Follow TV Tropes

Following

History Film / Mephisto

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** The director who sets a film in Budapest, then tells Hendrik that he did it as a ruse to get out of Germany, may be inspired by Creator/FritzLang, who directed the real Gründgens in ''M'' and sort of snuck out of Germany to make a film in France before departing for Hollywood for good.

to:

** The director who sets a film in Budapest, then tells Hendrik that he did it as a ruse to get out of Germany, may be inspired by Creator/FritzLang, Creator/FritzLang. Lang, who directed the real Gründgens in ''M'' and ''M'', sort of snuck out of Germany to make [[Film/{{Liliom}} a film in France France]] before departing for Hollywood for good.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


->"An actor is a mask."

to:

->"An ->''"An actor is a mask."
"''
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


''Mephisto'' is a 1981 Hungarian-West German-Austrian film directed by Istvan Szabo. It is an adaptation of 1936 novel ''Literature/{{Mephisto}}'' by Klaus Mann.

to:

''Mephisto'' is a 1981 Hungarian-West German-Austrian film directed by Istvan Szabo.István Szabó. It is an adaptation of 1936 novel ''Literature/{{Mephisto}}'' by Klaus Mann.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


''Mephisto'' is a 1981 Hungarian-German-Austrian film directed by Istvan Szabo. It is an adaptation of 1936 novel ''Literature/{{Mephisto}}'' by Klaus Mann.

to:

''Mephisto'' is a 1981 Hungarian-German-Austrian Hungarian-West German-Austrian film directed by Istvan Szabo. It is an adaptation of 1936 novel ''Literature/{{Mephisto}}'' by Klaus Mann.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


''Mephisto'' is a 1981 film from Hungary (although the whole movie is in German) directed by Istvan Szabo. It is an adaptation of 1936 novel ''Literature/{{Mephisto}}'' by Klaus Mann.

to:

''Mephisto'' is a 1981 Hungarian-German-Austrian film from Hungary (although the whole movie is in German) directed by Istvan Szabo. It is an adaptation of 1936 novel ''Literature/{{Mephisto}}'' by Klaus Mann.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Hendrik Höfgen (Creator/KlausMariaBrandauer in his StarMakingRole) is an actor in Weimar Germany, specifically Hamburg. He is wholly devoted to the theater, even sometimes saying that he is "married to the theater". He's actually married to wealthy Barbara Bruckner (Krystyna Janda), while keeping a secret mistress, Juliette, his dance teacher.

to:

Hendrik Höfgen (Creator/KlausMariaBrandauer in his StarMakingRole) is an actor in [[UsefulNotes/WeimarRepublic Weimar Germany, Germany]], specifically Hamburg. He is wholly devoted to the theater, even sometimes saying that he is "married to the theater". He's actually married to wealthy Barbara Bruckner (Krystyna Janda), while keeping a secret mistress, Juliette, his dance teacher.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Hendrik Höfgen (Klaus Maria Brandauer in his StarMakingRole) is an actor in Weimar Germany, specifically Hamburg. He is wholly devoted to the theater, even sometimes saying that he is "married to the theater". He's actually married to wealthy Barbara Bruckner (Krystyna Janda), while keeping a secret mistress, Juliette, his dance teacher.

to:

Hendrik Höfgen (Klaus Maria Brandauer (Creator/KlausMariaBrandauer in his StarMakingRole) is an actor in Weimar Germany, specifically Hamburg. He is wholly devoted to the theater, even sometimes saying that he is "married to the theater". He's actually married to wealthy Barbara Bruckner (Krystyna Janda), while keeping a secret mistress, Juliette, his dance teacher.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** Juliette is also a much more sympathetic character than the book's version, where she's depicted as sadistically enjoying her treatment of Hendrik and threatening to blackmail him over their relationship. In the movie she seems to have genuine feelings for Hendrik (and he for her) and tries to act as TheConscience rather than baiting and insulting him.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/07ec44b2_051c_45e4_97c7_e629a373baa3.jpeg]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* CreatorCameo: Istvan Szabo is seen near the end, as one of the two tuxedoed guys complaining about the expense of staging a birthday party for Hermann Goering.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** The director who sets a film in Budapest, then tells Hendrik that he did it as a ruse to get out of Germany, may be inspired by Creator/FritzLang, who directed the real Gründgens in ''M'' and sort of snuck out of Germany to make a film in France before departing for Hollywood for good.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* AdaptationalHeroism: Hendrik is still a hypocritical weasel who makes a DealWithTheDevil, but he is not quite as overtly evil as his book counterpart. In the novel, he has his ex-girlfriend imprisoned and his rival murdered. In the film, he gets his ex-girlfriend exiled to Paris, and he tries and fails to save Otto.


