Never Look Away Screenplay
Never Look Away Screenplay
Never Look Away Screenplay
An original screenplay
by
GUIDE
(nodding with regret)
Modern art. Yes, ladies and gentlemen.
Before the National Socialists took
charge, Germany, too, had its share of
"modern" art, meaning: something
different just about every year - as
follows from the word itself.
1
EXHIBITION GUIDE
And madness, mental illness, is elevated
to a defining principle. Can one truly
assume that the eye of certain
individuals makes them see things other
than they really are? That there actually
are men who see in their compatriots
nothing but degenerate cretins? That
these individuals perceive, or, as they
might put it: “experience”, fields as
blue, skies as green, clouds as sulfur-
yellow, and the like?
EXHIBITION GUIDE
There are only two possibilities: Either
these so-called "artists" really do see
and believe the things they are showing
us here – in which case all one would
have to determine is whether the root of
such a ghastly impediment was an accident
or a genetic defect. Should the former be
the case, our heart goes out to these sad
souls; if it is the latter, however, the
case should be looked into by the Reich
Ministry of the Interior, so that at
least we can avoid further proliferation
of such repulsive impairments. Or, on the
other hand, these “artists” do not even
believe themselves that their perceptions
are real and nonetheless choose to pester
the nation with this humbug – such an
offense would fall, clearly, under the
domain of criminal justice.
KURT
Right now, he’s out of work.
EXHIBITION GUIDE
(ignoring this)
2000 Reichsmarks out of the working
German people’s taxes.
The group heads on. Kurt and Elisabeth’s eyes stay on the
Kandinsky canvas.
KURT
(to Elisabeth)
Maybe I don't want to be a painter after
all.
AUNT ELISABETH
(whispers in his ear)
Don't tell anybody, but I like it.
KURT
3
Did you see the way they looked at you,
Aunt Elisabeth?
AUNT ELISABETH
On Monday nobody here will have eyes for
me. They'll all be cheering the Führer.
KURT
I think you're better than Hitler.
BUS DRIVER
So, you’re taking your nephew on an outing? And
when are you taking me on an outing?
KURT
(pointing)
Over there, that's where our apartment
was.
AUNT ELISABETH
(nodding)
You miss your friends...
AUNT ELISABETH
(teasing)
4
I know who you miss… That cute little girl with the
flaming red braids… What was her name, Johanna,
right?
KURT
(embarrassed)
No, not just Johanna…
AUNT ELISABETH
Who else do you miss. Sometimes it helps to just
get it out.
KURT
The Schröders – you know, that old couple who are
always holding hands, like little children. I miss
them. And Tilo, their dachshund. Whenever I called
him, he always ran to me…
He chokes up.
Aunt Elisabeth lifts her nephew onto her lap. The boy is
pleased to be so close to the beautiful girl. She strokes
his hair.
KURT
He says that if a man isn't prepared to
suffer for his beliefs there is either
something wrong with the man or the
beliefs. He says it’s criminal the way
the Nazis...
AUNT ELISABETH
(interrupts, whispering)
I know... But you don't talk to anybody
else like this, do you?
KURT
Mama says she'll persuade him to join
anyway. And then after the war that will
be his capitol.
AUNT ELISABETH
(laughs)
His capital!
6
AUNT ELISABETH (CONT'D)
But you mustn't...
KURT
What is it, Aunt Elisabeth? Did you
forget something?
AUNT ELISABETH
(to Kurt)
To paint a picture which gives you that
feeling. That's what they're trying to
do, those degenerate artists...
7
5. EXT. STREET IN DRESDEN – DAY
SS MAN
You come to the front. You, to the front.
SS MAN (CONT'D)
You, in the first row. Come on. You'll
hand him the flowers.
Little Kurt uses his own key to enter the house. Inside
the narrow hall there is a large, dark wooden wardrobe,
mounted antlers on the walls. The room is filled with the
sound of PIANO MUSIC from the living room: Bach’s
composition "Sheep May Safely Graze". For some reason,
Kurt feels uneasy. He follows the sound of the music.
When he enters the living room he sees Elisabeth sitting
at the piano, playing the music. She is naked. She
doesn't turn to face him. He lowers his eyes.
8
AUNT ELISABETH
(without turning round)
Don't look away.
He looks up again.
KURT
Aunt Elisabeth, you’re bleeding.
GRANDMOTHER MALVINE
Elisabeth, for God's sake, what are you
doing?!
AUNT ELISABETH
Playing a concert for the Führer!
GRANDMOTHER MALVINE
"Youthful delusion" – that makes it sound
almost harmless.
DR MICHAELIS
Nothing that cannot be healed by a short
break, I should say.
WALTRAUD
A short break in...
10
DR MICHAELIS
... an institution, yes.
GRANDMOTHER MALVINE
We would really like to try giving her
some rest at home first. She worked
extremely hard for the school leaving
exam. And then she went straight into the
secretarial course without a break.
Perhaps it's simply over-exertion.
AUNT ELISABETH
(calls over to them)
Is this your wife? You hate her, am I
right? I can see it, by the way you stand
next to her.
DR MICHAELIS
(harshly)
Kindly wait outside until we have
finished talking. I shall not ask again.
DR MICHAELIS (CONT'D)
(lowering his voice)
Schizophrenia is a serious condition, so
I'm obliged to ask: are there other cases
of mental illness in your family?
GRANDMOTHER MALVINE
Heavens, no!
DR MICHAELIS
Depression?
11
CLOSE-UP: a Nazi party badge is visible on the lapel of
the doctor's jacket, under his white coat.
WALTRAUD
(attempting to smile)
We’re all cheerful.
DR MICHAELIS
We doctors are the guardians of the flow
of genetic biology. I have to report this
case to the Health Department. The
decision about committal might not be up
to you.
GRANDMOTHER MALVINE
(resting a hand on his arm)
Dr Michaelis. Franz. I knew your parents.
Even your grandparents. Please. Don't
report it.
DR MICHAELIS
Just because it is you, Frau May... But
tell me immediately if her condition
worsens.
GRANDMOTHER MALVINE
Goodbye.
DR MICHAELIS
Heil Hitler.
GRANDMOTHER MALVINE
Yes, of course. Heil Hitler.
WALTRAUD
Heil Hitler.
Kurt's mother holds her hand over the boy's eyes. But he
pushes the hand away, determined to see everything. She
covers his eyes again, and again he pushes her hand away,
automatically stepping to one side.
GÜNTHER
(always the optimist)
She'll be back soon.
DR KROLL
I’d like to begin by congratulating you,
my dear colleagues: since the
introduction of the relevant law the
weakest percentile of the German
population has been rendered infertile.
400,000 individuals. A proud figure. A
contribution towards positive breeding
that future generations will thank you
for. It is now my hope that we shall one
day live in a world where the streets are
completely free of mongoloids, the
mentally ill and other deformities.
DR KROLL (CONT'D)
But it is time to shift into second gear.
As a result of the British air raids, we
have an increased need for auxiliary
hospital places. We cannot permit a
situation where a wounded German soldier
is denied a place in a hospital because
it is being used to nurture and maintain
useless life.
SEEBAND
(formal and pragmatic)
How can we help? What can we do?
DR KROLL
Thank you for that question, Carl.
DR KROLL (CONT'D)
Gentleman, from now on you are not just
doctors and SS officers. You are judges
at the Genetic Health Court. What does
this mean? Well, any patient you have
14
sterilized or will sterilize in the
future, whose medical file you mark with
a blue minus sign...
DR KROLL (CONT'D)
... remains in the institution, and will
be looked after. However, if we find a
red plus sign on the medical file, we
understand that the life in question is a
worthless one, and the patient will be
transferred to one of three special
institutions in the eastern part of the
Reich, to be relieved of his meaningless
existence. Your pen is your sword.
The door opens. The nurse enters and places the medical
file on the desk in front of Seeband.
NURSE
(whispers)
Examination and preliminary interview:
Elisabeth May. 23 years old. Psychiatric
patient for three years. Diagnosis number
15
14. Sterilization scheduled for today
1545 hours.
NURSE (CONT'D)
(to Elisabeth)
You may enter. The form of address is
"Herr Professor".
SEEBAND
You can sit down.
AUNT ELISABETH
Good day.
SEEBAND
Heil Hitler.
AUNT ELISABETH
Why should I heal him? You're the doctor.
SEEBAND
Is that your only problem?
AUNT ELISABETH
You will have to answer that one.
AUNT ELISABETH
Is that by your... daughter?
16
Seeband clearly does not wish the conversation turned to
his family.
SEEBAND
Why do you think you are here?
AUNT ELISABETH
Because I sometimes don't think very
properly.
SEEBAND
Do you know what kind of hospital this
is?
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
A gynecological hospital.
AUNT ELISABETH
A very nice girl, your daughter. I can
see from the picture. Not what you would
really call artistically talented. I
suppose you might even be pleased by
that? But a lot of heart. I have a nephew
the same age. Unfortunately he's very
talented. I sometimes take him to
exhibitions, to encourage him.
