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The Captain

GER/FR/PL 2017, 118 min

A disturbing hoax in a no-man’s-land in Germany, two weeks before the end of the war.

Synopsis

The end of World War II is in sight and the social structure of Germany lies in tatters. As the Wehrmacht’s morale begins to deteriorate and regiments begin to disintegrate, the number of deserters climbs so dramatically that any soldier found separated from his company may be shot as a traitor. Anarchy and arbitrary murder completely replace law and order.
One band of officers hunts down a 19-year-old private – deadly horseplay more than any kind of organized pursuit. The private, Willi Herold, bolts through the woods. Desperate, running out of time. By sheer luck, Herold escapes from his hunters and goes to ground – pursued by the local farmers he steals from to survive and by his fellow soldiers who want him dead – through the bleak and barren moors of the Ems river estuary. Soaked through, worn out, half starved, and nearly frozen to death, Herold makes a pivotal find: the uniform of some highly decorated Luftwaffe captain. Impersonating an officer, the man quickly takes on the monstrous identity of the perpetrators he is trying to escape from.

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Language: German, Subtitles: Arabic, English, French, German, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish

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Press reviews

A movie with echoes of Günter Grass’s The Tin Drum or Ralf Rothmann’s To Die in Spring – written and directed by Robert Schwentke, a veteran of commercial Hollywood fare who has gone back to basics with this brutally stark picture, shot by Florian Ballhaus in a crystalline black-and-white. – The Guardian

Hollywood will be hard-pressed to come up with a more horrifying film this year than writer-director Robert Schwentke’s “The Captain.” Schwentke is perhaps best known to American audiences as the filmmaker behind such hit-and-miss shoot-’em-up movies as “RED,” “R.I.P.D.,” and “Insurgent,” which makes this return to his native Germany a rather surprising departure. Shot in black and white and set in the final days of World War II, “The Captain” is every bit as violent as those movies, and twice as tense, but it’s a different beast entirely: a period piece – one with a chilling contemporary relevance – about Willi Herold, a kid just 19 years old, who found a Nazi officer’s uniform, assumed the role, and self-righteously went on to murder an estimated 170 of his countrymen. – Variety

Shooting in Poland and Germany in knife-edged black and white, the cinematographer, Florian Ballhaus, adds uncomfortable visual heat to Herold’s ice-cold cruelties. Through camera angles and lighting, in God’s-eye views and in carefully staged close encounters, his images pinpoint the tension between real and fake authority and the ways we determine which is which. – The New York Times

Extraordinary, extremely well-crafted and laced with as much humour as foreboding intensity, The Captain was a genuine surprise. – The Hollywood News

This is a film which doesn’t pull its punches, both thematically and stylistically. – Screendaily
 

Awards and Festivals

- Toronto International Film Festival 2017
- San Sebastian Film Festival 2017 – Jury Award for Best Photography
- Max Ophüls Festivals 2018
- Rotterdam International Film Festival 2018

Additional Texts

We are standing close to the abyss
An interview with director Robert Schwentke about THE CAPTAIN
(by Toby Ashraf) 

THE CAPTAIN is set during the last days of WW II and is based on the real-life character of Willi Herold. When did you first get the idea of turning his story into a fiction film?

National Socialism was a dynamic system – it took a great many people for this cultural catastrophe to occur. I was interested in the back row of perpetrators. Some were ideologically driven, others were opportunists, legitimized thugs, or simply got out of the way of evil. These were not the architects of the system they served, but the people who lived next door to you - the “little people” who kept the Nazi system alive and going. I knew I wanted to make a movie from the perspective of these perpetrators and I so I started to search for a suitable story.

So at first, there was the idea to make a film about the phenomenon of a generation, and Willi Herold’s story offered itself to you later, so to speak?

Yes.

What fascinated you about the perspective of the perpetrators, since it bears the risk to make the villain the hero and tell a film through the eyes of someone who is very difficult to identify with?

It confronts the audience with a different set of propositions than a movie that allows them to graft onto a morally upright character. We all hope and imagine that we would have been morally upright and brave enough to oppose the system. But history and the facts don’t bear that out. I wanted there to be no explicit moral compass, forcing the audience to find their own point of view, to ask themselves “What would I have done?” We are standing close to the abyss again and it is important to confront it. Contemplate our own limitations, strengths and beliefs – not to pretend it is going to resolve itself.

