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The Blue Angel (Der Blaue Engel) (1930)
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The Blue Angel is based on a
best-selling Expressionist novel of the day, Professor
Unrat (1905) by Thomas Mann’s older brother Heinrich. At the Blue Angel, a
small-town music hall, locals can rub shoulders with the traveling vaudeville
demimonde, including Lola Lola (Marlene Dietrich). The novel, set in late
Wilhelminian Germany (the Teutonic version of Victorian pomp, prudery, and
respectability), translates superbly into the Weimar-era UFA-Paramount
co-production, directed by Josef von Sternberg. Its success lay, in part, in the
Weimar zeitgeist--Heinrich’s political views and socially critical
fiction proved to be in tune with the modernist artistic energy, the politically
capacious society, and the decadent sensibilities following World War I in the
new Weimar democracy.
Checking up on his errant students, Prof. Dr. Immanuel Rath
follows them one evening to The Blue Angel (“The Drunken Angel”). The
impossibly stiff, patriarchal college professor Rath ( “good advice” or
“city alderman”) is smitten by the sexual charms of cabaret chanteuse Lola
Lola, who sings “Ich bin von Kopf bis
Fuss auf Liebe eingestellt,” coyly giving fair warning that “I’m
Nothing But a Sex Machine.” Thus begins the professor’s fall, as
foreshadowed in his students’ sardonic nickname for him, Professor Unrat
(translated as “Garbage,” but connotatively “Asshole”). He will end up a
drunk, a clown, and cuckolded backstage, while performing as a buffoon before an
SRO crowd on the show’s return stop in his hometown. This is schadenfreude
at its public best.
The film was originally designed as a vehicle for Emil
Jannings (one of Germany’s all-time revered film actors) in the lead role of
Immanuel Rath. Instead, Josef von Sternberg’s first collaboration with Marlene
Dietrich launched a super-star's career. Combining a feminine first name and a
masculine surname, Dietrich wowed audiences world-wide with her on-screen
persona as the original gender-bending femme
fatale, “insolently indifferent to male sexual debasement” (in the words
of critic Gaylyn
Studlar). Her sexually ambiguous and stylish on-stage cross-dressing has
been lovingly copied and spoofed ever since--from Liza Minelli’s version in Cabaret
(1972) to Madeline Kahn’s send-up in Blazing
Saddles (1974), even making a guest appearance
in pop music, in the Kinks’
“Lola” (1970).
The Blue Angel traces
the unmaking of traditional German society, embodying the newly
democratizing impulses of modernist experimentation, sexual liberation, and
challenges to the social class structure. It is a seminal film from the
short-lived German rival to the Hollywood system. The print has been
painstakingly restored, the soundtrack unmuddied, and readable yellow subtitles
added. The Blue Angel remains a cinéaste’s
delight. for all time.
- Les Wright