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Asphalt

Germany

1929

94 Min
Black and White
Silent
  • Currently 4.0/5 Stars.
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DIR Joe May

PROD Erich Pommer

SCR Joe May, Hans Székely, Rolf E. Vanloo

DP Günther Rittau

CAST Albert Steinrück, Else Heller, Gustav Fröhlich, Betty Amann, Hans Adalbert Schlettow, Hans Albers

PROD DES Erich Kettelhut, Robert Herlth, Walter Röhrig

MUSIC Karl-Ernst Sasse, Willy Schmidt-Gentner

Berlinale (Retrospective), Berlinale (Retrospective), Berlinale (Special Screening)

Synopsis

One of the last great German Expressionist films of the silent era, Joe May’s Asphalt is a love story set in the traffic-strewn Berlin of the late 1920s. Starring the delectable Betty Amann in her most famous leading role, Asphalt is a luxuriously produced Ufa classic where tragic liaisons and fatal encounters are shaped alongside the constant roar of traffic.
A well-dressed lady thief (Betty Amann) steals a precious stone from a jewellery shop. The aged jeweller prefers to let the young woman go, but the policeman who catches her explains he is obliged to pursue the case further. She tries to seduce the policeman (Gustav Fröhlich), and he gradually succumbs to her charms, but her criminal background dooms their relationship when an argument leads to murder.
Betty Amann’s salacious sensuality, May’s grand direction, the spectacular sets by Erich Kettelhut, and the photography of Günther Rittau make this largely unknown film a major rediscovery. —Eureka Entertainment

Director

Original

Joe May

Joe May (November 7, 1880, in Vienna – April 29, 1954, in Hollywood), born Julius Otto Mandl, was a film director and film producer born in Austria and one of the pioneers of German cinema.

After studying in Berlin and a variety of odd jobs, he began his career as a stage director of operettas in Hamburg before starting to make films from 1912 in Berlin. In 1902 he had married the actress Mia May (born Hermine Pfleger) and took his stage name from hers.

In 1914 he founded his own film production company, May-Film, and began to produce a successful series of crime films, whose detective hero went by the name of Joe Deebs. Some of these were directed by May himself, others by Harry Piel. (Around the same time May also worked on the Stuart Webbs series of detective films for another company). In 1917 he gave Fritz Lang one of his earliest breaks in the film industry as screenwriter on the film Die Hochzeit im Excentricclub (Wedding in the Eccentric Club) and Lang also worked… read more

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serotoninronin

25Jan12

betty amann is too sexy oof.

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Daniel S.

21Apr10

Recommended because of the initial credits and the first scene in Elsa Kramer's apartment when she seduces Holk.

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Asphalt

By Adam Suraf on November 2, 2010
Betty Amann is beguiling as a Louise Brooks-esque thief who casts her spell on a young policeman in this Ufa classic, one of the last of the studio’s mega-productions of the silent era.

Walking home…  read review

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