THE CAPTAIN is your first period picture. How long and specific was your research concerning set design, scenography, costumes and such?

Once I had come across the story of Willi Herold, I tried to figure out how to make it into a film and what kind of film I wanted it to be. What would be my movie about violence and the German National Socialist past? I realised that I had to do a lot of research and read books on history and psychology, diaries and novels by the meter…trying to find the answer to: “How could this have happened?”
I read the last remaining file on the case at the state archives in Oldenburg and visited the Gedenkstätte Esterwegen - the Emsland workcamp memorial - where a former prisoner had built a miniature of the camp from memory. The proportions were purposefully inaccurate: towers were too tall, fences too thick, the gate impossibly solid – a subjective, not factual view of the past. It affected me more deeply and rang truer than a proper scale model would have. Even though The Captain is not told through the perspective of the victims, this kind of experiential view of the past became a guiding principle for me and inspired me to make the movie with a level of abstraction.

How did that insight change your perception of Willi Herold’s character then?

To be honest: In a way the more I learned the less I understood, and I came to the conclusion that it’s not about trying to analyse who the character of Willi Herold is or to apply terminologies from clinical psychology. Whenever I tried to put a name to it, it felt reductive, pat. I decided everybody needed to make up their own mind about who Willi Herold is and why he did what he did. There is an intentional blank spot at the centre of the character that allows the audience to find their own answers.

Did that idea change over the course of writing the script?

It crystallized but there is still something that startles me to the degree that I can’t explain at all. What’s happening in the world right now, sadly, is helping me understand how easily democracy can be subverted, used and abused. There are certain conditions required for atrocities and genocide to occur. It starts with the rhetoric. Dehumanize the opponents. Create a them against us situation. Then we are told that the rules of civilization no longer apply. Killing is OK. This goes hand in hand with the legitimization of crimes committed.

Would you call THE CAPTAIN in any way an authentic period film?

I am not a fan of the “fetishism of authenticity” which is a wonderful phrase German film critic Cristina Nord once used when she talked about how German films about the Nazi past have all essentially become the equivalent of British heritage movies. The fallacy is that if you get the costumes and the car details right, you get the time right. But since none of the people involved in making the film were alive at the time, and all we can do is to research and look at photos and films of the time and read up about it, this so-called recreation of reality is pure artifice. History is a look back from a specific present with its particular biases and preoccupations. I never wanted to pretend this wasn’t the case. Of course, we got all the uniforms right since THE CAPTAIN is a movie about uniforms. But we took a lot of liberties with everything else. I wanted to make sure that there was a layer of abstraction in everything we did. Sets, acting, tone.

Talking about your cast: Making this film must have been quite a challenge for them, especially for your young main actor Max Hubacher. How did you prepare your actors for this very specific setting and how did you work with them?

I think a lot of it was set by the script. If you look at some movies that deal with violence, brutality and the darker side of humanity, most of them give you a little hole, through which you can escape - be it humour or be it the one character you can grab on to. My script didn’t have any of that—it didn’t let you off the hook. I think this idea was very clear to everyone involved when they read the script.

What kind of experience did the actors have during the shoot?

Every one of the actors fell apart at some point - mostly while we were shooting in the camp. Max Hubacher, who plays Willi Herold, went into shock when we shot his visit to the dentention barracks, with all the prisoners present. Bernd Hölscher, who plays Schütte, started to cry after his character shoots the prisoners in the pit. We never showed them, but there were always people in the pit and I had instructed them to beg for their lives - some did it so successfully that after I said “Cut”, Bernd Hölscher just started to weep. It was very hard for him to continue shooting that night. I went into shock a when Milan Peschel’s character walked across the (invisible) dead bodies in the pit. It got us all at a certain point.

Did you rehearse much with your actors?

We did extensive rehearsals for several weeks. Neither the tone of the film nor the acting is naturalistic. We needed to calibrate the tone and the intentions to make sure that we didn’t tilt too far into one or the other direction. The actors worked really, really hard to walk that line.

