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Tuesday, May 04, 2021

Ernest Udet chapter 4 - Myth, Aviation, Cinema, and Fascism

 

A. Manfred von Richthofen - the first mythical pilot 

in late 1917, in an attempt to raise civil morale, significant propaganda film collections also began to appear in Germany. One of them was the 10-minute production called "Pilots on the Western Front." In its first part, the film showed filming of enemy trenches, attacking observation balloons, and dropping small bombs. The second part focused on the air heroes, Imelman, Bolka, and even Herman Goering. The main theme was Richthofen. He is seen in several poses. With his dog, laughs and jokes with other pilots, and hosts a captured British pilot. Everyone looks relaxed and happy. The film ends in an air battle that ends in a British plane being shot down. The message is clear. This is quality propaganda for the elite corps, the young and safe eagles of the Second Reich. Substantial footage of the band remained, and it is scattered among documentaries about them, such as: The Red Baron: Master Of The Air. 

In his best-selling autobiography, Richthofen portrays a social, friendly, idyllic and ideal, authentic, charming figure, especially suited to young people before enlistment. He defines himself primarily as an athlete: a rider and a hunter. The autobiography is a key document in the design of the icon. His aura was so great that after he was finally overthrown, in April 1918, even the Allied news diaries devoted extensive coverage to him. His early and undecipherable death made him a myth. Generations of experts have tried to solve the question of how he was overthrown. However, the legend began when, since the beginning of 1918, the High Command systematically portrayed him as the example. 

The young and brilliant lieutenant was to serve as a symbol of German militancy and the desire to succeed, at a time when it was also difficult to persuade young people to become pilots. He was supposed to remain the invincible hero forever. The elite felt insecure, and received compensation in a military culture where hunting and warfare skills were highly valued. Richthofen's death, like his life, embodied many changes in the European aristocracy that had taken place. It is no coincidence that the men who fought in the colors of the Knights of the Flying Circus were descendants of the men who fought in bright colors, as the warrior elite of the Middle Ages. They grew up to see themselves as socially and militarily superior to ordinary people.  

After World War I, at a time when the United States, Germany, Britain, and France made only limited reference to the subject of air warfare, it was inevitable that Germany's most important war movie of the period would be: ''Richthofen, The Red Knight of the Air'' [1927]. It was an interesting mix of reconstructed footage from his career, combined with newsreels material. This film ends with the state funeral procession held for him in Berlin in 1925, which was the largest in the history of Berlin. German Air Force Day is set for the date of his death.


B. Ernest Udet - the second mythical pilot

Richthofen added Ernest Udet to his ranks when he was already a squadron commander, and shot down more than 20 planes, making him a star in his own right. The chance to fly with Richthofen was unstoppable for him. After Richthofen's death, Udet became the temporary commander, with the highest number of scores. But an instruction came from above that the regular commander would be Goering, who came from another squadron, and was also a much less good pilot, and not so well-liked. Competitive Udet may have been personally hurt by this.

Young Ernest Udet, born April 24, 1896, with the Medal of Heroism "Pour Le Merit" at the age of 22, also received his own autobiographical book during the war, published in August 1918, a few months after Richthofen's death. The content also appears in his late and extended 1935 autobiography: ''Mein Fliegerleben'', which sold 600,000 copies in its first year.

The debut book is called: ''Kreuz Wider Kokarde: Jagdflüge Des Leutnants Ernst Udet'', and the chapters mostly describe his air battles. The name of the author on the cover is his. Inside the book are many beautiful paintings of the flight experiences in the war. It is likely that they were painted in colors originally, but due to printing limitations they were printed in black and white. The technique is combined: photography, painting and drawing. It is clear that the painter is Udet himself, although there is no signature on the paintings. This can be discerned by the subjects of the paintings, and by the wavy drawing line, which has become the central feature of his cartoons style.