SEEBAND
Very well, now please go and get on to
the examination chair in the next room.
Take off your...
MAN (OFF)
(through the door)
I insist on speaking to the professor!
SEEBAND
Excuse me a moment.
17
He crosses to the door, and when he opens it, a man aged
about 50 is gazing at him with such hatred that even
Seeband is taken aback.
MAN
Well, there he is.
SEEBAND
Herr Lohse-Wächtler.
On the spur of the moment she reaches out for her file,
where Seeband has been writing his notes. A few phrases
leap out at her:
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
It would have been better had you not
seen that.
AUNT ELISABETH
I am from a healthy background. I know
I'm healthy.
SEEBAND
(pointing to the file)
Three experts are of a different view.
AUNT ELISABETH
No! No!
SEEBAND
(severely)
Sit down again.
18
He addresses her with such authority that she obeys. He
presses the button next to the intercom. Immediately the
attendant enters and approaches Elisabeth, who is sitting
in her chair.
SEEBAND
You will now go to the examination room
and then to the operating theater, and
you will cooperate. Otherwise we shall
have to strap you down, and everything
will be more difficult and more painful.
AUNT ELISABETH
(pleading)
Please... Herr Seeband... Herr
Professor... Please... Please!
She has become very weak and now allows the attendant to
lift her to her feet and lead her towards the door.
But after a few steps suddenly she pulls free and leaps
at Seeband, grabbing his feet like a sinner in a biblical
painting.
19
too... She could be my sister... I could
be your daughter... Papa! Papa!!
SEEBAND
Andrea. I will not perform the operation
on Fräulein May myself. Assign Blockmann.
SEEBAND
(impatiently)
Then change the schedule!
GRANDMOTHER MALVINE
20
You all look very nice in your uniforms.
Elisabeth will be pleased.
WALTRAUD
(strictly)
Johann...
JOHANN
(sadly, resigned)
I know: after the war it will be my
capital.
WALTRAUD
And don't forget the salute. Heil Hitler.
EHRENFRIED
(whispers to Johann)
If you really can't bring yourself to say
it, just say "three liter" very fast.
Nobody will notice.
WALTRAUD
(to Kurt)
Don't say anything about your painting.
And not a word about the nudies...
WALTRAUD (CONT'D)
(to Günther)
And keep quiet about enjoying Heine’s
books. We don't have any hobbies, and we
know nothing about art or culture...
except Richard Wagner, of course.
21
13. INT. ARNSDORF SANATORIUM - RECEPTION - CONTINUOUS
NURSE
Heil Hitler.
JOHANN
Three liter!
JOHANN (CONT'D)
We have an appointment to visit one of
your patients, Elisabeth May. I'm Johann
Barnert, her brother-in-law. These are
her brothers, Ehrenfried and Günther. Her
sister Waltraud, her mother Malvine.
NURSE
Fräulein Elisabeth May was transferred
the day before yesterday.
WALTRAUD
Transferred? That's impossible.
NURSE
Orders from Central Office.
WALTRAUD
But where to?
NURSE #2
(to Nurse #1)
Käthe, we’re waiting.
22
nods to indicate she is coming, and the other nurse goes
back to the group.
WALTRAUD
(repeats)
Where has she been transferred to?
NURSE
(checking the file)
Großschweidnitz Hospital.
GRANDMOTHER MALVINE
Großschweidnitz? That's two days from
here! How are we supposed to visit her?
We have to work. And the boys are on a
brief leave from the front.
The nurse can't help them. She waves to the other nurses
to indicate she is coming as quickly as possible; they
beckon her over urgently for the photograph. Little Kurt
is still watching closely.
NURSE
I can't tell you any more than that. And
now I have to go. Heil Hitler.
OFFICER
Reconnaissance in groups of two.
Rendezvous back here in 30 minutes.
RUSSIAN BOY
One Reichsmark. One Reichsmmark.
23
Günther laughs.
GÜNTHER
I can't drag a camera all the way to
Moscow. But you take a photograph.
GÜNTHER (CONT'D)
You – click, click – send to Germany? I
give you one Reichsmark. You keep camera.
EHRENFRIED
(dryly)
"Dear Mummy, we would like to share with
you the magnificence of our lives here."
RUSSIAN BOY
Ulibatsa.
EHRENFRIED
(cynically)
What are the chances, would you say, that
he really will send the photograph back
home?
GÜNTHER
Significantly higher than the chances
that we really will make it to Moscow.
EHRENFRIED
(anxiously)
Sshh! If you talk like that, we won't get
further than that wall...
MONTAGE:
GRANDMOTHER MALVINE
Metallic foil. I read about that. It's to
interfere with the radio and radar.
ONE SHOT: A MOTHER runs into a nursery when she hears the
approaching BOMBERS.
MOTHER
Johanna! Johanna!
But before she can reach the bed where her ten-year-old
daughter Johanna (flaming red hair) is sleeping, the
incendiary bomb STRIKES. The room is TORN APART, the
mother immediately killed by shrapnel. The little girl is
25
set on fire; she leaps up but then collapses in a ball of
flame.
27
26. INT. GROSSCHWEIDNITZ CLINIC - 20 MINUTES LATER
ATTENDANT
You take this side.
END OF MONTAGE
RADIO ANNOUNCER
People of Germany, the Bolshevik hordes
are approaching. They are already outside
Dresden. They know no mercy. They
plunder, rape and murder. You have seen
in newsreels the images of mutilated
German women and children in East
Prussia. Lock your doors, arm yourselves.
And, just as our heroic troops are doing,
resist in every way possible!
28
Suddenly Kurt sees two Russian soldiers approaching the
house. He sees them alternately in and out of focus.
KURT
(strangely calm)
They are here.
WALTRAUD
No! No!!
(whispering in panic)
Did you lock the door?
RUSSIAN SERGEANT
Stoitje. Halt. Stay there.
GRANDMOTHER MALVINE
(to the other women, calmly)
Don’t move. We don't want to anger him.
RUSSIAN SERGEANT
(to Kurt, indicating the door)
Atkroi dwerj.
GRANDMOTHER MALVINE
Do it, Kurt.
29
Kurt walks over to the wardrobe which has been placed
right in front of the chair that is holding the door and
tries to push it away, but he's too small and weak. The
sergeant laughs, walks over and tips the wardrobe with a
powerful shove. It falls and smashes on the ground. The
door is now free. The sergeant gestures to indicate that
Kurt should unlock it. Kurt turns the key in the lock.
RUSSIAN SERGEANT
Atkroi.
Kurt looks over at the women one last time. Waltraud nods
to him. He walks out of the door. The sergeant locks it
behind him and then comes over to look at the women more
closely.
The men march along the corridor with harsh, rapid steps
until they encounter two young doctors.
NKWD OFFICER
31
Professor Seeband?
The doctors are all too willing to point out their boss’s
office. They watch the Soviet soldiers as they march on
until they reach the office. Just as they are about to
knock at the door they notice that there is a large hole
in the the wall alongside it, so they can in fact walk
straight into Seeband’s formerly tidy office.
SEEBAND
Careful.
NKWD OFFICER
Herr Seeband?
SEEBAND
Professor Seeband. Yes, that's me.
MURAVYOV
Herr Seeband...
SEEBAND
Professor Seeband.
MURAVYOV
(in Russian, to the interpreter, incredulously)
What did he say?
INTERPRETER
(in Russian)
He wants you to call him "Professor".
MURAVYOV
Ladno (“Alright"), Professor.
MURAVYOV (CONT'D)
(in Russian)
Where is Burghard Kroll?
SEEBAND
Who?
MURAVYOV
(in Russian, with subtitles)
Burghard Kroll? Your boss in the...
(he reads)
... Reich Medical Workgroup. We know
about the meetings in Berlin.
SEEBAND
I do not know what you're talking about.
I do not know that gentleman.
33
The interpreter translates.
SEEBAND
I still do not know him.
MURAVYOV
(losing his temper)
The only reason we don't hang you
immediately is that we are going to
behave better that you swines. We have
laws. But since there are so many of you
swine, it takes us a while to find all of
you and slaughter you. Just like you
found and slaughtered anybody you didn't
like.
MURAVYOV (CONT'D)
If my child is born not completely
healthy, then he deserves to die? Is that
right?
SEEBAND
The space and resources available to us
on this earth are not unlimited. Who
should have access to them? The healthy
or the sick?
MURAVYOV
Well, Soon there will be one more space
available, that's for sure.
SCHOOL PRINCIPAL
(looking at the application folder)
You have not indicated whether you were a
member of the Nazi Party.
JOHANN
Principal... For many years I...
SCHOOL PRINCIPAL
Yes or no, Herr Barnert.
JOHANN
Yes.
JOHANN (CONT'D)
I am not a Nazi. Three quarters of all
teachers were in the Party.