Added DiffLines:

* BecomingTheMask: Inverted. Hendrik becomes famous for playing Mephisto onstage, but not until the end does he realize that he's made the DealWithTheDevil and he is actually Faust, not Mephisto.


Added DiffLines:

* DealWithTheDevil: Hendrik makes a metaphorical one, agreeing to become a Nazi stooge in return for power and wealth.


Added DiffLines:

* PetTheDog: Hendrik likes to do this to soothe his conscience while he serves the Nazis. At one point he saves a couple of stagehands who have been denounced. Later, however, he is reminded exactly how low on the totem pole he is, when he tries to save Otto, only for the Minister President to refuse before screaming at him and kicking him out of the office.

Added: 1892

Changed: 220

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* CallBack: Early in the film, when Hendrik is making a splash on the Berlin stage, a British critic named Davidson compliments him effusively. Many years later they run into each other in Paris; Davidson slaps him and says "That's for what's going on in Germany."



* EiffelTowerEffect: A shot of the Eiffel Tower is used to convey that Hendrik has gone to Paris. There he meets both Juliette and Barbara.



** The character of Hendrik is based on [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustaf_Gründgens Gustaf Gründgens]], Klaus Mann's brother-in-law. Gründgens, like Hendrik, played Mephisto and Theatre/{{Hamlet}} on the stage, and did in fact become director of the Prussian State Theatre under the Nazis. (He is best-known to latter-day audiences for the film ''Film/{{M}}'', where he appears as the safecracker and leader of the kangaroo court.). The character of Barbara is Klaus Mann's sister, and Barbara's brother Sebastian, who in the movie kind of lingers around but never does anything, is Klaus Mann himself.[[note]]In RealLife Gründgens was briefly imprisoned by the Soviets before a Communist actor friend stuck up for him; Gründgens was released from jail and continued to enjoy a successful acting career until his death.[[/note]]

to:

** The character of Hendrik is based on [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustaf_Gründgens Gustaf Gründgens]], Klaus Mann's brother-in-law. Gründgens, like Hendrik, played Mephisto and Theatre/{{Hamlet}} on the stage, and did in fact become director of the Prussian State Theatre under the Nazis. (He is best-known to latter-day audiences for the film ''Film/{{M}}'', where he appears as the safecracker and leader of the kangaroo court.). The character of Barbara is Klaus Mann's sister, and Barbara's brother Sebastian, who in the movie kind of lingers around but never does anything, is Klaus Mann himself.[[note]]In RealLife Gründgens was briefly imprisoned by the Soviets before a Communist actor friend stuck up for him; Gründgens was released from jail and continued to enjoy a successful acting career until his death.[[/note]]


Added DiffLines:

* NoEnding: In the last scene, the Minister President whisks Hendrik away from a party and brings him to a large stadium that the M.P. is intending to use for grand outdoor performances. He more or less forces Hendrik to go down to the field below. A whole bunch of spotlights turn on while the M.P. shouts "Hendrik Höfgen" over and over again. Hendrik, blinded by the lights, turns to the camera and says "What do they want of me? I'm only an actor." With that the film ends, mainly because the source novel was written nearly a decade before UsefulNotes/NaziGermany was destroyed.[[note]]In RealLife Gründgens was briefly imprisoned by the Soviets before a Communist actor friend stuck up for him; Gründgens was released from jail and continued to enjoy a successful acting career until his death.[[/note]]
* RedemptionRejection: Barbara and Hendrik see each other in Paris, for the first time in years. Barbara reaches out to him with a heartfelt plea, telling him that he's lying to himself by claiming to be an apolitical artist. In reality he is a minister and servant of the German state, and even when he helps out an anti-Nazi actor in trouble, he's only doing it as a nod to his past ideals and a salve to his conscience. She tells him that the only thing he can do to cleanse himself is to leave Nazi Germany. Outside the cafe, Hendrik looks around at the buildings for a bit, and then snorts with derision, wondering what he would do with "freedom". He then goes home.