The name of the book, which in translation is: "The Cross Against the Lily", is important. The "cross" was the symbol on the wings of German planes. The "lily" was the symbol of the color circles on the wings of French planes. Both are archetypal symbols of wholeness. But here the cross is, also, the sight of the machine gun, and the lily is the target board mark. When the cross is placed above the circle, an optical illusion of a spinning propeller, or swastika, is created. 

Between 1919 and 1929, before becoming a movie star in "Mountain Movies", Ernest Udet was mainly a stunt pilot, who made a lot of money and became an international celebrity, thanks to many airshows he held in front of a large audience across Europe and later USA. He was of great value to Nazi propaganda, and Goering recruited him and made him a senior general and in charge of the fighter airplanes industry.


C. Aviation, Nationalism, and Popular Cinema

Memory of the First World War was built through the myth of the war experience, which gave it legitimacy by changing the true picture of reality. The image engraved in the collective memory, of the romantic fighter pilot, disguised also the terrifying reality of a World War II pilot, capable of destroying entire cities. Private and collective memory is built and is not copied. This construction is done not alone, but out of social, cultural and political discourse. That’s why aviation filmmakers, most of whom were air crews during the war, shaped their memories in less frightening terms. They sought to make their experiences less painful. But the roots of the stereotype lie in the war propaganda. These films had a great impact on the way the public thought about aerial warfare, and the way new aviation films were created. They have created a model for future generations, and an iconography that exists to this day. 

The golden age of aviation, from the early 20th century to the 1950th, coincided with the golden age of cinema. Cinema developed just as quickly and dramatically as flight, and both quickly established themselves as the most exciting and popular form of leisure and activity, while becoming an incredibly effective channel for disseminating ideas, attitudes and qualities that society deserves to preserve. Very quickly the first films reflected the Gospel of the Wings, according to which air transport would bring with it a golden age of progress, and the pilot is a romantic and chivalrous figure. 

In the interwar period, folk cinema still paradoxically promoted these familiar themes, but also took advantage of fears of an aerial bombardment in the next great war. At the same time, cinema during this period used photographs of the pilot and the aircraft for nationalist propaganda, which showed achievements in this subject as the spearhead of the national technological initiative. 

Aerial propaganda films were more important in countries where national pride suffered a blow as a result of the war, and they were defeated or angry. In Germany, one way to achieve this was technological progress, which was seen as proof of recovery and superiority. For example, the "Missile Madness," which began in 1923 and peaked in 1929. During the 1920s, rapid airplanes development gradually began to offer more practical insights for nation-building. The heroic status of the air crew, the rapid spread of gliding and flight sports clubs, the growth of commercial aviation, the success of the national company Lufthansa, and the almost fanatical interest in the flights of the new zeppelins, all testified to the popularity and public support. 

After 1918, German cinema quickly re-established itself as a serious enterprise, and within five years its output was lower only than that of the United States. The aviation films, however, reflected little of Weimar's democratic spirit. Most of the films were propaganda works. Under a spectacular cover they attacked the enemies of the nation and praising national achievements. The aviation films were a clear channel of self-praise. The struggle of the airplanes against the forces of nature depended not only on the technological superiority, but on the moral qualities of man in the cockpit, the "new man" who symbolized the best in the nation. 

The first aviation film after the end of the war was: ''Ikarus, Der Fliegende Mensch'' [1918]The film was created as a patriotic film before the end of the First World War, but was re-edited and distributed after it, as a film with universal messages. The protagonist of the film is a young German inventor of a revolutionary engine, which the French covet, and enlist a beautiful countess to seduce him. The young man becomes an outstanding fighter pilot in the war, falls captive to the beloved Countess, but is rescued and at the end of the film he also reconciles with her. This impressive film is a romantic and light-hearted aviation-cinematic spectacle. The title of the work, the plot, and the timing, express the Gordian knot between aviation, cinema and myth.

Another film is: "Flight to Death" [1921], which deals with a flight contest. A major attempt to glorify the new man was Richthofen's biography from 1927. The film was distributed in the United States with a soundtrack. Even more successful were Ernest Udet's appearances in Arnold Punk's popular mountain films.