SCHOOL PRINCIPAL
And it is to the remaining quarter that
we shall entrust our children. Good day.
GUARD
What is this? Are you repeating what
we're saying?
SEEBAND
35
I beg forgiveness.
The guard looks into the cell and sees the improvised
razor, which impresses him.
GUARD
(in German)
You are learning Russian?
SEEBAND
Ja staraius.
(Subtitle: I am trying)
GUARD
You'll still be hanged.
MURAVYOV’S WIFE
Hot! It’s hot!
36
"Dilation" and "Contractions", together with estimated
times.
MURAVYOV
How can it possibly take so long?
ARMY DOCTOR
I can't do anything until the
contractions begin. We have to wait.
GUARD
Schto?
SEEBAND
Comrade! Preliminary contractions can't
last that long. The baby is in the wrong
position.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
The interpreter.
SEEBAND
Perewotchik.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
(in Russian)
37
Ja magu pamotsch. Ja wratsch, nemjetzki
wratsch. Pozawitje Perewotschika. Srasu.
(Subtitle: I can help. I am a doctor.
German doctor. Call the interpreter.
Quickly.)
INTERPRETER
I can't help you.
SEEBAND
If you do not tell the Major I can help,
you will have to shoot me here and now.
Because I promise you that I will tell
him his wife had a chance and you
prevented her from taking it.
CUT TO:
SEEBAND
What is he saying?
INTERPRETER
He is suspicious. He asks why you want to
help.
SEEBAND
I want to help because I can.
MURAVYOV’S WIFE
(in Russian, with subtitles)
38
A gypsy woman predicted I will never have
children. How could I believe I am
stronger than destiny?!
SEEBAND
(to the army doctor)
Which week?
ARMY DOCTOR
(in Russian)
36.
SEEBAND
Blood pressure?
MURAVYOV’S WIFE
How could I believe I can have children?!
SEEBAND
(firmly)
Tell her that she will definitely have
one child. And if she wants, many more
after that.
SEEBAND
(to the men)
The baby is in a transverse position.
During the contractions the uterus is too
hard for me to turn it. I shall open the
amniotic sac from inside. In a pause
between contractions, I turn the baby.
INTERPRETER
I am a military interpreter... I...
Seeband understands.
SEEBAND
(indicating the army doctor)
Tell him to prepare an anesthetic.
39
The interpreter translates.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
(in Russian, strictly)
Do not dry. Do not touch anything.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
Now I have the legs...
(he pulls)
Now I place the index finger in the
baby's mouth, press the chin against the
chest and lever his head out...
SEEBAND
Parenj. Zdadowij parenj.
(Subtitle: A boy. A healthy boy)
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
And a healthy, magnificent mother. I
congratulate you, Major.
Seeband takes off the gloves and extends his hand for
Muravyov to shake. The Commandant doesn't take his hand
but instead embraces Seeband and kisses him.
MURAVYOV
Whoever saves a life, saves the whole
world. You have saved my world,
Professor. Nobody will harm a hair of
your head. You are now under my personal
protection.
40
MURAVYOV (CONT'D)
Get the guest room ready for the
Professor, and give him some of my
clothes.
KURT
(euphorically)
Father! You don't have to worry any
longer! Now I understand!
JOHANN
What... What is it you understand?
41
KURT
Everything... How everything is
connected, what everything means... The
fact that everything is linked...
Everything...
(almost bashful about his happiness)
The code of the world...
KURT
I never have to worry again, never have
to be afraid again. I am untouchable.
JOHANN
(smiling mildly)
That's nice.
KURT
No, Father, you don't understand... You
don't have to worry either. I don't even
have to be an artist any more. I can
choose any profession and will still find
the Truth!
Johann picks up his dog and strokes it; it's hard to say
who looks more disheveled, Johann or the dog. In any
case, he is as far removed from Kurt's spiritual state as
could possibly be.
JOHANN
I'm happy for you, really.
KURT
I have to preserve this moment!
JOHANN
I know who you are thinking about. But
he's different.
42
48. EXT. DRESDEN STREETS - DAY
YOUNG PAINTER
Why do you do it that way? So you can
feel better than the rest of us?
KURT
Do what?
YOUNG PAINTER
The work. Like that.
(indicating the banners)
Drawing freehand while we have to sweat
away with stencils. Are you showing off?
Why do you do it?
43
Kurt gazes at his colleague, his expression puzzled and
blank.
KURT
I do it because I can.
FOREMAN
You can take the materials home with you
if you want, as long as you bring them
back the next day.
FOREMAN (CONT'D)
Next month there are applications for the
Academy of Art.
KURT
(cautiously)
I'm content with this work.
The foreman lifts up one end of the banner and pulls out
the drawings; Kurt realizes there's no point trying to
disown them.
44
FOREMAN
(really annoyed)
What's the idea? Does this help the
working man? Give your father more
strength when he's cleaning the stairs?
You do want to help him, don't you?
Didn't you even arrange for him to get
the job.
FOREMAN (CONT'D)
You've been through a lot of shit,
haven't you?
FOREMAN (CONT'D)
But do you really think it helps to
wallow in it? Do you think that helps
create a world where your children will
have better lives than you? That's what
communism is all about.
FOREMAN (CONT'D)
I'll support your application.
FOREMAN (CONT'D)
The girls at the Academy are prettier
than here.
45
The fine lecture theater is in darkness, although in a
few places it hasn't been possible to repair the bomb
damage, and here the sun streams through in large beams
of light which are clearly visible in the cloud of
cigarette smoke that fills the room. The lecture theater
is packed with students, all happy to be here. A gaunt
Professor, HORST GRIMMA, a painter about 60 years old
with a friendly, open face, is lecturing with great
commitment and warmth. He picks up a new photograph
(showing a painting of a group of surveyors at work in
the countryside) and places it on the surface of an old
episcope. He projects the image on the screen next to the
blackboard, where two words have been written: Socialist
Realism.
PROFESSOR GRIMMA
Can you see that here somebody has
abandoned all vanity and devoted himself
entirely to the service of the cause? The
service of the people?
STUDENT
Would you please turn this way in profile
again?
WORKER MODEL
(in a high voice and heavy Saxon accent)
Where? Who said that?
STUDENT #2
Me.
WORKER MODEL
48
(getting upset)
Oh, I almost think you're doing this
deliberately to make me cross!
The students laugh even more, and the worker storms off.
Kurt has made more progress with his picture than the
others. He has understood what is required and has
transformed the man's everyday shirt into a mint-grey
East German workers’ blouse, inventing a factory
landscape in the background and giving the man a proud,
masculine expression.
PROFESSOR GRIMMA
Is this a kindergarten or what?!
WORKER MODEL
(in his falsetto)
Yes, I think you have captured the
essential me.
The model has left, and the last of the students are
going to lunch. The only two left are Kurt and MAX, the
student sitting next to him, an athletic, slim young man
with smooth black hair. Max has produced a mediocre copy
of Kurt's ideas with a very similar factory landscape.
Now Max also gets up to leave.
MAX
(to Kurt)
You coming?
49
Kurt is so engrossed in his work that he doesn't reply.
MAX
(annoyed, impatient)
Can I at least have my cap back, then?
MAX (CONT'D)
What more do you want? Yes, your
picture’s best.
MAX
Man shall not live from bread alone, you
know?
MAX
...but from ever pretty girl he might
meet in the canteen, right?
KURT
I'll be along soon.
STUDENT #4
A girl in the Fashion Department is
giving away Western pencils!
50
57. INT. DRESDEN ACADEMY OF ART - FASHION DEPARTMENT -
CONTINUOUS
STUDENT
Elisabeth! Me too, please!
MAX
(determined)
Don't even bother trying. She's mine.
Watch and learn how it's done!
ELISABETH
(reading the labels)
F, 2B or 4B?
ELISABETH (CONT'D)
Well?
MAX
2B, thanks. But what I'd like even more
than a pencil is...
ELISABETH
F or 4B?
51
Max steps aside and sneaks a glance at Kurt, hoping his
friend hasn't seen the way he was rejected. But Kurt has.
Max walks off.
KURT
Your name is Elisabeth?
ELISABETH
Do you want one? There's only 4B left.
KURT
A golden pheasant like you shouldn't use
a normal ashtray.
ELISABETH
(indignant)
Golden pheasant? I can't let you get away
with that.
KURT
I completely agree. A walk? In the park?
KURT (CONT'D)
So I can correct my misapprehension?
52
They come past a large building in ruins with a banner
hanging on it, proclaiming in large letters: "Learning
from the Soviet Union means Learning Victory". We see
from a place where some paint was spilt onto it that it
is the very banner Kurt painted himself. But he doesn't
say anything.
ELISABETH
I thought you wanted to talk to me.
KURT
I wanted to go for a walk with you.
ELISABETH
Very well, then I'll make conversation.
ELISABETH (CONT'D)
Socialist realism... is that really your
kind of art?
