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To New Shores

Zu neuen Ufern

Germany

1937

106 Min
Black and White
1.37:1
German
  • Currently 3.6/5 Stars.
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DIR Douglas Sirk

PROD Bruno Duday

SCR Lovis Hans Lorenz, Kurt Heuser, Douglas Sirk

DP Franz Weihmayr

CAST Zarah Leander, Willy Birgel, Edwin Jürgensen, Viktor Staal, Carola Höhn, Erich Ziegel, Hilde von Stolz, Jakob Tiedtke, Curd Jürgens

ED Milo Harbich

PROD DES Fritz Maurischat

MUSIC Ralph Benatzky

Synopsis

In 19th century London, popular show singer Gloria Vane enjoys great success. Out of love for Sir Albert Finsbury, she claims responsibility for a bank fraud he committed and is sentenced to manual labour in a work camp in Parametta, Australia. Although she hopes for her lover to rescue her, Finsbury lets her down. In order to escape the ordeal of the camp, Gloria participates in a wedding market and is picked by good-natured farmer Henry Hoyer. But life on a farm seems unbearable to Gloria, and she flees to Sir Albert, who meanwhile also moved to Australia and is now engaged to the governor’s daughter. They meet again in the nightclub “Sidney Casino”, where Gloria is performing as a singer. Albert begs her to leave with him, but Gloria can’t forgive his betrayal. Finally, Albert commits suicide. Gloria returns to Parametta and is taken in by a forgiving Henry. —filmportal.de

Director

Original

Douglas Sirk

The film director Douglas Sirk, whose reputation blossomed in the generation after his 1959 retirement from Hollywood filmmaking, was born Hans Detlef Sierck on April 26, 1900, in Hamburg, Germany to a journalist. Both of his parents were Danish, and the future director would make movies in German, Danish and English. His reputation, which was breathed to life by the French nouvelle vague critiques who developed the “auteur” (author) theory of film criticism, casts him one of the cinema’s great ironists. In his American and European films, his characters perceive their lives quite differently than does the movie audience viewing “them” in a theater. Dealing with love, death and societal constraints, his films often depend on melodrama, particularly the high suds soap operas he lensed for producer Ross Hunter in the 1950s: Magnificent Obsession (1954), All That Heaven Allows (1955), and his last American film, Imitation of Life (1959). (Sirk’s favorite American film was the Western… read more

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