The Nazis did not enforce full control of the film industry until 1942, but the remaining filmmakers in Germany regularly reflected on Nazi ideology. Through UFA, the German huge nationalized film industry, there was a continuity of productions from the 1920th to the 1940th. Aviation films, in particular, had the continuity and clear development of patriotic themes, from productions in the Weimar period to those created after 1933. Example is Carl Ritter, who was an influential Nazi producer and director, beside being a veteran fighter pilot. He made several important aviation films during the period of 1920th-1940th.  


D. Aviation, Fascism and Mythical Modernity

A clear symbol of mythical totalitarian modernism in Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy was the airplane. The linguistic symbols and metaphors associated with aviation discourse, its perception and interpretation, are many, and the sources that can be relied on in this context are very numerous. They include important cultural events, artwork, books, magazines, propaganda products, and more. Gabriel D'Anoncio and Futurism are of great significance as a distinct model, thanks to the respectable place they occupied in the overall cultural discourse. It was not the aviation itself, but its connections, not the pilot himself, but the concepts involved, that were the focus of attention. They served as a means of revolutionary liberation from the burden of the past. The social agenda, which has been the focus of attention in fascist regimes, is clarified through the narrative of aviation heroes, and through the vision of the new man that fascism has tried to make a reality through an anthropological revolution. The protagonists were models and prototypes that citizens were required to use in order to shape their lives. The norms and values ​​that the media published as embodied in those heroes permeated the social reality, and the world was understood according to their register. The plane and the pilot were totems, in the fullest sense of the word, of icons with archetypal characteristics, of modernity in fascist regimes. Indirectly, they reflected the desire for order. Directly, they were the embodiment of modernity. The spiritual reciprocity between fascism and aviation was unequivocal. It has created mythical modernity, as opposed to liberal modernity. 

Aircraft aroused admiration, enveloping those who flew them in an immediate aura of daring, vitality and youth. The flight was more than a forward movement in the air. The plane was more than a means to an end. The flight experience was seen as the ultimate empowerment of life. Aviation has become the form of the new era, on which it has made its mark. The pilot was a new kind of person. The German pilot was not just a new German man. The model deserved to have a formative impact on the entire world. There is no machine that requires so much concentration and willpower as the airplane, and the pilot knows what it means to control. Every pilot is an innate fascist. In this way the necessary spiritual connection is created between aviation and fascism. The cultivation of the new man was one side of the fascist regime and the elimination of the others was the other side. 

Hitler and Mussolini had a passion for speed, and powerful planes and cars where tools for their call for action. Moreover, the airplanes provided a powerful symbol of military force. They described the German character. Accordingly, the Nazis worked to make the Third Reich air-conscious, and thus one capable of fully dealing with the challenges of the 20th century. When Goering declared "We must be a pilot nation", he declared the Nazi commitment not only to training the reserves of military pilots, but also to assimilate and cultivate the moral values ​​of aviation, which were courage combined with self-sacrifice and service to the national community. Through a special ministry, they reorganized the aviation clubs as the "German Aviation Association", took full control of all activities on the subject, and began planning the establishment of the Luftwaffe - the new air force. Hitler created a dramatic dynamic image of himself through the personal use of air transportation. 

Nazi air propaganda began seriously in a film about the Nazi Party Conference in Nuremberg: ''Tag Der Freiheit - Unsere Wehrmacht'' [1935]. Lenny Riefenstahl made this film, which celebrated the Nazi armament program, announced in March 1935. The film deals with the political conference and military demonstration that took place at the assembly, which introduced the new mechanized army, and the concept of the ''Blitzkrieg''. The Air Force and Air Defense are given central screen time, and the film ends with a flight in a swastika formation.

Propaganda was strengthened in the cinematic news diaries of the period. One newsreels from 1936 revealed the new types of aircraft in the army. The most interesting scenes deal with bombers. The background music is threatening, and you see bombers loaded with bombs. Bombers performs maneuvers and they all hit their targets on the first try. The film ends in a mass flight, when the announcer announces: "The German Air Force is strong and proud, ready to maintain German peace and protect the land of the ancestors."  

