Der kleine Kuno is an East German black and white film, directed by Kurt Jung-Alsen. It was released in 1959, and is set in October 1959 during the tenth anniversary celebrations of the foundation of the communist East Germany state as seen through the lens of a little boy and his two-day adventures. The author of the film script, Peter Brock (1916-1982), subsequently modified the text into a popular book for children with the same title.[1]

Der kleine Kuno
Directed byKurt Jung-Alsen
Written byPeter Brock
StarringSiegfried Ewert, Rudolf Ulrich, Rolf Ludwig
CinematographyOtto Merz
Edited byFriedel Welsandt
Music byGerhard Wohlgemuth
Distributed byDEFA
Release date
  • June 12, 1959 (June 12, 1959)
Running time
52 minutes
CountryEast Germany
LanguageGerman

Plot

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Kuno (Siegfried Ewert), a six-year-old boy, has had a long-sought after wish: he wanted to experience what it is that grown-ups do at night while he is asleep. After getting up (after feigning sleep), he sneeks out of his home. He encounters workers at a locomotive factory who give him a ride on a newly-produced locomotive. After observing the fire department putting out a fire, he hides in an ambulance, and along with a little girl suffering from smoke inhalation, is quickly driven to a hospital. It is acertained that he rode unauthorized in the ambulance, so his parents are called by the Volkspolizei just as he runs away from the hospital. Kuno converses with a soldier (Stefan Lisewski) in the National People's Army in front of the local barracks until suddenly all the soldiers leave to prepare for the military parade for their country's 10 year anniversary. After further wandering at night, Kuno watches adults dancing at a large municiple dance hall near the city's center which is being broadcast live on TV. After the police find him and bring him to his father (Rudolf Ulrich) who is still working the night shift as a typesetter at a printing company, a newspaper reporter (Rolf Ludwig) agrees to bring Kuno to his mother (Margit Schaumäker) who is just returning home from her shift as a nighttime streetcar conductor, and after they get home, she puts her son to bed.[2]

Reception

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The monthly publication Deutsche Filmkunst praised the film. “It is certainly the first film by DEFA – not only among their films for children – which was constructed with so much poetic artistry. What’s new in this film? It makes the unlikely possible. It shows the magic of a big city in the eyes of a six-year-old boy.” [3]

Neues Deutschland critic Horst Knietzsch commented that “Der kleine Kuno is not a 'big' film, with all the bombastic claims that 'big' films so often unjustifiably make. It is a small, good film, in many details of its design exemplary of the modern, socialist children's film.”[4]

Benita Blessing argues that, in the history of East German cinematography, “Der kleine Kuno” is representative of a new “generation of films [which] turned to children as adventurous members of a society who look forward to a bright future. In this casting young people are freed from the burden of the Nazi past and begin to make their own mistakes from which they can learn.”[5] Part of the reasoning behind the new direction was the state's policy to confront the many negative social issues surrounding the East German uprising of 1953 with positive socialist imaginary of progress in GDR film and fiction.

References

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  1. ^ Brock, Peter (1963). Der kleine Kuno: Eine aufregende Geschichte. Kinderbuchverlag Berlin.
  2. ^ Habel, Frank-Burkhard (2001). Das grosse Lexikon der DEFA-Spielfilme: Die vollständige Dokumentation aller DEFA-Spielfilme von 1946 bis 1993. Schwarzkopf & Schwarzkopf. p. 728. ISBN 3862655873.
  3. ^ Salow, Friedrich. "Der kleine Kuno", Deutsche Filmkunst, vol 6: 1959 (in German).
  4. ^ Knietzsch, Horst. "Der kleine Kuno", Neues Deutschland, June 18, 1959, p. 8 (in German).
  5. ^ Blessing, Benita (2014). “DEFA Children’s Films: Not Just for Children” - DEFA at the Crossroads of East German and International Film Culture. de Gruyter. p. 243. ISBN 9783110273441.
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