Added: 2372

Changed: 860

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ArtisticLicenseHistory: A panicked Barbara says "The Nazis have won the elections!" In fact the Nazis never won a free election in Germany and never got more than 37% of the vote. They only took power because non-Nazi conservatives invited them, as part of an extremely ill-advised power-sharing agreement.
* CassandraTruth: Dora tells Hendrik that the Nazis are going to take over, and it will be impossible to make real art anymore, and any artist with a conscience must flee. Later, in Paris, Barbara tells him that he's not an actor anymore, he is a minister and servant of the state advancing the Nazi cause, and his pretentious of still supporting liberal causes are bullshit. He ignores both of them.



* {{Hypocrite}}: In the first scene Hendrik is shown wrecking his dressing room in a fit of jealousy, as Dora crushes a musical number on the stage. He then congratulates her afterwards.

to:

* {{Hypocrite}}: {{Foil}}: Otto, who remains true to his left-wing belief while Hendrik sells out. Otto pays with his life.
* {{Hypocrite}}:
**
In the first scene Hendrik is shown wrecking his dressing room in a fit of jealousy, as Dora crushes a musical number on the stage. He then congratulates her afterwards.
** Hendrik gets on his high horse about Barbara and her comfortable bourgeois lifestyle, saying that she'd probably find it easy to adjust to and accept Nazi dictatorship. In fact it's Hendrik who does that, while Barbara emigrates to Paris and starts an anti-Nazi newspaper.



* MalignedMixedMarriage: Juliette rips on Hendrik for supporting the Nazis when they are racists who hate people like her. He dismisses her concerns, but when the Minister President says that he can't keep a black mistress, he hardly hesitates in packing her away to Paris.
* MatchCut: Hendrik closing a curtain as he's about to have sex with Juliette cuts to a curtain opening as Hendrik comes onstage in a play.



** The character of Hendrik is based on [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustaf_Gründgens Gustaf Gründgens]], Klaus Mann's brother-in-law. Gründgens, like Hendrik, played Mephisto and Theatre/{{Hamlet}} on the stage, and did in fact become director of the Prussian State Theatre under the Nazis. (He is best-known to latter-day audiences for the film ''Film/{{M}}'', where he appears as the safecracker and leader of the kangaroo court.). The character of Barbara is Klaus Mann's sister, and Barbara's brother Sebastian, who in the movie kind of lingers around but never does anything, is Klaus Mann himself.

to:

** The character of Hendrik is based on [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustaf_Gründgens Gustaf Gründgens]], Klaus Mann's brother-in-law. Gründgens, like Hendrik, played Mephisto and Theatre/{{Hamlet}} on the stage, and did in fact become director of the Prussian State Theatre under the Nazis. (He is best-known to latter-day audiences for the film ''Film/{{M}}'', where he appears as the safecracker and leader of the kangaroo court.). The character of Barbara is Klaus Mann's sister, and Barbara's brother Sebastian, who in the movie kind of lingers around but never does anything, is Klaus Mann himself.[[note]]In RealLife Gründgens was briefly imprisoned by the Soviets before a Communist actor friend stuck up for him; Gründgens was released from jail and continued to enjoy a successful acting career until his death.[[/note]]



* TitleDrop: Dora tells Hendrik that he was born to play Mephisto. Later, the Minister President regularly calls Hendrik "Mephisto". The irony, of course, is that in reality Hendrik is actually Faust, and the Minister President and the Nazis are Mephisto, tempting him into selling his soul.

to:

* TimePassesMontage: Two. One montage has Hendrik cycling through a series of costumes and roles onstage and even appearing on a couple of movie sets, after establishing himself as an actor in Berlin. Later, another montage after he's director of state theater has him going through a series of interviews and meetings.
* TitleDrop: Dora tells Hendrik that he was born to play Mephisto. Later, the Minister President regularly calls Hendrik "Mephisto". The irony, of course, is that in reality Hendrik is actually Faust, and the Minister President and the Nazis are Mephisto, tempting him into selling his soul.soul.
* VoiceoverLetter: Hendrik is hiding out in Budapest, believing himself to be blacklisted in Germany because of his left-wing past, when he gets a letter from his friend Angelika. In voiceover, Angelika says that her friend Lotte, now the Minister President's mistress, says that it's OK for him to come home and he can make amends with the Nazis. The voiceover actually cuts to a shot of the actress who plays Angelika reciting the letter, before cutting back to voiceover as Hendrik reads.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Still more to come


->"An actor is a mask."



