The Angel with the Trumpet | |
---|---|
Directed by | Anthony Bushell |
Written by | Franz Tassie Karl Hartl |
Produced by | Karl Hartl |
Starring | Eileen Herlie |
Cinematography | Robert Krasker |
Edited by | Reginald Beck (sup.) |
Music by | Willy Schmidt-Gentner |
Color process | Black and white |
Production company | |
Distributed by | British Lion Films |
Release date |
|
Running time | 99 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Box office | £86,265 [1] |
The Angel with the Trumpet is a 1950 British drama film directed by Anthony Bushell and starring Eileen Herlie, Basil Sydney, and Norman Wooland. [2] [3] It was based on a novel by Ernst Lothar. The film follows the rise and fall of an Austrian aristocrat, and her eventual death following the Anschluss. The film was a remake of a 1948 Austrian film Der Engel mit der Posaune .
Henrietta Stein, daughter of a Jewish academic, is the mistress of the Habsburg crown prince, who cannot marry her. She chooses instead a loveless marriage with Francis Alt, the head of the Alt Viennese piano manufacturing firm. [4] Only their mutual friend Baron Hugo Traun knows of their feelings. On the day of her marriage, the prince kills himself in despair.
Francis and Henrietta raise their three children in the family home, uninterrupted until twelve years later, the baron visits her in Vienna, and they have an affair. Henrietta plans to leave her husband. The affair is interrupted when her brother-in-law is dying and her son finds her in the arms of the baron. Returning home, she admits her affair to her husband who has returned unexpectedly. The next morning, her husband has a duel with the baron and kills him.
Four years later, World War I breaks out. Her husband and sons enlist. Her husband is left paralyzed and can no longer speak. Her son Paul takes over as the head of the factory. Her daughter Monica leaves for America with her boyfriend Gino to escape the conditions in Vienna. Her son Herman speculates in illegal arms trading and loses $2000. Faced with jail, he asks her for the money but she does not have it. She gives him her diamonds and throws him out of the house. The only good news comes when Paul announces his engagement. She gives all of the news to her husband, who gives her a note apologizing for marrying her and they reconcile.
Years later, Herman joins the Nazis as Nazi popularity rises in Austria. The Anschluss comes and the Nazis come to arrest her for not flying the Nazi flag on her house. Before they take her away, she jumps out of a third-storey window to her death. Herman arrives minutes later, to tell her he had arranged for her Jewish ancestry to be erased for her own safety, but she is already dead.
World War II comes. The Alt family home is destroyed by bombing. The Alt piano factory is in ruins, but Paul, his wife, their children and one remaining worker, re-establish the factory with their first new piano.
To reduce costs, this British film re-used much of the earlier Austrian film, especially for distance shots and for scenes with minor characters who were dubbed.
Maria Schell and Oskar Werner launched their international careers in this film. [5] It was the first film Bushell directed. [6]
Maximilian Schell was a Swiss actor. He won the Academy Award for Best Actor for the 1961 American film Judgment at Nuremberg, his second acting role in Hollywood. Born in Austria, his parents were involved in the arts and he grew up surrounded by performance and literature. While he was still a child, his family fled to Switzerland in 1938 when Austria was annexed by Nazi Germany, and they settled in Zürich. After World War II ended, Schell took up acting and directing full-time. He appeared in numerous German films, often anti-war, before moving to Hollywood.
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Interlude is a 1957 American CinemaScope drama romance film directed by Douglas Sirk and starring June Allyson and Rossano Brazzi.
The Angel with the Trumpet is a 1948 Austrian historical drama film directed by Karl Hartl and starring Paula Wessely, Helene Thimig and Maria Schell. It is based on the novel of the same name by Ernst Lothar. The film was remade in Britain in 1950, under the same title.
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