KURT
Probably about as much as Lotte
Ulbricht's is your kind of fashion.
ELISABETH
Why do you keep looking at me like that?
KURT
You remind me of someone.
ELISABETH
Would you like to paint me?
KURT
I don't know. Would you like to make a
suit for me?
ELISABETH
I have to get home.
KURT
May I accompany you? Just to the door?
53
They walk through the ruins of Dresden until they come to
an area of large villas and stop in front of a
spectacular building from the late 19th century, Wiener
Strasse 91.
KURT
You're taking dance lessons?
ELISABETH
(laughs)
I live here. The house belongs to us.
KURT
Well, you haven't really proven me wrong
about the golden pheasant thing.
ELISABETH
We were just lucky: the house wasn't even
hit once. Before the war the whole street
looked like this.
ELISABETH
You have such confidence. Certainty.
Almost as if you knew something.
ELISABETH (CONT'D)
Goodbye, Kurt.
KURT
Goodbye...
ELISABETH
54
Elisabeth!
KURT
Could I call you something else? Maybe
you have a nickname?
ELISABETH
(taken aback)
Everybody calls me Elisabeth, really...
KURT
"Really" always means precisely the
opposite is true.
ELISABETH
(laughs)
Alright. My father calls me Ellie.
KURT
Goodbye, Ellie.
KURT (CONT'D)
(to himself)
Elisabeth.
55
Kurt leaps up and runs out, following the sound of the
next scream and racing up the stairs to the attic. He
pushes aside sheets and shirts that have been hung up
here to dry, which are blocking his view. Finally he
finds his mother standing in front of a laundry basket,
and then he sees the body of his father hanging from a
beam by a rope. Once again, his eyes blur the image.
PROFESSOR GRIMMA
You could have taken off a few days more,
Kurt.
MONTAGE
END OF MONTAGE
ELLIE (O.C.)
A golden pheasant as a proletarian?
56
Her expression indicates that she has heard what
happened. She has in her hands a suit and shirt which she
holds up to him.
ELLIE (CONT'D)
You are now my seminar project.
KURT
I'll never take it off.
CUT TO:
KURT
It's far too easy to love you. You're so
beautiful, it’s almost unromantic.
KURT (CONT'D)
Do you love me?
KURT (CONT'D)
Do you love me? Otherwise... It doesn't
work... with me.
KURT (CONT'D)
Otherwise it doesn't work.
ELLIE
I love you.
57
He becomes more passionate and aroused.
KURT
(very openly)
Really?
ELLIE
Yes.
ELLIE (CONT'D)
I love you! Really, I love you.
They are lying in bed. The two young bodies are only lit
by the moonlight and the flame of a candle. Kurt strokes
Ellie’s back. She seems calm, relaxed, as we have not
seen her before.
ELLIE
Will you still be able to look me in the
eye tomorrow?
KURT
What do you mean by that?
ELLIE
When we see each other tomorrow,
completely normal, fully dressed, in the
Academy, with the teachers...
(correcting herself with a laugh)
Professors! With the other students in
the canteen... Will you look at me in
exactly the same way?
KURT
(tenderly, serious, meaningful)
No.
She smiles.
ELLIE
My parents!
58
KURT
I thought they lived in Chemnitz?
ELLIE
My father!
(going pale)
My God, what shall we do?
After her initial shock Ellie looks round the room and
sees his suit; she sweeps it up with a quick gesture,
flings it out of the window, leaps into bed, pulls up the
sheet and pretends to be asleep.
Kurt has reached the lowest branch and now jumps to the
ground, rolling over and getting to his feet, a manoeuver
which brings him face to face with Frau Seeband. He is
stark naked, while she is very dressed in a Dior-style
suit with a fur collar and hat. She gazes at him in
surprise, curious, the suggestion of a wry smile on her
face.
FRAU SEEBAND
Elisabeth?
SEEBAND
Sound asleep. She left a candle burning;
when is she finally going to grow up?!
FRAU SEEBAND
Yes, young people...
ELLIE
Thanks for risking your life to preserve
my reputation. But don't ever do anything
that reckless again.
KURT
Did your parents...?
ELLIE
They didn't notice a thing. Not a thing.
ELLIE
They’re moving back to Dresden. My father
is getting his old job back, as hospital
director. But he has to rent out two of
the rooms in our house. Otherwise he'll
get into trouble with the Residence
Allocation Office. He’s going to put up a
sign tomorrow.
KURT
But the dance school is there?
ELLIE
That's only the first floor. We have
seven bedrooms upstairs. For me, my
parents and Papa’s "secretary".
ELLIE (CONT'D)
Would you perhaps like to be the first to
discover that sign tomorrow, quite by
chance?
There are large trees outside the big windows, and the
powerful sunshine projects the shape of leaves
alternating with areas of bright light over her face and
body. It's like a painting. Kurt can do nothing but stare
at her.
ELLIE (CONT'D)
61
I mean, they couldn't really hold it
against me if I fall in love with a
tenant they themselves have chosen.
KURT
But... your mother? Don't you think she
might sense something?
ELLIE
Oh, Mama! She's such an innocent. You
don't have to worry about her. She won't
suspect a thing. Really, not a thing.
FRAU HELLTHALER
Yes?
KURT
I've come about the sign. Is the room
still to rent?
FRAU HELLTHALER
We put the sign up a quarter of an hour
ago.
KURT
Is that a yes?
FRAU HELLTHALER
(calls)
Frau Seeband. Somebody has come about the
room.
FRAU SEEBAND
(calls back)
That was quick.
62
She comes down the stairs looking very elegant: it's
obvious where Ellie got her fashion sense. Kurt gets to
his feet almost reluctantly, hardly daring to meet her
eye. She slows down briefly when she recognizes him but
then walks on.
KURT
(murmurs awkwardly)
Kurt Barnert.
FRAU SEEBAND
What is your profession?
KURT
I'm a student.
FRAU SEEBAND
Fashion.
KURT
Painting.
FRAU SEEBAND
Painting...
SEEBAND (O.S.)
(from above, authoritatively)
Frau Hellthaler. Come up here, would you?
FRAU SEEBAND
(calls up, still gazing at Kurt)
Carl, there's a tenant for one of the
rooms. Do come down for a moment.
63
Seeband’s POV: Kurt's face, the lower lip twitching very
slightly.
SEEBAND
You have facialis.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
Facialisparese - partial facial paralysis.
(pointing to his mouth with one finger)
The hanging corner of the mouth. Did you
have an accident at some point, or
borreliosis?
FRAU SEEBAND
(to Frau Hellthaler)
Would you be so kind and take this up to
the office? Then my husband can have a
few words with... the tenant.
SEEBAND
You should have that examined. Cortisone
can help. Failing that - surgery.
FRAU SEEBAND
(to her husband)
Kurt comes with the best recommendations.
(Kurt looks astonished)
We have already agreed on the rent. But
of course it's your decision whether he
gets the room or not.
KURT
I am a painter.
SEEBAND
The facade of the house is starting to
peel. Perhaps we could set that off
against the rent.
KURT
I'm not that kind of painter.
SEEBAND
Then what kind are you?
KURT
A painter of pictures.
SEEBAND
Socialist realism?
KURT
Is there any other kind?
SEEBAND
I hope not.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
You can have the room anyway.
KURT
Thank you, Herr Seeband.
SEEBAND
Professor Seeband.
65
71. INT. SEEBAND’S VILLA - FRAU HELLTHALER’S ROOM -
SIMULTANEOUS
SEEBAND
What are you doing up so late?
KURT
I... I’ve been out.
SEEBAND
Alcohol? Hardly conducive to good work.
You should get to bed.
SEEBAND
I don't like that Kurt. We must make sure
Ellie doesn't get too friendly with him.
66
FRAU SEEBAND
(motionless)
Why?
SEEBAND
So she can marry well, of course.
(amiably)
Just as you married well.
KURT
Professor Seeband, about yesterday; of
course I would never...
SEEBAND
(interrupts)
You have a new subject. Me. For the
directors’ gallery.
(indicates a sketched portrait of Lenin)
That style, more or less. We start
tomorrow at four in the afternoon. In my
office at the hospital.
SECRETARY
The Professor will be here in a minute.
You may take a seat.
Kurt walks round the room, gazing at the chair and the
walls with such intensity, it is almost as though he
senses something.
Seeband enters.
SEEBAND
I thought you could set up your easel
here.
68
By now we can see clearly that Kurt has accurately
captured on the canvas Seeband’s pose.
SEEBAND
That's pretty much what I had in mind.
Very good. We will continue tomorrow at
four o'clock. Three sessions should be
enough?
ELLIE
Why are you looking at those terrible
pictures? I look awful in them. Come over
here.
69
CLOSE-UP: Seeband’s face in the photograph.
KURT
Why does even the most idiotic amateur
snapshot have more reality than my
painting?
ELLIE
Papa likes it.