The accumulated imagery was strong enough to arouse widespread fear in other countries, allowing Hitler to use the Luftwaffe threat as a political weapon in his foreign policy during the late 1930s. Air operations during the Spanish Civil War, and in particular the attack on Guernica, which was widely covered in film diaries, confirmed the power of the Luftwaffe and the threat it posed.



Saturday, May 01, 2021

Thursday, April 29, 2021

Ernest Udet as a star in German mountain movies


The mountain movies were a substitute for the war films. They were a face of masculinity and purity, according to which the conquest of the mountains was a symbol of the personal power, in a world that had lost direction. They provided a description of human control over the forces of nature. The addition of aircraft, especially when Ernest Udet flew them, made them much more significant, linking war, the conquest of nature, and aviation, in a symbolic relationship. His appearances in films were a constant reminder to the audience of the romantic heroism of the pilot of the war, and a means of using the character, who, through "will", controls nature and technology. They praised the aircraft as a tool by which human will power was expressed, and as a model of technological achievement.

The mountain movies greatly influenced the design and inculcation of Nazi ideology. Following the First World War, the German psyche was debating the dilemma of wanting to break free from the yoke of the tyrannical regime in the face of the effects of personal chaos. One of the tracks they chose was this genre, which was exclusively German, and which reflected a wide-ranging sporting activity. 


Filmmaker Arnold Punk discovered the genre and had almost a monopoly on it until the end of the Weimar regime. Punk was a geologist by profession, and a mountaineering enthusiast. He even sought to spread his faith in the towering peaks and dangerous climbs on them, and relied on actors and technicians who had themselves become excellent alpinists. Among the best known were Lenny Riefenstahl and Lewis Trunker. The mountains as a symbol were already an element in expressionist cinema, but he was interested in real mountains. 


Punk initially created, in the years 1920-1923, a trilogy that showed the beauty and joy that is in mountain sports, and this in spectacular field photography, which was a stark contrast to the typical studio films of the period. Punk later showed greater interest in combining the emotional passion in the sights of the peaks and abysses, and in the human conflicts that arise in distress. Each year brought with it another mountain drama. 


The message conveyed by Punk matched the mood of many Germans, who even before World War II found refuge in the Alps from their daily routine, and climbed to the peaks in order to look down on contempt. They were more than athletes. They were zealous believers, who performed cult rituals. They were characterized by heroic idealism which, as a result of blindness to more tangible ideals, was embodied in this tourism industry. Punk developed the mountainous survival narrative further and further, bringing it to the pinnacles of fanatical and nationalist emotion, in a way that overlapped with Nazi ideology. Scenes of heroism and heroic sacrifice, civilian and military, became dominant. The protagonist in them was released from his hesitations, and the transformation that the audience underwent was one of release from complications after a temporary paralysis attack created by the camera stunts. The development of this narrative reflected, above all, the pro-Nazi wave that intensified in German cinema in the early 1930s. 


Lenny Riefenstahl continued to star in Punk, inspiring them to her films, among the first of which were also mountain films, in which she also starred in these. The mystical-primitive experience stands out, such as [1932] ''Das Blaue Licht''. In this film Riefenstahl directs herself, as a reclusive Italian country girl suspected of being a witch, as she climbs the mountains alone, and the village men who try to follow her fall to their deaths. On full moon nights she reaches a cave full of crystals that emit blue light. She befriends a German painter, who discovers the cave, tells about it to the villagers, who loot it, thereby causing her suicide. 


Luis Trunker, another Punk star, also turned to an independent career, starting to create and star in his own mountain movies. In Trunker, military heroism stands out, as in [1931] ''Berge in Flammen''. The plot of this film is about two mountain climbers, an Austrian and an Italian, who before the First World War climbed the Alps together, but in the war fought each other. 