It’s the first film you ever shot in black-and-white. What was the idea behind that decision?

There is a story that Martin Scorsese shot tests for RAGING BULL in colour and showed them to Michael Powell who said – I’m paraphrasing: “You cannot make this film with all its blood in colour, people won’t be able to look past the blood, past the red. You need to make this film black-and-white!” This struck me as amazingly astute in terms of how audiences perceive violence in film and I thought: We have such a bloody tale here, I need people to somehow not be completely blocked and repelled. It was also an intuitive choice because I know the past mostly through black-and-white photographs. The third reason was aesthetics: I wanted the film to have an abstract quality. There is an intentional theatricality to the film and the black-and-white  suited that better than colour.

You live and work both in the USA and in Germany. Do you expect audiences to react differently to your film?

It’s hard to predict, but Germans haven’t seen these kinds of characters in a German film. I think there is going to be a bit of a cognitive dissonance that American audiences for example might not experience. It’s the same way that we watch 12 YEARS A SLAVE differently than Americans do. It’s just a difference in culture.

Background information THE CAPTAIN

THE CAPTAIN was shot within 41 days. Principal photography took place between February and April 2017 near Wroclaw, Poland and in and around Görlitz, Germany. Ironically termed “Görliwood”, the small town Görlitz in East Germany with a population of under 60.000 has become a popular filming location for Hollywood productions in recent times, with films like Stephen Daldry’s THE READER (2009), Quentin Tarantino’s INGLORIOUS BASTERDS (2009) or Wes Anderson’s THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL (2014) being shot here.

Since THE CAPTAIN is set during the last two weeks of World War II before the German surrender to the Soviet Union and the Western Allies in late April and early May 1945, and the film mostly consists of outdoor shots, it was important for the filmmakers to shoot during late winter and early spring as well.

Rehearsals with the actors started as early as summer 2016. Since the real-life character of Willi Herold was only 19 years old when he started his terror regime in 1945, it was crucial for Robert Schwentke to find a young actor that not only bore some resemblance to Herold but also looked young enough to fit the part. 23-year-old Swiss actor Max Hubacher who plays Willi Herold, already gained praise and won the Swiss film award at the age of 17 for his part in THE FOSTER BOY (DER VERDINGBUB, Markus Imboden 2011).

Popular German actor Alexander Fehling, who plays Nazi captain Junker (hunting Willi Herold in the beginning of the film) has been known to an international audience from his part in Quentin Tarantino’S INGLORIOUS BASTERDS. He also plays the lead in THREE PEEKS (DREI ZINNEN, 2017) by Jan Zabeil which premiered at this year’s Locarno Film Festival and is part of the line-up of this year’s Toronto Film Festival in a Special Presentation.

Frederick Lau (Kipinski) has starred in the internationally acclaimed arthouse hits such as VICTORIA (Sebastian Schipper, 2015), A COFFEE IN BERLIN (OH BOY, Jan Ole Gerster, 2012) or THE COUNTESS (Julie Delpy, 2009). Milan Peschel (Freytag) starred as a family father diagnosed with a brain tumor in the highly acclaimed drama STOPPED ON TRACK (HALT AUF FREIER STRECKE, Andreas Dresen, 2012) which was part of the 2011 competition programme in Cannes.

This is the 9th collaboration of DOP Florian Ballhaus (son of legendary German cinematographer Michael Ballhaus) and director Robert Schwentke. Their works includes THE FAMILY JEWELS (EIERDIEBE, 2003), FLIGHTPLAN (2005), THE TIME TRAVELER’S WIFE (2009), R.E.D. (2010), INSURGENT (2015), ALLEGIANT (2016) and THE CAPTAIN (2017).
Ballhaus also collaborated with Hollywood director David Frankel on such hit comedies such as SEX AND THE CITY (various episodes, 2003), THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA (2006), MARLEY & ME (2008) or HOPE SPRINGS (2012).

One of the main shooting locations, the work camp containing the barracks, was built in Poland especially for the film and then blown up in real time to simulate the bomb attack of the Allied Forces as realistically as possible. The VFX of the film were produced by the German CGI and VFX company Mackevision, which is based in Stuttgart. Mackevision worked on productions like INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (Roland Emmerich, 2016) or the hit TV-show GAME OF THRONES among other things.