KURT
That's exactly the point. Hardly anybody
likes a photograph of himself. Everybody
is supposed to like a painting. The
photograph must be truer.
KURT
Why did your father go to work in
Chemnitz anyway? He was hospital director
here before.
ELLIE
He doesn't want us to talk about it...
Kurt waits.
ELLIE (CONT'D)
(hesitantly)
During the war Papa treated the wives of
Göring and Goebbels...
ELLIE (CONT'D)
(quickly)
... simply because he's the best
gynecologist... They came 200 km from
Berlin, as if nobody there was capable of
doing a smear test... Just imagine!
Anyway, as a reward they made him an
honorary member of the SS. He couldn’t
70
refuse. But of course after the war it
was hard to explain to the Russians that
he didn’t have anything to do with the
Nazis otherwise. They combed through all
the archives but couldn’t find anything
against him.
KURT
Today the Professor called me a Willi
Sitte type artist.
ELLIE
But that’s good. I mean, he’s successful.
KURT
(scornfully, almost to himself)
Willi Sitte type... I think I have to get
out of here.
ELLIE
Out of where?
ELLIE (CONT'D)
You’re not serious... But things are
going so well for us here... I could
never leave Mama.
ELLIE (CONT'D)
You were just saying that, weren’t you?
PROFESSOR GRIMMA
(excitedly)
71
Your diploma work convinced the
committee. They have selected you to
paint the mural for the new Museum of
Hygiene. The theme is “The Joy of Life
Under Socialism.”
(friendly, making a confession)
It's a job I think some professors would
also have liked.
KURT
A mural?
PROFESSOR GRIMMA
Yes.
KURT
I'm not a muralist.
PROFESSOR GRIMMA
Kurt, we both know you can do it.
KURT
I'm sorry. That's not for me. That's pure
decoration.
PROFESSOR GRIMMA
(bewildered)
You would immediately have guaranteed
work. Even money.
KURT
It's not me.
PROFESSOR GRIMMA
(disappointed)
Me, me, me.
KURT
(whispers)
No, don't move... Please.
72
She becomes motionless again, her cheek against his.
KURT (CONT'D)
(whispers)
This way I can imagine that we are one
body.
ELLIE
(whispers)
I'm pregnant.
KURT
(whispers)
Then you fully belong to me now.
KURT (CONT'D)
(smiling gravely)
With me, I mean.
She rolls over to one side, kisses him and gazes into his
eyes.
KURT (CONT'D)
We have to tell them. Ellie.
ELLIE
Maybe we should start by telling them
that we are together. To divide the shock
into little pieces?
KURT
I think your mother might have already
guessed something...
ELLIE
It's not Mama I'm worried about. Papa
will be devastated. I'll always be 12
years old to him.
FRAU SEEBAND
What??
SEEBAND
For several weeks now the temperature of
her hand has been slightly elevated, but
no cold symptoms. Yesterday she left the
room twice at dinner, didn't touch her
porridge at breakfast, and held onto the
chair when she got up... The 3rd month,
I'd say. Maybe the 4th.
FRAU SEEBAND
My God, she's still a child herself!
SEEBAND
The problem isn't her age but the man.
FRAU SEEBAND
Who could it be?
SEEBAND
Leptosomic, melancholic, heavy smoker,
facial paralysis, a "painter". This is
not the genetic material I want for our
descendants. We must prevent it.
FRAU SEEBAND
But how?
SEEBAND
(calmly)
After 30 years as a gynecologist I can
tell you I have rarely seen a
relationship survive an abortion.
74
watches him at work for a while. He is engrossed in his
work, content.
SEEBAND
... The psychotic thinks two and two make
five, while the neurotic knows two and
two make four – but it worries him.
ELLIE
There’s something we want to tell you...
SEEBAND
(quickly)
About the Academy of Art? I'm always very
interested in that.
ELLIE
No... although... there is news on that
front, too. You see, Kurt has been given
the job of painting the mural in the
Museum for Hygiene.
SEEBAND
(to Kurt)
Painting walls after all?
KURT
It's a fresco with the theme "Joy of
Life".
ELLIE
And on that subject...
SEEBAND
What is it, my child? Nothing unpleasant
I hope – my nerves, you know.
ELLIE
We are... together.
75
SEEBAND
You are working on the fresco as well?
ELLIE
We are a couple. We have been for some
time.
SEEBAND
A couple of students.
ELLIE
A... couple in a loving relationship.
ELLIE
And there's something else...
SEEBAND
(interrupts, as if overcome)
That's really... big... news...
ELLIE
Yes, and as well as that...
SEEBAND
My God, I have to take this in first. My
God... this is really out of the blue...
ELLIE
(to a waiter)
Please bring the Professor some water.
Quickly!
SEEBAND
76
I am pleased you broke the news to us.
And I'm glad you did so at an early
stage. You see, there is something you
should know about Ellie.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
We don't want to worry Ellie
unnecessarily, so we have never really
talked to her about it, but... When she
was a little girl Ellie had a serious
infection in the pelvis, which left scar
tissue in the fallopian tubes and
consequently caused considerable cilia
damage.
KURT
Cilia...?
SEEBAND
Cilia are the tiny hairs in the mucus of
the fallopian tubes which transport the
fertilized egg to the uterus.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
At present we are looking for a way of
treating it with surgery. But if she were
to become pregnant before then, the
chances are extremely high that she would
experience extra-uterine gravidity – an
ectopic pregnancy, with the cell growing
where the fallopian tube is. And that
could well lead to extremely dangerous
internal bleeding.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
I must therefore warn you, though not for
the same reasons that normally motivate
fathers of daughters to warn a young man,
not to become intimate with her, until we
have been able to alleviate this
condition. A pregnancy at this point in
time could be life-threatening for Ellie.
SEEBAND
77
You do understand? Life-threatening.
KURT
(with a huge effort)
And if she were already pregnant?
SEEBAND
(acting shocked)
Then I would have to examine her
immediately.
SEEBAND
I must act immediately. The pregnancy is
considerably more advanced than I had
feared – it's already the third month.
78
84. INT. SEEBAND’S VILLA - SEEBAND’S STUDY - CONTINUOUS
KURT
An... abortion?
SEEBAND
If I do not remove the fetus she will not
survive the pregnancy.
KURT
Here?
SEEBAND
We have a reputation to maintain.
KURT
Is it really the only way? Really?
SEEBAND
Are you doubting my professional ability?
SEEBAND
Would I put myself through something like
this... and my daughter!... if it were
not absolutely necessary?
ELLIE
(in a monotone)
He had an SS uniform made for himself.
For hours he would practice in front of
the mirror, trying out different poses
until he found the best ones.
ELLIE
(in despair)
Am I always going to be at his mercy?
80
We see Kurt, Ellie and also Frau Seeband, who is standing
next to her husband. The Minister of Health is making a
speech in Seeband’s honor:
MINISTER OF HEALTH
... a gifted doctor, a humanist, one of
the founders of our Socialist Republic –
in short, a fine example for all members
of his profession. And today, 11
December, the anniversary of the
foundation of the German Democratic
Republic, it is my honor to present him
with the Robert Koch Medal and the title
Distinguished Doctor of the People.
SEEBAND
Thank you, Minister, for those kind
words, of which I am not deserving.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
As a doctor and a member of society I
merely do my duty. I am simply one wheel
in the huge machinery of international
socialism, just as the painter of this
far too flattering portrait of me is only
a small wheel, his style
indistinguishable from the other painters
here...
DIGNITARY 1
(to his companion)
Who was it by?
DIGNITARY 2
It doesn't say. Willi Sitte, probably.
One of those.
DIGNITARY 1
I just wonder how long it will take the
news to get around that Mr Eastman has
invented a device which does this sort of
thing itself – but much better!
The two men laugh and walk on. Ellie and Kurt stand
silently, watching Seeband and his wife at the other end
of the room as they accept expressions of congratulation.
A little further away Frau Hellthaler is standing by
herself. She is also watching Seeband and his wife. Among
the people congratulating Seeband is a uniformed Soviet
officer, a slim, good-looking man who whispers something
quietly into Seeband’s ear when he approaches. For a
moment Seeband seems startled; then he nods briefly to
the Russian officer, who walks on. Seeband’s wife
addresses him, apparently asking about the incident.
REVERSE ANGLE:
SEEBAND
I am to report to KGB Headquarters in
Berlin tomorrow. That's all he said.
Now the two of them notice that Kurt and Ellie are
watching them from the other end of the room. Frau
Seeband nods to them in greeting.
FRAU SEEBAND
82
Looks like that plan didn't work either.
They are closer than ever.
SEEBAND
Patience, Martha, patience.
MURAVYOV
(genuinely moved)
Carl, Carl...
(something occurs to him)
Wait, I must show you something.
MURAVYOV (CONT'D)
Carl, I’m being transferred. Back to
Russia. I won't be able to protect you
any longer.
