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Celebrating G.W. Pabst at Bard College

G.W. Pabst sits next to Louise Brooks (center) on the set of "Pandora's Box" in 1928.
G.W. Pabst sits next to Louise Brooks (center) on the set of "Pandora's Box" in 1928.
Photo credit: 
Louise Brooks Society

G.W. Pabst stands alongside Fritz Lang and F.W. Murnau as one of the three great directors working in Germany during the silent film era. Pabst, however, has not always gotten the attention paid to his more celebrated colleagues.

A month-long film series at Bard College in New York may help turn the tide of critical thinking. “The Best of G.W. Pabst” includes seven films by the Austrian-born director. It features his celebrated and often revived masterpieces Pandora’s Box (1929) and Diary of a Lost Girl (1929), each of which star Louise Brooks, as well as The Threepenny Opera (1931), which stars Lotte Lenya and is based on the musical theater of Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill.

Though Pabst is sometimes tagged as an expressionist, his films range from drama and social criticism to satire, melodrama, comedy and historical epics. And that may have been his problem. Pabst may have been a little too varied for his own good.

Also on the schedule of the Pabst festival, which kicks off July 15, are the psychoanalytic thriller Secrets of a Soul (1926), the provocative The Loves of Jeanne Ney (1927),the bleak plea for peace Westfront 1918 (1930), and the socialist-toned Kameradschaft (1931). Not on the bill are two other notable works, Joyless Street (1925), which helped make Garbo a star, and The White Hell of Pitz Palu (1929), one of the so-called “mountain films” so popular at the time. This latter work starred Leni Riefenstahl.

Why has Pabst not received the critical and popular attention given Lang and Murnau? Some have argued that Pabst was never a true auteur like other better remembered directors, nor did he make the sheer number of great films as did Lang and Murnau and their contemporary, Ernst Lubitsch.

In his day, Pabst’s films were also on the receiving end of a fair amount of critical disdain - and even official censorship. The recently released Concise Cinegraph: Encyclopedia of German Cinema, which depicts Pabst and Brooks on the cover, notes that “Pabst’s films, which comprise some masterpieces of Weimar cinema, often revolve around themes of poverty, extravagance, sexuality and violence, and frequently caused problems with censors, meaning many of his films were released in only an abridged form.”

The other problem with Pabst’s reputation is the fact that he spent the war years in Austria and Germany. Unlike the three previously named directors, Pabst didn’t leave for a career in Hollywood. According to his wife, Pabst planned to emigrate, but was trapped on the continent when the war broke out. There is evidence to support this claim, but the fact remains he is the only important German director of the pre-war era to make films under the Nazis.

Pabst, however, was no friend to Nazism. He left leanings were well known (he was even called “Red Pabst”), and the Nazis hated his decadent Weimar era films like Diary of a Lost Girl. Nevertheless, Pabst’s reputation – which could have been made in the post WWII era when Lang and Murnau rose through the ranks - has never really recovered from the unfair taint of collaboration.

Lee Atwell, the author of one of two English-language books on Pabst, stated in 1977 that “Pabst’s strength as a director was not ideological and, second, that while pursuing a new vein of realism, he remained temperamentally still profoundly romantic.”

Like Hitchcock, Pabst’s other strength was his direction of women – Garbo, Asta Neilsen, Henny Porten, Bridgette Helm, Reifenstahl, and especially the American-born Louise Brooks. Pabst brought the then little-known actress to Germany to play in two films which are now considered his best, Pandora’s Box and Diary of a Lost Girl. They are also the Pabst films most often revived.

On July 17th, Diary of a Lost Girl will be shown in San Francisco as part of the San Francisco Silent Film Festival. And on the same day in Berlin, the same film will be shown as part of the “Berlin Babylon - Silent Film Festival.” One week later, the Babylon Kino in Berlin will also screen Pandora’s Box. Are we in the middle of a Pabst’s revival? It’s hard to tell. Reputations, it seems, rise and fall.

For more info: A schedule and other details about the “The Best of G.W. Pabst” Festival at Bard College can be found at http://fishercenter.bard.edu/calendar/event.php?eid=109631

Thomas Gladysz is a longtime fan of Louise Brooks, so much so that in 1995 he founded the Louise Brooks Society, an internet-based archive and fan club devoted to the legendary silent film star. Gladysz has contributed to books on the actress, organized exhibits, appeared on television, and introduced her films around the country. Recently, he edited and wrote the introduction to the “Louise Brooks edition” of Margarete Bohme’s The Diary of a Lost Girl.

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, Louise Brooks Examiner

Thomas Gladysz is a widely published arts journalist with an interest in silent film and the Jazz Age. His special passion is the silent film star Louise Brooks. Gladysz has written articles, contributed to books, organized exhibits, hosted events, and introduced the actress' films around the...

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