at the Babelsberg Studios and Althoff Studios in the Soviet zone. The film's sets were designed by the art director Emil Hasler.

Bosley Crowther, critic for The New York Times, praised it as "a trenchant dramatic exposition of the way in which an innocent German Jew is almost destroyed by nascent Nazis—back in 1926."[2]

The film sold more than 4,330,000 tickets, making it one of DEFA's all-time most successful productions.[3]

  1. ^ "The Blum Affair (Affaire Blum): Synopsis". DEFA Film Library, University of Massachusetts Amherst. Retrieved 25 May 2015.
  2. ^ Bosley Crowther (October 18, 1949). "The Screen; German Drama at World". The New York Times.
  3. ^ List of the 50 highest-grossing DEFA films.