MURAVYOV (CONT'D)
83
All the others have been caught. On paper
we are still hunting for Burghard Kroll
and the "medical coordinator of the
Dresden region for the euthanasia
program".
(he glances meaningfully at Seeband).
I can't guarantee my successor won't re-
open the investigation and start
questioning doctors and nurses again.
MURAVYOV (CONT'D)
You have to leave the country as well.
And never come back. Apply for permission
to emigrate, for you and your wife. It
will be approved. These days Wernher von
Braun is building space rockets for the
Americans. As far as we can see, nobody
in the West would be interested in your
SS past any more... Nobody will suspect
the truth.
(dryly)
Let's hope our side doesn't, either.
MURAVYOV (CONT'D)
(openly trusting, confidentially)
You can’t tell me anything about Kroll?
Where he is? Who else was at those
meetings?
(almost pleading)
You would help me a great deal.
SEEBAND
I never met the gentleman. I don't know
anything about him.
MURAVYOV
We shall never meet again, my friend. I
hope I have repaid my debt to you.
84
Seeband is sitting at his desk, Frau Hellthaler at her
place, while he dictates letters to her.
SEEBAND
... to make sure we can avoid a
bottleneck in the occupancy. Yours
respectfully, Professor Dr. etc.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
There is another letter.
SEEBAND
To Dresden Municipal Council, Department
for Internal Affairs.
FRAU HELLTHALER
Reference?
SEEBAND
(watching her closely)
Application to relinquish citizenship of
the German Democratic Republic.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
"After due deliberation I, Professor Dr.
Carl Seeband, hereby request permission
for myself and my wife Martha to emigrate
immediately to the Federal Republic of
Germany." Write it!
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
"For political reasons it is no longer
possible for me to remain in the German
Democratic Republic. My daughter
Elisabeth, who is of age, will remain in
the GDR, since she continues to believe
in the GDR and in the socialist world
view. I leave to her my property, Wiener
Strasse 91. With best respects, Professor
Dr. etc."
85
Frau Hellthaler is still writing, although large tears
are dripping onto her notepad, blurring the lines.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
Do you have all that? Kindly deliver it
in person to the Town Hall tomorrow.
FRAU SEEBAND
(to Kurt)
Are you thinking about your mother?
SEEBAND
Dear Ellie. Dear Kurt. You have now been
my son-in-law for two hours. I shall be
leaving my daughter in your hands when we
leave the country at the end of the
month. There is only one thing I would
like to pass on for your journey through
life: It is not enough to be "good". I
have seen many men who were just "good"
passed over, dispossessed, even
annihilated. If you want security in this
world, no matter what you do, you have to
be the best. Not one of the best. The
best.
ELLIE
(reading from a letter)
... and thus I find myself in Oldenburg,
in the Sanderbusch Clinic, with every
prospect of taking over when Erkner
retires two years from now. Take care of
yourself. Your Papa."
KURT
Well, it looks as though he's landed on
his feet again.
MAX
(happily)
Really?
KURT
How much would you give for my Wartburg?
MAX
Are you kidding me? Do you know how long
a normal mortal has to wait to get a car
like that?
87
KURT
I just don't like it any more. 300 marks?
Max gazes at him for long time, silent and serious; here
has a good idea what his friend is planning.
MAX
Kurt, in the West they even don't do
painting any more. These days painting is
considered bourgeois.
KURT
(skeptical)
I thought for them "bourgeois" was good?
MAX
(now uncertain)
Oh, what do I know!
Kurt laughs.
MAX
Of course we all want to get rid of you.
Of course we do. But you've got a life
here. You have money. You're becoming
famous. I mean... I get girls to go to
bed with me because I'm your assistant.
You can handle the apparatchiks like
nobody else... Next year you're going to
be 30, so you’re not so young anymore...
You’re... Why?
KURT
Because none of that matters.
MAX
Then what does matter?
KURT
The truth.
MAX
And who says what is true?
KURT
(smiling)
Me, me, me.
88
MAX
260?
KURT
Fine. Do you need canvases?
MAX
You mean you have some?
KURT
In my studio – with pictures on them.
MAX
What?!
KURT
Paint over them. All of them, please.
Max is speechless.
KURT
I don't want to see them again. Believe
me. Nothing I've painted there is right.
MAX
But what about the murals? Those you
can't destroy.
KURT
I expect other people will take care of
that.
MAX
Alright, then at least let me drive you
in my new car.
(Kurt is about to object)
Only to East Berlin, I mean.
MONTAGE (MOS)
SOVIET SOLDIER
What is purpose of your visit to Berlin?
89
MAX
I'm just the driver.
KURT
We are assistants at Dresden Art Academy,
and we're going to a meeting at the
School of Visual and Applied Art in
Weissensee.
90
Ellie and Kurt freeze. But the policeman is addressing
someone else; he stops a man climbing the steps with a
large suitcase. Kurt and Ellie walk on.
ELLIE
(whispers to Kurt)
They almost make it too easy...
KURT
Not for much longer.
TRAIN DRIVER
(over loudspeakers)
Next Station: Zoological Garden, West
Berlin.
91
- Ellie, wearing a bra, is washing her only blouse in
one of the many washbasins of the communal bathroom.
The same Stasi officers and the two party officials who
watched Kurt paint the mural originally are now ensuring
that everything is covered over. Several workmen are
nailing wooden planks onto the wall.
END OF MONTAGE
92
A small apartment full of paintings, realistic portraits,
realistic street scenes in GDR style. WERNER BLASCHKE, a
cigarette in the corner of his mouth, is painting a
portrait of a plump 12-year-old boy squirming in front of
him in his Sunday best.
BLASCHKE
(in a strong Saxon accent)
Stay still, Klaus, or you'll spoil your
father's birthday present for Mummy.
BLASCHKE (CONT'D)
How old are you again?
KURT
29. Almost 30.
BLASCHKE
(impressed)
You look younger.
(getting back to business)
Yes, in that case Munich is a good idea.
People there have plenty of money. They
always need portraits, landscapes too.
What I wouldn't advise is Düsseldorf.
KURT
Düsseldorf?
BLASCHKE
It's all modern art there. Avant-garde!
And if you didn't study at their Academy,
you don't stand a chance anyway. It's a
kind of Mafia. Munich is good. Hamburg is
good. Berlin...? Well, middling, as you
can see for yourself.
KLAUS
(obediently)
Good day.
BLASCHKE
Stay still!
KURT
Good morning. My name is Kurt Barnert. I
phoned about a tour.
PREUSSER (O.S.)
(loud, brisk)
You're still under 26 I hope?
PREUSSER (CONT'D)
94
Good. And what you want to do? Sculpture?
Action? Installations?
KURT
Painting... actually.
Preusser laughs.
PREUSSER
(mocking Kurt’s mild Saxon accent)
“Pointing?”
PREUSSER (CONT'D)
No offence. I'm from the east myself.
Mecklenburg.
PREUSSER (CONT'D)
Take a look around. Nobody really does
painting anymore. People want something
new – an idea.
KURT
An idea?
PREUSSER
Yes. But not something like that:
something new, or at least in new
packaging. Like Yves Klein, who says: I
am claiming ultramarine for myself. I am
even going to patent it. It is now called
Yves Klein Blue. And I shall only express
myself with this color. I will paint the
naked breasts of a beautiful woman with
Yves Klein Blue, and she will rub the
paint against the breasts of another
beautiful woman. I shall paint sponges
with Yves Klein Blue and stick them to
canvases with Yves Klein Blue.
95
PREUSSER (CONT'D)
(whispers to Kurt)
Of course, it’s no good if someone had
the idea first. Lucio Fontana has been
slashing canvases for the last six years.
What's the point of just repeating it?
But Katrin has lovely firm breasts, so we
let her do what she likes...
PREUSSER (CONT'D)
That's Adrian Schimmel. The name says it
all...
("Schimmel" = "mold".)(Preusser whispers)
His real name is Adrian Finck, son of the
chairman of Mannesmann. Prig. But he's
got international connections – even in
Paris and New York, they say. And he can
talk, that's for sure. But is the
wallpaper idea enough?
ELDERLY MAN
Yes, I think it's very pretty. But isn't
it still what you might call...
wallpaper.
ADRIAN SCHIMMEL
Yes, but you see, it only looks that way.
That's exactly what we artists are
searching for: that which is hidden
behind the decorative. The emptiness,
expressed by the holes I punched in it.
The banality, incorporated in the
material linoleum that I applied to it.
The senseless stridency visible in the
neon colors in which I rolled my work.
Thus it becomes obvious than in art even
the facade, yes, even wallpaper always
speaks the truth. And that is precisely
what brought you here. You have a deep
sense of the artistic; otherwise you
would not have ended up here. Piet
Mondrian presents you with utopia. I
96
present you with the truth. Your friends
see some pretty wallpaper. You see the
level behind it.
ELDERLY WOMAN
(impressed)
And... is it possible to... purchase
something like this?