The sacred mountain stars in many traditions and myths of all religions. It is related to the hero archetype. Of the four elements, it is most closely related to the element of air. Nietzsche is considered the mountain and air poet. The color of the snowy mountains is white, the color of light in which all the colors unite. White symbolizes the innocent primordial state, and the final state of integration. The films of the time were still shot in black and white, which highlighted these mythical qualities. After the white color comes the red color, the color of the Nazi flag.


All of these contributed to the fusion of the mountainous subculture with the Hitlerite subculture. The mountain movies were a response to the military and economic crisis of the 1920s, which was particularly pronounced in the field of aviation. They were used to promote aviation and militarism. The pilot was also used to redefine the masculinity figure, which is based on self-confidence, iron nerves, and ignoring dangers, traits that were also typical of those of the mountain climber. Hitler established his spacious vacation home, with a small movie theater, in Berghof in the Alps. Berghof became a well-fortified compound, where his associates also lived and his headquarters operated. On a cliff at the top of the mountain was another small residence, called "The Eagles' Nest", which was a place for solitude. Hitler did not engage in skiing and dangerous mountain climbing, but he did a lot of hiking on the trails that were paved on the mountain. 


Ernest Udet was already a well-known character when he started acting in mountain movies. At the same time, the importance of aviation has gained much momentum in public opinion. Arnold Punk was not naive on the matter. He admired Udet, and knew that his appearance would open a chapter of military history in his mvies, with all the consequences. The geopolitical developments of the period were intertwined with the debate over the future of aviation. The restrictions imposed on Germany under the Treaty of Versailles were in stark contrast to the development trends in the Allied countries. The number of German aircraft it in the 1920s was small, but the Germans did not interested so much flying machines as in the pride involved, the sense of power, and the unstoppable desire. Aviation was a recipe for education, and shaping a future nation, prior to military armament. Like the 19th century railway revolution, the plane was also designed to pump blood to the nation's arteries, unleashing its potential. From here it was also a short way to the theory of ''Living Space''.


The airspace created new possibilities for Germany's aspirations for power and self-defense. All that was needed for that purpose was a determined will, along with appropriate propaganda, that used the most powerful tool at its disposal, cinema. The pilot became the archetypal colleague of the mountain climber. Together they left the viewers feeling hyperactive. The pilot was not just a knight. He was an industrialist, well aware of the power of machines in modern life. He symbolized the new pace of life, and the fusion of man with the machine. 


Comparing the qualities of the modern pilot to the qualities of a mountain climber the balance clearly leaned in favor of the former. Punk movies between the years 1929-1933 are not just examples of the continuity of the genre. They are an expression of the social stalemate crisis, which could be resolved through the pilot's liberated dynamics. The presence of the aviation star, along with the aerial photography, enabled the broadening of horizons, which erases all claustrophobia. With Udet's help, viewers regained the sense of mobility they had lost. He does not look like the ideal Hero. He was short, only 160 cm tall and round, but he was the epitome of professionalism in aviation.


In the film [1927] ''Die weiße Hölle vom Piz Palü'', despite the recurring narrative in the Arnold Punk movies, there are significant upgrades compared to his previous movies. The heavy and extroverted symbolism of his previous works, as in the [1926] ''Der heilige Berg'', is replaced here by a more realistic and vital approach. The mountain is a real mountain, not a metaphysical place of challenge and salvation. The result is more realistic and compelling. However the plot narrative is similar, and will repeat next time as well. At its center are a man and a woman, and their struggle to get out of a snowstorm with their colleagues. The storm causes them to make mistakes in their way, and in addition disrupts the minds of the weak among them. They try to escape on their own, but the result is a fall into the abyss. After the rescue squad fails to arrive, despite its many efforts, it alll depend on the pilot in the air. After lengthy searches, he finds the trapped people and helps rescue them. The pilot is not part of the social circle of climbers. He arrives quickly from a distance, from the big city, and has the resilience and ability to be resourceful in lost situations. ''Die weiße Hölle vom Piz Palü'' was an artistic and commercial success, returning pride to German cinema. At the same time, he promoted the aircraft, as a machine with performance capabilities that no others have. The movie was released during the stock market crash in October 1929, and is one of the last silent films. As part of the mountain films starring udet, it combined also the transition from silent film to sound films, which created a severe crisis in the German film industry. 