THE CAPTAIN is a German-Polish-French co-production with a budget 5.8 million Euro. It was financed by private investors and produced by Paulo Branco from Alfama Films (Paris), Piotr Dzięcioł and Ewa Puszczynska for Opus Film (Lodz), while the lion’s share of the budget was provided by the German production company Filmgalerie 451 (Berlin) and producer Frieder Schlaich.

Willi Herold, a German life
The true story behind THE CAPTAIN

The story of THE CAPTAIN is based in great parts on the real-life story of 19-year-old German soldier Willi Herold who turned into a con man and a sadistic despot after finding and wearing the uniform of a high rank officer in April 1945.

Willi Herold was born in 1925 in a small town near Chemnitz in the East of Germany and starts an apprenticeship as a chimney sweep before he is conscripted to join the Wehrmacht as a paratrooper in 1943. He fights in Italy before his brigade is deployed to serve in Germany.

On April 3 1945, only a few weeks before the end of the war, Herold is separated from his troops and finds himself alone in a German no-man’s-land, making his way North towards the town of Bentheim. Inside a demolished army car, the young man finds an officer’s box with a captain’s uniform that is equipped with war decorations and a number of badges of the highest honour, among those the Iron Cross.

Herold begins to play the role of the captain, quickly making use of his new powers and soon becoming the commander of a group of soldiers he encounters on the way. The German expression for soldiers who had lost their brigade or were under other circumstances separated from their troops is “Versprengte”, which can be translated as “scattered” or “dispersed”. Towards the end of the war, hundreds of Versprengte were on the roads of Germany, as were deserters.

The amount of soldiers under Herold was estimated to have once been around 80 men, with a core group of 12 men remaining until the end. As depicted in the film, Herold could not identify himself according to the rank of his uniform when meeting another officer on the road, but got away only through his brazen, authoritarian and self-assured behaviour towards the real captain.

In the Emsland, a sparsely populated area in the North-West of Germany, the Nazis had erected a total of 15 detention camps, 6 of which were exclusively for members of the Wehrmacht who were either deserters or being accused of insubordination, corroding the troops or other misdemeanours. Herold and his men arrive at Camp II, the detention camp Aschendorfermoor, on April 11, 1945.

Against the organisational structure of the camp and initially against the will of its superintendant, Herold and his men install a completely arbitrary summary court of their own, justifying their cruel murders and random executions with the lie of having orders from Adolf Hitler himself. Despite the lack of (written) proof, all officers believe him.

On April 12 1945, Herold and his men ask inmates to dig a 1,80-meter-deep pit and begin executing them with an anti-aircraft gun. Later they would use machine guns to kill the soldiers, push them into the pit throw hand grenades into the hole. By the end of the night, 98 soldiers were executed. The mad atrocities of Herold’s drumhead trials even exceeded the deeds shown in the film and included drowning inmates, body-stripping and chasing down deserters.

Between April 15 and 18, Herold and his men reorganise the camp completely, sending soldiers back to the Wehrmacht and accepting others into their group. On April 19, Allied Forces bomb the barracks and destroy the camp completely. Herold and his men continue their killing spree on their way to the small town of Papenburg. Their terror regime includes a public hanging, the execution of alleged spies and the killing of a farmer hissing the white flag of surrender.

On April 28, Herold is finally arrested by the German military police. During his time in jail, the

Red Army reaches Berlin and Hitler commits suicide. Herold confesses his deeds but is let go by the tribunal. When Herold is asked to join “Operation Werewolf” one of the last Nazi plans to form resistance against the allies, Herold escapes to Wilhelmshaven. Ironically, he is caught by a British marine soldier while stealing a loaf of bread and his story is eventually revealed and presented to a British military court. Willi Herold is sentenced to death on August 29 1946. Herold and five other men are killed by guillotin. He was 20 years old.

Willi Herold would later be known as the “Hangman of the Emsland” (“Henker vom Emsland”). He had killed almost 170 people.

Paul Meyer and Rudolf Kersting made a doumentary film about Willi Herold called “Der Hauptmann von Muffrika” in 1996 (“The Captain of Muffrika”, Muffrika being a racist analogy of the vast, bleak and musty Emsland to the no-man’s-land of the countrysides of “Africa”).

