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The Harmonists (Comedian Harmonists) (1997)
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The Harmonists is a German made film that begins in 1927 and runs till 1934, dealing
directly with the impact of the Nazis on the lives of the principal characters, members of
a popular and very successful singing group, the Comedian Harmonists.
The
director/executive producer of the film (born 1939) and its writer (born 1943) are from
the post-Nazi generation and, so, in a sense, are a step removed from direct personal
involvement in that dark history. Still, the younger German generations have surely
carried their own special emotional baggage on these issues. It is not unusual to hear
comments from Germany today, sometimes to the effect that Germans have tried to ignore or
bury the past, sometimes to the opposite effect that the Germans have paid enough penance
for the crimes of an earlier generation. Sometimes, too, the sounds of neo-Nazism become a
reminder that the past is not as well behind us as we would hope.
The film focuses on
the history, based on fact, of the Comedian Harmonists. The idea of the singing group was
that of Harry Frommerman, a young Jewish drama student with musical talent. His special
"take" on the music was to use essentially traditional, even kitschy types of
tunes, sung in close harmony with musical skill, and to add just enough of a touch of
irony, both in the lyrics and in the arrangements, to make the songs fresh and amusing,
thereby avoiding the overly sentimental effect such music might otherwise have. It proved
to be a formula for success.
The film follows the
group from its formation, through its initial struggles, and to the worldwide acclaim that
they won. In that aspect, it is not unlike many performer biopics from the past. But
here, on a parallel track, the Nazis are rising to power and the film shows, through a
series of incidents, the ugly ways that National Socialism infiltrated the daily lives of
even the nonpolitical. Several times, members of the group are shown to be in denial
of what was going on around them. At least, they deluded themselves that their fame
and popularity would protect them. Three of the six members were Jewish. In the end, the
Nazis force the dissolution of the group.
The talented
cast is led by Ulrich Noethen, who brings to the role of Frommerman a fine sense of wry,
the very irony that was at the root of the group's success. We get to know several members
of the group in some depth, we see their relationships and conflicts develop. The
singing numbers have charm, if, to this ear, a bit of sameness about them. Indeed, the
charismatic quality of the group, the performing magic that made them the big stars they
were, is not convincingly demonstrated and that is a major weakness in the film.
But in the end, it
is the handling of the historical theme which separates The Harmonists from the
standard show biz biography. The screenwriter says, "The film wants to express the
sorrow of what it meant - and what it still means - for Germany that the country's best
creative talents were persecuted, suppressed, driven away, and finally murdered." In
this, CV believes the film falls short. The major scene of the group's last
appearance together in concert in 1934 loses the balance of intelligent humor and blatant
sentimentality for which the writer says he was aiming. It droops into manipulative tear
jerking and, as represented, seemed more a fiction of the silver screen than any possible
reality. That only one couple got up to leave when the Nazi condemnation of the
group was announced stretches credulity.
And, at the
conclusion, the Jewish members of the group leave Germany. They have the money, they have
the clout of their fame to win them their freedom. It makes for a happy, if bittersweet
ending. To this viewer, in the final analysis, The Harmonists seemed to trivialize
the experience of those victims of the Nazis who were less privileged.
- Arthur
Lazere