ADRIAN SCHIMMEL
It is. That's what so fantastic about
art.
PREUSSER
Money always makes money... You know how
it is. But no artist should have to talk
about his work like that. He just wants
to prove to his successful family that he
can be successful even without them.
Money is all that counts for that...
(a sudden moment of introspection)
Whereas I want to prove to my
unsuccessful family that I can be
successful in spite of them. Money is all
that matters there, too... Families...
it's all shit.
PREUSSER
But you must be younger than 26 when you
get the idea. Otherwise it’s no use.
KURT
Why?
PREUSSER
Just think about it: Picasso was 26 for
Les Demoiselles d'Avignon. Duchamp was 25
when he painted Nude Descending a
Staircase. And Michelangelo was 24 when
he did the Pietà.
PREUSSER
What do you call that?
ARENDT IVO
"Device to make a potato circle another."
PREUSSER
No more dots?
ARENDT IVO
(innocently, shaking his head)
At the moment I'm more interested in
potatoes.
PREUSSER
This is Kurt. From the East. Painter.
Wants to study here.
ARENDT IVO
So I suppose Harry already subjected you
to his speech about "the idea"?
KURT
You don't believe it?
ARENDT IVO
If you are looking to create the supreme
masterpiece, it might be right. I mean,
mastery has to be measured somehow. But
personally, I'm more interested in:
potatoes.
PREUSSER
Come on, before you get corrupted.
PREUSSER (CONT'D)
Arendt Ivo: what he wants, nobody knows.
He used to do everything in big dots, all
the same color, that he printed on
98
boards. Could have been a real idea. And
now that. And in a couple of months he'll
be doing something completely different.
PREUSSER (CONT'D)
(with a certain pride)
Our Professor... Antonius van Verten. But
I guess you've heard of him even in
Saxony.
PREUSSER (CONT'D)
A true original... He'd probably like me
to say: 'legend'. Always wears that hat.
One time a really sexy student seduced
him - just to see him without the hat.
PREUSSER (CONT'D)
He kept it on, even in bed...
(he laughs)
Only works with felt and animal fat. Why?
(mocking but also envious)
That remains his big, legendary secret.
Sometimes he uses rabbit blood. He told
the sexy student that when he was a kid
he once shot a rabbit – and never
recovered from it. We have to attend all
his lectures – they’re obligatory – but
he never looks at anything we do. He says
the only person who knows if you're doing
it right is yourself... I think he simply
doesn't care about us. Well... We don't
care about him either.
99
Preusser's dismissal doesn't sound too convincing. Kurt
gazes in fascination at the wild movements of the
mysterious teacher.
PREUSSER (CONT'D)
But whether you're accepted, whether you
get a studio – it's all completely up to
this madman.
PREUSSER (CONT'D)
Come on, he's not that interesting.
KURT
(dryly)
So this is one of those "ideas"?
PREUSSER
(to the young woman)
Does it appeal to you, this sculpture?
YOUNG WOMAN
Yes.
PREUSSER
It's still not quite right. I can only
see that now you're standing next to it.
(gestures to her with his palm upright)
That's right...
(gestures to his sculpture)
That isn't.
YOUNG WOMAN
100
(blushing)
What are you trying to express with this
work?
PREUSSER
(gravely, with emphasis)
Precisely what you're experiencing right
now.
PREUSSER
I was 23, by the way.
VAN VERTEN
You haven't submitted a portfolio.
KURT
I wasn't able to bring anything with me.
VAN VERTEN
What have you done up to now?
KURT
Painting.
VAN VERTEN
In East Germany?
KURT
Yes.
VAN VERTEN
Socialist realism?
101
It is more a statement than a question, so no reply is
required.
VAN VERTEN
So now they really have built a wall. Did
you feel that coming?
KURT
"Nobody has the intention" – always means
precisely the opposite is true.
VAN VERTEN
But somehow it's almost art, that wall –
a piece of landscape art. The
craftsmanship involved in the execution
is completetly un-interesting; hundreds
of thousands of people have problems with
it...
(shaking his head)
Consistent German madness.
Kurt nods.
KURT
One step forwards, two steps back.
ELLIE
Oh come on! Don't tell me you can't do
anything you like here.
KURT
Yes, but if I only knew what that is...
ELLIE
Maybe... first of all... to inaugurate
this studio?
VAN VERTEN
103
Who are you going to vote for? The SPD?
The CDU?
PREUSSER
That's almost an idea. You learn fast.
MONTAGE
VAN VERTEN
What I am now going to show you – is art.
You should never be afraid to call art by
that name. Most people talk about "works"
and "images" and "objects". By doing so
they diminish their own art. I don't want
you to be diminished. I want you to make
art. And this... is art.
105
I would like you to have Arno Breker’s
creative power. I would like you to
produce a body of work like his.
ELLIE
The sixth time, Kurt. This time it was as
far as the third month.
ELLIE (CONT'D)
I went to see the doctor. I will not be
able to have children.
106
Kurt is shaken. He still can't move.
ELLIE (CONT'D)
And you know what he said? It was the
abortion. Not cilia damage.
(bitterly)
By wanting to keep it so pure, he
succeeded in extinguishing his own
bloodline.
ELLIE (CONT'D)
We'll never have children, Kurt...
ELLIE (CONT'D)
Your pictures... Your pictures have to be
our children. Yes? Alright?
VAN VERTEN
Have you all studied Lehmbruck?... If
not, please do so. For your own sakes...
He said: "Each work of art must retain
something from the first days of
creation... As if it were still divine...
As if it were yet emerging from the
primeval mass, from the ribs..."
107
Van Verten falters and then stops: it is as though the
urge to touch, to teach, to communicate, simply isn’t
there today.
KURT
Lottery numbers...
KURT (CONT'D)
No, really. The lottery numbers. If I say
six numbers at random - 5, 7, 23, 29, 44,
11 – that's just stupid. But if I read
you the winning numbers from the
lottery...
(picking up a newspaper from the desk of
the student next to him)
... 2, 17, 19, 25, 45, 48 – then suddenly
they have a true quality, something
forceful, almost beautiful...
KURT (CONT'D)
(disconcerted)
That was... my... insight.
VAN VERTEN
You can go. I have nothing for you today.
108
While the others walk out Kurt comes down to the front,
looking anxious. When he gets there Van verten waits
until everyone else has left and then turns to face Kurt.
KURT
When?
VAN VERTEN
Whenever you like. If you like. Just let
me know.
Van Verten picks up his bag, tips his hat in farewell and
walks out.
PREUSSER
What is there to think about? If he likes
your work, you get a gallery, and then
you can buy your girlfriend...
KURT
I'm married.
PREUSSER
... then you can buy your wife and your
girlfriend a car. Soon you'll be able to
exchange your pictures for classics. Van
Verten swapped a chair covered in animal
fat for a Courbet!
KURT
At least there were a few nails in it.
KURT (CONT'D)
(honestly)
I just don't know whether it's good
enough, what I'm doing. Somehow I feel it
isn't.
PREUSSER
109
But it's all subjective anyway! And if it
weren't subjective, it wouldn't be art,
it would be craft.
Craft. An insult.
PREUSSER (CONT'D)
At the end of the day, it's all a matter
of luck, isn't it? And the fact that van
Verten is interested in your stuff, for
whatever reason, means you’re in luck.
Anyway, he doesn't want to be wrong.
Right now, he's ready to discover
something brilliant in your work. Don't
stand in your own way.
Kurt goes back into his part of the studio and looks at
his pictures. The CAMERA shows only his face. He doesn't
look convinced. Suddenly the hammering stops. Preusser
appears behind him. He also gazes at Kurt's work.
PREUSSER
(comforting)
It's good, your work. Really. It's good.
Kurt opens the door. Van Verten storms in, rushing over
to the pictures in excitement, with something akin to
hunger in his eyes. But after a few steps his movements
become slower and slower. His initial enthusiasm changes
into reservation. Silence. Van Verten is deeply
disappointed. Kurt can see this – and suffers silently.
VAN VERTEN
During the war I was a radio operator
with the Luftwaffe. I was a terrible
radio operator, and my pilot was a
terrible pilot. Not really surprising
after only four weeks’ training.
(he laughs a little)
We were shot down on our second sortie,
over the Crimea. The pilot was killed
immediately.
The nomads extinguish the fire with blankets and haul van
Verten's shattered body out of the plane.
VAN VERTEN
If I ask myself what I truly know, what I
have truly experienced in my life, what I
can claim without lying, it's the animal
fat on my skin, the homeland of animal
fat, of felt. When other people talk to
me about love, about women, about their
children or about sex – I know what they
mean only because I experienced that fat
and felt on my skin.
KURT
Herr Münster, a question.
112
(indicating the pictures)
Can I throw these out with the garbage?
JANITOR
No - they wouldn't take that much.
KURT
Any idea how I can get rid of it?
Kurt walks into the apartment. Ellie has been waiting and
gives him a kiss on the cheek.
