- Activism
- Animation
- Asylum
- Austria
- Berlin
- Black Germans
- Childhood
- Cologne
- Colonialism
- Comedy
- DDR
- Documentary
- East/West Germany
- Environment
- Food
- Hamburg
- Health
- Holocaust
- Immigration
- Intergenerational Families
- Jewish
- Judicial system
- Lesbian/Gay
- Lübeck
- Munich
- National Socialism
- Politics
- Pomerania
- Racism
- Religion
- Sexism
- Short films
- Stuttgart
- Switzerland
- Twins
- Weimar Republic
Spur der Steine
Spur of the Stones is a 1966 film produced by DEFA-Spielfilm, Künstlerische Arbeitsgruppe (KAG) “Heinrich Greif.” The director was Frank Beyer, who also wrote the screenplay with Karl Georg Egel. It is based on the novel by Erik Neutsch. The film was premiered at the 8th East German Workers' Party in Potsdam, followed by three days in some cinemas, before being dropped out of “anti-socialist tendencies.” It was not until October 1989 that the film could be performed again in the GDR, a little later at the Berlinale 1990 in the Federal Republic of Germany.
Das Kaninchen bin ich
The Rabbit Is Me was made in 1965 to encourage discussion of the democratization of East German society. In it, a young student has an affair with a judge who once sentenced her brother for political reasons; she eventually confronts him with his opportunism and hypocrisy. It is a sardonic portrayal of the German Democratic Republic’s judicial system and its social implications. The film was banned by officials as an anti-socialist, pessimistic and revisionist attack on the state. It henceforth lent its name to all the banned films of 1965, which became known as the “Rabbit Films.” After its release in 1990, The Rabbit Is Me earned critical praise as one of the most important and courageous works ever made in East Germany.