[1930] ''Stürme über dem Mont Blanc'' is the second of four mountain films with Ernest Udet as the rescue pilot. He won many compliments for his role, breaking records for daring flights over the landscapes of the Alps, which gave the movie its dramatic power. The compliments fit into the overall critique, praising the physical and cinematic achievements that have reached highest peaks. This movie, like the others, emphasizes the vital need for speed and agility that the aircraft imparts, as opposed to the slowness and awkwardness of mountain climbers. The plot is about a meteorological station manager at the top of the mountain, caught in a storm and slowly freezes to death, but manages to broadcast a call for help. The rescuers are delayed due to the storm, but the pilot comes to the rescue. The criticism in the New York Times was: ''Steel cliffs rise in the snow, the clouds pile up at their feet ... glaciers intertwined in cracks. A plane is struggling in a path over the mountains, in the middle of a fierce storm." The power of the machine and the will of the pilot are learned from this review.


The success of these two movies convinced a German studio to collaborate with Hollywood, and create the [1933] ''S.O.S Eiesberg'', which takes place in Greenland. The views of the sea glaciers replace the views of the Alps. The plot formula is similar, the director and crew are almost identical, and even the names of the plot heroes are similar. Udet appears by his real name. In this movie, a delegation sets out to search for the lost diaries of an ice-currents researcher. The expedition gets stuck on a floating glacier, and personal attempts to reach the shore, to the nearby Eskimo village, fail. The pilot of the team, who is the girlfriend of the head of the delegation, and played by Lenny Riefenstahl, also fails to rescue them. The one who finally does it is Udet. Riefenstahl is also the female protagonist in the previous two films with Udet. In this last movie of him with Punk, the plot is less important. The main protagonists are nature and the airplane, and there is almost no dialogue. Punk designed a huge nature painting, over which technology hovers. It was the main source of success. The natural landscapes are revealed in full drama through the pilot's constant search for the survivors. 


The last mountain film in which Udet participated was [1935] ''Wunder des Fliegens: Der Film eines deutschen Fliegers'', created after becoming an active Nazi. It's a propaganda film about a young glider pilot, the son of a war pilot who perished in the war, who crashes in the heart of the Alps, and Udet is called to rescue him. He is the main character, and recreates his resume. The young pilot actor role is done by the one who starred in the best-known Nazi propaganda film, produced by Carl Ritter, [1932] ''Hitlerjunge Quex''.  


''Wunder des Fliegen'' was created at the initiative of the Luftwaffe. The pathetic and emotional message is prominent. Praises for heroism, fame and adventure appear again and again. Udet can be found in almost every scene. The hero of the war also indulges in memories of the past by a collection of images displayed in a long scene. In the flashback, Richhofen can also be seen for a short time, while figure is slightly dwarfed compared to Udet. The aerobatic stunt pilot Udet appears in many scenes. Various sequences from his previous movies help serve this purpose. 


All flying skills in mountain movies are important, but the main skill is aerial observation. Again and again the pilot is seen scanning, with his sharp eyes, the surface of the landscape, in search of a sign of life of the survivors, lost in the snow. This can be linked to the Nazi skill in espionage. Reinhard Heydrich was a fighter pilot who specialized in reconnaissance flights, while having a secret information folder about every important figure. 


Between ''Stürme über dem Mont Blanc'' and ''S.O.S Eiesberg'', Ernest Udet also planned to participate in an international production of a flight film over Mount Everest. After this plan did not materialize, in 1931 he made a filmed flight journey to the African steppes, creating a film and photo album under the name: ''Fremde Vögel Über Afrika''. The film consists, for the most part, of aerial footage of wild herds in Africa as they roam and flee across the savannahs. The filming became a real adventure, after the crews ran into many technical glitches. Short excerpts from the film are combined in the 26-27 minutes of the movie ''Wunder des Fliegen'', together with scenes from ''S.O.S Eiesberg''.