T. X. H. Pantcheff wrote a book about the story of Willi Herold in 1993 called “Der Henker vom Emsland. Willi Herold, 19 Jahre alt. Ein deutsches Lehrstück” (“The Hangman of the Emsland. Willi Herold, 19 years old. A German lesson.”), later called „Der Henker vom Emsland: Dokumentation einer Barbarei am Ende des Krieges 1945“ (“The Hangman of the Emsland: the documentation of a barbarity at the end of the war 1945”).

Nazi perpetrator, center-stage
by Olaf Möller

The end of World War II was a traumatic experience for the vast majority of the German population living in the Reich, as well as those serving in its armed forces abroad. Today, we might like to believe that people simply must have happily rejoiced over the end of Nazism and the advent of peace. In reality, the majority of Germans might have whole-heartedly abhorred the extremes of Nazi politics but were otherwise in accord with their core beliefs, prejudices, aims and incentives. For them, thus, the end of World War II meant defeat, loss of territory, occupation, and subjugation under foreign laws, yet no end to the most immediate problems: the lack of housing and scarcity of food. Simply put: most Germans felt vanquished, not liberated. Look at newsreel material from that period and see the mix of exhaustion, fear and hate in so many faces…

Long before May 8th, 1945, it was clear that the war would be lost. If we take the defeat of the Reich’s armed forces first at Stalingrad on February 2nd, 1943, then in the Battle of Kursk (“Operation Citadel”) on July 16th, 1943, as the great twin turning point, it would take another 22 months for things to end. Two years is a long time for a society to unravel, for an army to disintegrate... Come April 1945, there is little left that holds things together. Instead, times are determined by safe self-interest and short-term alliances - whatever helps you survive.

This is the world of Willi Herold, a young soldier who stopped caring and would do whatever it takes to see another dawn. Willi played along. Willi liked the role he took on when wearing that career soldier’s captain uniform. Willi relished being feared. Willi made the savage heart of fascism flesh and ashes with his crimes. Willi is a con man, a looter, and a mass murderer. As portrayed by Robert Schwentke, Willi Herold is scared for his own life while callous about anybody else’s worldly existence. He is a man of quick wit, adaptability and learning abilities, living in a world eager to believe in anything or anyone. All people needed was the promise to get a problem solved, get food on the table or get a girl into bed. And Willy tried to oblige.

Willi Herold is also a man more calculating and ruthless characters like Kipinski might attach themselves to, the same way that more hapless and helpless types like Freytag try to stay out of harm’s way in his company.

Maybe Willi Herold was a psychopath – maybe he was just a man of his time. What he was not, is an exception, a singular occurrence, for there were more than 400 cases of crimes in nature (if not necessarily in scale) similar to those committed by Herold and his flying drumhead. Willi Herold is a character most decidedly worthy of our attention.

And yet, German cinema has not yet seen a character like Willi Herold, certainly not centre-stage. This is not surprising, considering how few FRG films in general there are about soldiering during the spring of 1945. On the other hand, some of the most famous works of West Germany’s post-war cinema are either set in that period or at least relate to it. And so is (at least) one classic of East German cinema, Konrad Wolf’s epochal I WAS NINETEEN (ICH WAR NEUNZEHN, 1968). But let’s leave the GDR’s film production aside here, since it followed very different ideological (as well as artistic) parameters which eventually vanished with the state itself. In a German context, THE CAPTAIN (DER HAUPTMANN) refers to the cinema of the so-called Bonn Republic (1949-1990), for it is at this film culture’s fringes, just out of sight, that Willi Herold always lurked.

