Ultimatum (1938 film)

{{short description|1938 film}}

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{{Infobox film

| name = Ultimatum

| image = Ultimatum (1938 film).png

| caption =

| director = {{ubl|Robert Wiene|Robert Siodmak}}

| producer = {{ubl|Herman Millakowsky|Robert Wiene}}

| writer = {{ubl|Ewald Bertram (novel)|Pierre Allary|Alexandre Arnoux|Léo Lania}}

| narrator =

| starring = {{ubl|Dita Parlo|Erich von Stroheim|Abel Jacquin|Bernard Lancret}}

| music = Adolphe Borchard

| editing = Tonka Taldy

| cinematography = {{ubl|Robert Lefebvre|Jacques Mercanton|Theodore J. Pahle}}

| studio = Films Ultimatum

| distributor = {{ubl|Forrester-Parant (France)|Milo Films (other markets)}}

| released = {{Film date|1938|10|27|df=yes}}

| runtime = 83 minutes

| country = France

| language = French

| budget =

| gross =

}}

Ultimatum is a 1938 French historical drama film directed by Robert Wiene and Robert Siodmak and starring Dita Parlo, Erich von Stroheim and Abel Jacquin. The film's plot is set in 1914 against the backdrop of the July Crisis between the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand and the beginning of the First World War. It focuses on the relationship between a Serbian officer and his Austrian-born wife and their involvement in espionage between the countries.

It was the final film of Wiene, who had been a leading director of German cinema particularly noted for his work on expressionist films during the silent era. He died shortly before the film's completion, and it was finished by Siodmak.

Production and reception

Wiene had been forced into exile from Germany following the Nazi rise to power. During the four years since his previous film A Night in Venice (1934) he had been struggling to raise financing in London and Paris for his projects and had not made a single film.Jung & Schatzberg p.181 The film was based on the novel Days Before the Storm by Ewald Bertram. The film's title refers to the Austrian ultimatum issued to Serbia shortly before the outbreak of war.

Because of the film's casting of Parlo and von Stroheim and its war-theme, it drew comparisons with Jean Renoir's La Grande Illusion (1937).Jung & Schatzberg p.184

Cast

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References

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Bibliography

  • Jung, Uli & Schatzberg, Walter. Beyond Caligari: The Films of Robert Wiene. Berghahn Books, 1999.