ELLIE
How was your day?
KURT
Productive.
More slides are shown: Seeband and his wife on the beach,
with big hats and exotic cocktails; in a Roman
amphitheater; in front of the small Lufthansa plane that
is going to bring them home; inside the plane – the 1st
class cabin. Everything spells prosperity.
The women have gone through to the kitchen, while the men
are sitting at the table.
SEEBAND
Re-commence your studies at the age of
30? When I was 30 I was chief physician
in Dresden. When Mozart was 30, he was
dead.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
I do understand you don't want any
support from me. And that's admirable.
(leaning forward and whispering)
But factory work? Is that a life you want
for your wife?
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
I have a suggestion. I am on good terms
with the director of the gynecology
clinic in Düsseldorf. He frequently
invites me there for consultations. I’ll
get you a part-time job there, something
suitable. Maybe three hours each morning.
114
Agreed? Then you’ll have an income, and
you'll still have time for... painting.
ELLIE
Can’t he just vanish from our lives? Just
leave us alone?
KURT
Perhaps the job will help with that.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
(dryly)
"Allegory of Emptiness" – that could be
the title. Maybe it will be a sensation.
SEEBAND
This has to be taken to the passport
office in Bonn so they can issue my
permanent passport. It's all ready to be
picked up. I was thinking – why don’t you
do it for me? That way you can earn a bit
more money. Here’s the authorization.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
The administration fee is 10 marks 50.
You can keep the rest. I'll call by next
week to pick up the passport. Agreed?
NEWSPAPER BOY
(calls out)
Burghard Kroll, Nazi Murderer caught
after 16 years.
SEEBAND
(jovially, in Italian)
That smells delicious.
116
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
Kurt, it's not too late for you to start
something completely new. It just has to
be something reasonable. You're a
punctual fellow and not workshy. Perhaps
something in Postal Administration. I was
just reading that they're looking for
young men. Becoming a civil servant
wouldn’t be a bad idea at all.
KURT
(startled by the realization)
You smoke?
SEEBAND
63 is the right age to start. The
consequences will hardly catch up with
me.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
You finish your meal, take your time. I'm
afraid I have to dash. All my best to
Ellie.
KURT
May I?
MAN
The politics section? You can have it.
All I need is the sports pages.
117
134. INT. DÜSSELDORF ACADEMY OF ART - KURT’S STUDIO – SHORTLY
AFTERWARDS
Preusser appears.
PREUSSER
(scornful, angry)
"White on a white background"...
"Allegory of Emptiness"... Your father-
in-law?
PREUSSER (CONT'D)
What an asshole.
PREUSSER (CONT'D)
You know, for the first time I’d like
somebody else to succeed more than me.
PREUSSER (CONT'D)
Your mistake is that you're still bound
to the easel and canvas. Do something
with...
(looking round)
... dust, or... broken glass or rubber
bands. Painting is just dead. Like folk
dancing and lace-making and silent
movies.
PREUSSER (CONT'D)
(with sympathy)
I only want the best for you, you know.
Otherwise I'd just let you go on like
this. I mean, it's too late for us to
become doctors now.
118
Kurt attempts to give him a friendly smile, which doesn't
quite work. Preusser goes back into his studio.
119
137. INT. DÜSSELDORF ACADEMY OF ART - KURT’S STUDIO - DAY
PREUSSER
(points to the pictures)
What's this?
KURT
I don't know either. But I think that's
it.
PREUSSER
(genuinely baffled)
Painted copies of photographs.
120
Kurt laughs and closes the blinds. Preusser goes back
into his studio. Kurt has to close the interconnecting
doors to make his studio dark enough.
KURT
Sorry.
121
close that they seem to be born out of one another, the
face of the accusing child in between.
SEEBAND (O.C.)
(harsh, arrogant)
I imagine you will understand why I
didn't introduce you this morning? It
would not have been appropriate.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
Well, how is the world of art? And even
more importantly: do you have my
passport? I've come to collect it.
SEEBAND (CONT'D)
I... have to... go I'm afraid. Thank
you... excuse me.
PREUSSER
Have you ever seen anything like that?
What did you say to him? What was wrong
with him?
KURT
(honestly)
No idea.
MONTAGE:
INTERCUT WITH:
INTERCUT WITH:
KURT
If you knew how beautiful you look right
now.
ELLIE
124
I'm pregnant.
He is staggered.
ELLIE (CONT'D)
The fourth month. I went to the doctor.
The fourth month. We are going to be
parents!
ELLIE (CONT'D)
We are going to be parents. We are going
to be parents.
KURT
It's Sunday. There’s nobody here. I
promise.
KURT (CONT'D)
Please, there’s nobody here. Please, like
yesterday. Please tell me again. And then
come down the stairs.
ELLIE
(quietly)
I'm pregnant.
And now she comes down the stairs, moving with gentle,
majestic steps, her head slightly lowered. Kurt is so
125
impressed that he forgets for a moment to take a
photograph. Then he does so.
HIGH ANGLE: WE SEE THE MEN FROM BEHIND THE CANVAS, THE
TOP OF THE CANVAS IN THE BOTTOM EDGE OF THE SHOT.
PREUSSER
Now that's not potatoes, is it?
PREUSSER (CONT'D)
Should we show it to van Verten? I think
we could find a gallerist for it.
ADRIAN
Oh, what the hell! This doesn't deserve a
provincial gallerist. Kurt, what do you
say I become your gallerist?
PREUSSER
Adrian Schimmel, the gallerist?
ADRIAN
Adrian Finck.
IVO
You’re not as bad as you always pretend
to be, you know that?
126
Adrian Finck stretches his hand out to Kurt Barnert.
ADRIAN
50-50?
ADRIAN (CONT'D)
But first we don't sell a thing. First we
hold a big exhibition of your work, with
press conference and TV. International
attention.
PREUSSER
Paris?
(reverently)
New York?
ADRIAN
Documenta. Kassel.
INTERCUT
127
Van Verten enters his office. There is a painting on his
desk, wrapped in paper, with the traditional red bow. He
opens it. It is the overlapping portrait of Seeband,
Kroll, Aunt Elisabeth and young Kurt.
BACK TO SCENE:
ARTHUR KASTNER
Are there any questions for Kurt Barnert?
KURT
Yes.
JOURNALIST #1
128
The magnificent painting "Mother and
Child" we can see here. Who is depicted
there? You and your mother?
KURT
No. It's just a snapshot. It doesn't
really matter to me who I paint.
JOURNALIST #2
But if you paint a portrait, you must
know the person...
KURT
It's actually better if I don't know
them.
Sounds of astonishment.
KURT (CONT'D)
Then I see better what is really there.
JOURNALIST #2
Is that the reasoning behind the passport
photographs from a machine? A photograph
without an author?
KURT
Yes.
JOURNALIST #2
So by painting an army officer you are
not making a statement about the German
Army?
KURT
No. I don't make statements. I make
pictures. Photographs. Photographs by
other means.
JOURNALIST #3
If you take even the composition from a
snapshot – surely that means everything
is very random?
KURT
Not random. Real. Genuine. Consistent.
Only reality is consistent. Every reality
is consistent.
129
JOURNALIST #4
What do you mean by that?
KURT
If I say six numbers now it’s just
stupid, meaningless. But if the six
numbers are the winning numbers from the
lottery, then they mean something, they
have coherence, value, almost beauty...
and truth. That's how it is with the
photographs. I want the truth.
The baby begins to cry. Ellie tries to calm her, but she
can see there's no point. She gives Kurt a surreptitious
wave and walks off.
ARTHUR KASTNER
Yes, Herr Meybert, your question?
JOURNALIST #5
What will be next for you? More painted,
slightly blurred copies of photographs?
KURT
No, I've had enough of them for a while.
Right now I'm interested in color charts.
JOURNALIST #5
Color charts?
KURT
Yes...
CAMERAMAN
(indicating the breasts and crotch)
That'll get us into trouble.
CAMERAMAN (CONT'D)
130
That'll get us into trouble as well.
JOURNALIST #3
Magazine images chosen at random,
passport photographs from machines,
snapshots from family albums – all
painted in blurry style. With these
pictures, which admittedly have genuine
force in some mysterious way, Kurt
Barnert seems on his way to becoming one
of the leading artists of his generation
– in painting, a supposedly long dead
medium. But, like so many of his
generation, he has no statement to make,
no stories to tell, and nothing to say.
He is rejecting artistic tradition, side-
stepping the auto-biographical and is
thus creating, perhaps for the first time
in the history of art... a body of work
in which the artist is almost irrelevant.
CAMERAMAN (O.C.)
Super.
ADRIAN
You sure you don't want a lift to the
hotel?
KURT
I'd like to walk a bit.
ADRIAN
You were good today. It was good. It's
going to be good.
LONG SHOT: we see Kurt walk up to the cab of one bus and
speak to the driver.
THE END
132