The earliest important example of a war movie set during the first months of 1945 is probably Paul May’s 08/15 AT HOME (08/15 IN DER HEIMAT,1955), which is the final chapter of a vastly successful trilogy. The film follows (fictive) Wehrmacht PFC Herbert Asch throughout World War II, starting at basic training and ending in the chaos of early 1945. German audiences would understand that the main character’s name is an ironic corruption of the German word “Arsch” (meaning: arse), as PFC “Arse” was a common term for the ordinary soldier, meaning the millions of men every armed force’s corps is made of. In short: Asch was the German Word War II soldier. In 08/15 IN DER HEIMAT, Herbert Asch is anticipating the end of the war, tired of fighting, while trying to prevent some Nazis from going underground with a treasure of platinum. Asch is a decent guy, just like one of his commanding officers who doesn’t fight captivity during the US-American occupation. He assumes responsibility for his deeds and accepts his failure both as a soldier and a citizen. In that respect 08/15 IN DER HEIMAT is the complete opposite of THE CAPTAIN. In Paul May’s film, there is good and bad, always clearly separated. In Robert Schwentke’s film, evil comes in all shades, some of which might have their useful or even helpful aspects. In Paul May’s film, the crime is spectacular and singular, in Robert Schwentke’s film, it’s manifold, ranging from the petty to the outrageously horrible.

There couldn’t be a Willi Herold in Bonn Republic cinema, especially not during its early years, since the common soldier serving the Wehrmacht, the Reichsmarine or the Luftwaffe on German screens eventually had to be portrayed as the good guy for political and commercial reasons: While the Adenauer government (1949-1963) needed the image of an essentially honourable Wehrmacht to justify the founding of West Germany’s new armed forces, the Bundeswehr, local film producers and distributors were in need of characters their audience would want to identify with. which for the male viewers meant ao. soldier types that reassured them of their moral rectitude, as well as their suffering’s meaningfulness. The bad ones were invariably Nazis which meant party members in positions high and low, Gestapo (= secret police) operatives, as well as soldiers from the party’s own forces like SA or SS.

Even troublemakers like the great director Wolfgang Staudte respected this unwritten rule in his two main films that (partly) play during the end of World War II and deal with soldiers. The satire ROSES FOR THE PROSECUTOR (ROSEN FÜR DEN STAATSANWALT, 1959), set partly in April 1945, has the former grunt Rudi Kleinschmidt sentenced to death by an overzealous army judge for stealing a package of chocolates. Thanks to an aerial attack, Kleinschmidt gets away – only to meet his tormentor again years later in a now “denazified” Germany, where he can take his revenge. The realist drama THE FAIR (KIRMES,1960) shows a deserter getting betrayed by just about everybody in his home village out of fear for reprisals. In both films, it’s the body politic that fails and needs to be looked at critically, not the armed forces as such. That perspective Wolfgang Staudte would explore with his sardonic tragedy DESTINATION DEATH (HERRENPARTIE, 1964), one of the very few works of that period to look at perpetrators from various ranks of the military.

If cinema or television dealt with those who committed war crimes at all, the films would look at the architects and head administrators of genocide, the upper echelon. Theodor Kotulla’s DEATH IS MY TRADE (AUS EINEM DEUTSCHEN LEBEN, 1977), a Rudolf Höss biopic by way of Robert Merle’s novel “Death Is My Trade” (“La mort est mon métier”, 1952), or Heinz Schirk’s teleplay detailing the Final Solution’s decisive discussion, THE FINAL SOLUTION. THE WANNSEE CONFERENCE (DIE WANNSEEKONFERENZ, 1984) are good examples. And yet, a Hitler equivalent for Carlo Lizzani’s wry, dry and decidedly myth-proof MUSSOLINI: THE LAST FOUR DAYS (MUSSOLINI ULTIMO ATTO, 1974) has yet to be made…

No German film so far has shown the totality of Nazi Germany’s collective collapse at the final stage of World War II the way THE CAPTAIN does: as a free-for-all, dog-eat-dog world where civilians and soldiers, party functionaries and state administrators are willing to see everybody else get maimed or murdered – as long as it gets them through to the end alive. And If a little profit can be turned by ripping off the state or one’s neighbour – even better. Here, the prospect of getting reimbursed for injuries not suffered and imaginary losses incurred gets you a roast with dumplings, the prospect of seeing a judicial dilemma solved (by mass execution) gets you honours and a roof over your head.

