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Paragraph 175

Reviews

New York Times - 9/13/00
Salon.com - 9/7/00
Variety - 2/9/00

PlanetOut.com / PopcornQ, September 2000

Paragraph 175

(2000, USA)
  Director: Epstein, Rob and Jeffrey Friedman
  Producer: Ehrenzweig, Michael and Janet Cole
  Starring: Rupert Everett

Paragraph 175, German Penal Code: An unnatural sex act committed between persons of male sex or by humans with animals is punishable by imprisonment; the loss of civil rights might also be imposed.

What can be said about Oscar-winning documentary filmmakers Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman (Common Threads, The Celluloid Closet) that hasn't been said before? There is a reason they have two Academy Awards, multiple Emmy Awards, and three Peabody Awards. They are sensitive, brilliant gay men. Therefore it is no surprise that their new effort Paragraph 175 is not only one of the most important works in the gay film cannon, but a vibrant and lyrical movie.

Very little has been written about the horrific years that followed the gay paradise of Weimar Germany depicted in the film Cabaret. Until now Sean Mathias's Bent, adapted from Martin Sherman's play, was the only film to tackle the subject. Paragraph 175 not only shines a light on a time of terrible gay persecution but also captures the emotion, fear, hopes, and dreams of men who were there.

Paragraph 175 had been an unenforced part of the German penal code since 1871. Strengthened and enforced by the Nazis, it was used to justify the arrest of an estimated 100,000 gay men. Of that number, as many as 15,000 were taken to concentration camps between 1933 and 1945. There were nine known survivors at the time of filming, and Paragraph 175 introduces us to five of these men.

The subjects interviewed were between 76 and 94 years old. The sense of urgency is woven into the fabric of the film as we follow the onscreen interviewer (Dr. Klaus Muller, a German historian and employee of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum) on his rounds. We share his frustration as a sixth man refuses to talk. We see the look of horror on his face as the sins of his forefathers are laid bare. This extra element transfuses what could have been a traditional but important documentary into something even more amazing. I was on the edge of my seat.

But it is the interviews with the aged men coupled with photographs of their youth that are the soul of the film.

  • In 1941, 18-year-old Gad Beck joined an underground Jewish resistance group in Berlin and liberated his lover, Manfred, from a Gestapo holding camp by posing as a Hitler Youth member. But as they walked away, Manfred told Gad that he couldn't desert his family. Gad was powerless as his friend walked back to the camp.

  • In 1935, then 23-year-old Heinz Dormer began a series of arrests for Paragraph 175 that lead to years in concentration camps and prisons. His last release was not until 1963. In 1982, he applied for reparations from the German government and his application was rejected.

  • In 1940, Frenchman Pierre Seel was only 17 years old when he was arrested under Paragraph 175 and sent to a concentration camp where he was sexually violated with broken rulers and used as a human dart board by camp orderlies with syringes.

  • Heinz F. asked Epstein and Friedman not to use his full name. He is still unable to "come out" although in a sense he was "outed" in 1935 by one of his friends who was arrested and tortured by the Gestapo. Heinz was arrested and without a trial, sent to a concentration camp at Dachau.

  • When photographer Albrecht Becker was brought in for questioning in 1935 on suspicion of violating Paragraph 175, he said, "Everybody knows I'm a homosexual." He was sentenced to three years in prison at Nuremberg. When released he decided to join the German army -- because "that's where all the men were." He spent the rest of the war taking pictures of naked German soldiers.

The only flaw in the film is small. Epstein and Friedman have included the story of Annette Eick to give a lesbian perspective. And while her story is moving, she was not subject to the provisions of the gender-specific Paragraph 175 and escaped to England before the worst of the persecution. The film needed this perspective, but it has a "tacked on" feel and dampens the impact of the other interviews. But this is a minor quibble about a brilliant film.

Bottom line? Go see it! Go see it now.

--Steve Pride

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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