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January 27, 2007

Weinoir

David Jeffers

Asphalt (1929)
Monday January 29, 7:00pm, The Paramount Theater

A frenzy of murderous violence and moral turpitude lurk just beneath the urban order of Asphalt (1929). Joe May (The Indian Tomb, 1921) wrote (as Fred Majo) and directed this Ufa pot-boiler about a beautiful thief and the cop she seduces to stay out of jail.

The controlled chaos of the city is seen through a series of abstract images, beginning with the boots of workmen as they pound hot asphalt into a flat surface. In a montage of crane shots that soar over pedestrians and traffic, May introduces the hard intensity of city life. The camera descends slowly to the street where Sergeant Albert Holk, played by Gustav Fröhlich (Metropolis, 1927) is directing traffic from a concrete island. Naïve and inexperienced, Albert still lives with his Mother (Else Heller) and Father (Albert Steinrück), a Chief Sergeant. The young policeman commands the speeding cars, trucks and buses with confident authority and measured control. On a sidewalk, pickpockets work a crowd of onlookers, distracted by a young woman in lingerie as she moves behind a storefront window. In a jewelry store around the corner, Elsa Kramer (Betty Amann) examines several large diamonds on a velvet cloth while the gray-haired jeweler stands waiting. She flirts with the old man and while he blushes, she cleverly steals a jewel. Within seconds of her leaving the jeweler’s son chases Elsa down and summons the closest policeman, which happens to be Albert. When the diamond is found (on the tip of Elsa’s umbrella) Albert arrests her and they rush outside to a waiting car. Through her histrionics, Elsa persuades Albert to take her home so she can collect her identification papers. As they enter her apartment, the implied understanding of Elsa’s profession is followed by Albert’s seduction, and his moral foundations crumble.

Hostility in a modern world, consuming sexuality, crime, and its consequences are the solid building blocks of Joe May’s Asphalt, produced by Erich Pommer, photographed by Günther Rittau (Siegfried, 1924 Metropolis 1927, The Blue Angel 1930), with art direction by Erich Kettelhut (The Indian Tomb 1921, Dr. Mabuse, the Gambler 1922, Metropolis & Berlin, Symphony of a Big City 1927). Lotte Eisner observed that Asphalt " … is a cogent example of the use that Ufa commercial films made of the results of artistic research. May uses everything." A dark and moody love story, Asphalt clearly influenced and anticipates the coming of film noir.

Seattle Theater Group and the Paramount Theater present Asphalt, with musical accompaniment performed by Dennis James, on the Paramount’s original 4/20 Publix 1 Wurlitzer.


Posted by David Jeffers at January 27, 2007 8:00 PM
Comments

I wish I could see this one! It sounds great and the stills look beautiful. Is this out on home video?

Posted by: Anne M. Hockens at January 29, 2007 9:49 AM

Indeed it is! The Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau Foundation and Transit film relased a new restoration of this film on Kino Video last year, #K464

Posted by: David Jeffers at January 31, 2007 6:25 AM




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