The two closest relatives for THE CAPTAIN, both similarly based on true crimes, are again to be found in 50s German cinema: Helmut Käutner’s comedy with melancholic linings, THE CAPTAIN FROM KÖPENICK (DER HAUPTMANN VON KÖPENICK,1956) and Robert Siodmack’s THE DEVIL STRIKES AT NIGHT (NACHTS, WENN DER TEUFEL KAM, 1957). THE CAPTAIN FROM KÖPENICK shows another common man who puts on a captain’s uniform – only that cobbler Wilhelm Voigt is a loveable fellow and a petty criminal whose con exposes Prussia’s militaristic-authoritarian heart in all its ridiculous absurdity. THE DEVIL STRIKES AT NIGHT, then, was the lone local example of a war noir: Siodmack details the hunt for a serial killer whose existence the Nazis want to cover up, even if that means getting rid of the cop investigating the case.

Willi Herold also exposes the absurdities of bureaucracy, and how to best abuse them, which ends not in laughter but in a mass grave. Befitting this tale of homicidal fury, THE CAPTAIN looks like a film noir storyboarded by Flemish woodcut artist Frans Masereel: all expressionistic angles, trance-like acting, many an eerie silence blown up by sudden splashes of acidic humour, with the occasional stab of a gruesome and wise surrealism. When during the punk-fuelled final credits, Willi Herold and his merry band of mass murderers wreck symbolic havoc in a small town in present-day Germany and play pranks on perplexed passers-by, something long suppressed in German film history finally breaks free.

Historical research has long shown how easily people from each walk of life, class and stratum could succumb to the darkness of war and become part of a mass murdering detail, be turned into torturers and killers, rob and rape, or just take advantage of other people’s willingness to do all this and worse. With the story of Willi Herold in THE CAPTAIN, German cinema finally acknowledges the true horror of war: human frailty, and a will for indifference when it comes to the suffering of other human beings.

Galerie Extras

Festival- and set photos from the film shooting of THE CAPTAIN.
The film was shot within 41 days. Principal photography took place between February and April 2017 near Wroclaw, Poland and in and around Görlitz, Germany. One of the main shooting locations, the work camp containing the barracks, was built in Poland especially for the film and then blown up in real time to simulate the bomb attack of the Allied Forces as realistically as possible.

PDF

Storyboard (extracts) by Concept Artist Sasa Zivkovic
and Moodboard for THE CAPTAIN