* DressHitsFloor: Barbara is changing when Hendrik comes into her bedroom and passionately embraces her. There's a shot of their lower legs as her dress hits the floor, then the film cuts away.
* {{Hypocrite}}: In the first scene Hendrik is shown wrecking his dressing room in a fit of jealousy, as Dora crushes a musical number on the stage. He then congratulates her afterwards.



* TheMistress: Juliette, whom Hendrik keeps as a mistress long after he's married to Barbara. When the Minister President tells him that he can't have a black girlfriend, he packs her off for Paris.



** Hendrik has an actress friend, Dora, who tells him that she is learning English so she can act in Hollywood, because the rise of the Nazis will make Germany no place for art. She's inspired by Creator/MarleneDietrich, who was a fervent anti-Nazi.

to:

** Hendrik has an actress friend, Dora, who tells him that she is learning English so she can act in Hollywood, because the rise of the Nazis will make Germany no place for art. She's inspired by Creator/MarleneDietrich, who was a fervent anti-Nazi.anti-Nazi.
* ShoutOut: A British critic tells Hendrik that he's better than Creator/ConradVeidt.
* ThatRussianSquatDance: Hendrik does one of these onstage when performing a Russian play with his left-wing theater troupe (the Revolutionary Theater).
* TitleDrop: Dora tells Hendrik that he was born to play Mephisto. Later, the Minister President regularly calls Hendrik "Mephisto". The irony, of course, is that in reality Hendrik is actually Faust, and the Minister President and the Nazis are Mephisto, tempting him into selling his soul.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Much more to come

Added DiffLines:

''Mephisto'' is a 1981 film from Hungary (although the whole movie is in German) directed by Istvan Szabo. It is an adaptation of 1936 novel ''Literature/{{Mephisto}}'' by Klaus Mann.

Hendrik Höfgen (Klaus Maria Brandauer in his StarMakingRole) is an actor in Weimar Germany, specifically Hamburg. He is wholly devoted to the theater, even sometimes saying that he is "married to the theater". He's actually married to wealthy Barbara Bruckner (Krystyna Janda), while keeping a secret mistress, Juliette, his dance teacher.

Hendrik professes left-wing politics and even works in a Communist theatrical troupe, but seemingly only because artists are expected to be left-wing. What he really wants is to be a star, and his career gets a big boost when he's hired to work in Berlin, which is the big-time for German theater. He plays Mephisto in ''Theatre/{{Faust}}'' and makes a big impression.

When the Nazis gain power in 1933, many of Hendrik's fellow actors either continue to oppose the regime, or emigrate. Not Hendrik, who likes his life in German theater too much. He makes friendly with the Nazi Party, and rises in the theater world, eventually becoming director of all German theater--only to realize too late that he isn't Mephisto, he's Faust, and he's made his DealWithTheDevil.

----
!!Tropes:

* ItWillNeverCatchOn: When Barbara is panicking at the Nazi seizure of power, Hendrik tells her that the Communists and Social Democrats will still be around as opposition to act as a check on the NSDAP. Nope.
* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: Klaus Mann's original novel was a thinly veiled satire of his family and people he knew.
** The character of Hendrik is based on [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustaf_Gründgens Gustaf Gründgens]], Klaus Mann's brother-in-law. Gründgens, like Hendrik, played Mephisto and Theatre/{{Hamlet}} on the stage, and did in fact become director of the Prussian State Theatre under the Nazis. (He is best-known to latter-day audiences for the film ''Film/{{M}}'', where he appears as the safecracker and leader of the kangaroo court.). The character of Barbara is Klaus Mann's sister, and Barbara's brother Sebastian, who in the movie kind of lingers around but never does anything, is Klaus Mann himself.
** The "Minister President", the high-ranking Nazi who becomes Hendrik's patron, is Hermann Goering. "Minister President" was one of Goering's titles. Just to make it more obvious, the nameless Minister President says a line, "When I hear the word 'culture' I reach for my revolver", which is apocryphally attributed to Goering. Lotte Lindenthal, the stage actress who becomes the Minister President's TrophyWife, is Emmy Goering.
** Hendrik has an actress friend, Dora, who tells him that she is learning English so she can act in Hollywood, because the rise of the Nazis will make Germany no place for art. She's inspired by Creator/MarleneDietrich, who was a fervent anti-Nazi.

Top