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Credits

Director and Screenplay
Robert Schwentke
With
Max Hubacher, Milan Peschel, Frederick Lau, Bernd Hölscher, Waldemar Kobus, Alexander Fehling, Britta Hammelstein, Sascha Alexander Geršak, Samuel Finzi, Wolfram Koch, Marko Dyrlich, Hendrik Arnst, Haymon Maria Buttinger, Alexander Hörbe, Eugénie Anselin, Sebastian Rudolph, Rike Eckermann, Jörn Hentschel, Stefan Kolosko, Max Thommes, Blerim Destani, Annina Polivka, Stefan Feddersen-Clausen, Harald Warmbrunn, Ferdinand Dörfler
Director of Photography
Florian Ballhaus
Camera Operator
Florian Emmerich
1st AC
Rafael Jeneral
2nd AC
Kaja Styczynska
Video Operator
Paul von Heymann
DIT
Daniel Mock, Chris Bach
Editor
Michał Czarnecki
Assambly Editor
Maja Tennstedt
Assistent Editor
Krzysztof Korybut-Daszkiewicz
Composition
Martin Todsharow
Production Designer
Harald Turzer
Production Designer Assistant
Philipp Eggert
Art Director
Jurek Kuttner
Art Director Assistant
Julien Weizenhöfer
Art Director Vol.
Julian Knaack
Set Construction / Camp
Lothar Heiner, Knut Greiner, Graham Thomas
Draftman
Martin Berg
Concept-Artist
Sasa Zivkovic
Set Dec
Alwara Thaler
Set Dec Assistant
Friederike Gast
Set Dec Vol.
Oskar Meyer-Ricks
Set Dec Buyer
Maik Gießler
Set Construction
Daniel Plashues, Jan Zegenhagen, Eric Thiel, David Thummerer
Propmaster
Ole Kloss
Prop Assistant
Christine Jahn
Prop Driver
Thomas Schlegel
Prop Trainee
Gabriela K. Schenkmann
Standby Props
Harald Voss
Standby Props Assistant
Marius Hess
Weapons
Torsten Baumann
Flak / KFZ-Construction
Joachim Klein, Sebastian Kapitan, Jürgen Vendt
Make-up Artist
Grit Hildenbrand, Doreen Kindler, Marcus Michael
Costume Designer
Magdalena J. Rutkiewicz-Luterek
Costume Designer Assistant
Robert Adamczyk, Beata Dąbska, Agata Drozdowska, Ewa Pałdyna
Wardrope
Robert Kowalczyk
Tailor
Janusz Kowalczyk
Gaffer
Janosch Voss
Additional Gaffer
Helmut Prein
Best Boy Gaffer
Benjamin Hirlinger
Electrician / Certified Elec.
Lars Voigtländer
Electrician
Volker Langholz, Martin Beck, Mathias Beier
Key Grip
Christian Scheibe
Grip
Sebastian Mayer
Sound Operator
Eric Devulder
Boom Operator
Rafael Ridao
Sound Assistant
Leonrad Pelz
SFX / Stunt
Production Concept
SFX Supervisor
Michael Rudnick
Projektleitung Stunt / SFX
Jörg Lorbach
Stunt Coordinator
Wanja Götz
Sound Mixer
Martin Steyer
Sound Design
André Bendocchi Alves
Copy-Right Clearance
Ingo Fischer
Postproduction
The Post Republic
Postproduction Inhouse Producer
Petra Kader-Göbel
VFX
Mackevision
VFX Supervisor
Jörn Großhans
VFX Executive Producer
Heiko Burkardsmeier
VFX Producer
Stefan Brenner, Stefan Schorer
Unit Manager
Daniel Schwarz, Diana Minkenberg-Molitor
Location Manager
Ronny Engel
Location Manager Assistant
Marc O'Malley
Set Manager
Karsten Christop
Set Manager Assistant
Patrick Dielefeld
Production Coordinator
Caroline Dietze
Runner
Anja Knobloch, Hagen Rohling
Driver
Jens Marschalleck, Stefan Noebel-Heise, Willy Necke
Catering
Wöpke & bissFEST
Camera, Light & Grip Rental
ARRI Rental
Casting Director
Anja Dihrberg
Extras Agency
Agentur filmissimo
Animal Trainer
Nicole Abraham
1st AD
Christian Hoyer
2nd AD
Simon Aschenbrenner
Script and Continuity
Candy Maldonado
Assistant Robert Schwentke
Julia M. Müller
Accounting
Jörg Huke
Line Producer / Production Manager
Heino Herrenbrück
Line Producer
Irene von Alberti

POLISH - PRODUCTION CREW
Production Cooperation
Aleksandra Skraba, Magdalena Malisz, Łucja Kędzior-Samodulska
3rd Crowd AD
Dominik Watin
Art Department Coordination
Wojciech Czapla
Set Construction
Michał Pietrzak, Maciej Janiszewski
Extras Agency
ABM Studio Sp., Marius Chandoha
Production Coordinator PL
Sylwia Szczechowicz-Warszewska
Accounting
Dorota Bednarek
Serviceproduction
Tempus Film - Jacek Gaczkowski, Piotr Strzelecki

FRENCH - CREW
Production manager
Raoul Peruzzi
Production Assistant
Olivia Marcès, Nastasia Kahan, Géraldine Nouguès

Produced by
Frieder Schlaich, Irene von Alberti (Filmgalerie 451 - Berlin), Paulo Branco (Alfama Films - Paris), Piotr Dzięcioł, Ewa Puszczynska (Opus Film - Lodz)
Executive Producers
Philip Lee, Markus Barmettler, Marcel Greive, Kay Niessen, Daniel Hetzer
Screenplay funded by FFA
Deutsch-Polnischer Co-Development Fonds
Production funded by
MDM, MFG, BKM, FFA, PISF, MBB-Deutsch-Polnischen Förderfonds, Eurimages

World Premiere (CA)
07.09.2017, Toronto
German Premiere (DE)
22.01.2018, Saarbrücken, Max Ophüls Preis
German Theatrical Release (DE)
15.03.2018

DVD-Details

DVD, Blu-ray and 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray information
Weltkino Filmverleih