Feind im Blut explained

Feind im Blut
Director:Walter Ruttmann
Producer:Lazar Wechsler
Music:Wolfgang Zeller
Runtime:74 minutes
Language:German

Feind im Blut (English: Enemy in the Blood) is a 1931 Swiss-German drama film directed by Walter Ruttmann. It tells three stories about people who become infected with syphilis. There are also documentary parts with information about the disease. The film was co-produced with several organisations focused on combatting sexually transmitted infections.

Plot

A student learns that his girlfriend has been unfaithful. He goes out in the city nightlife together with a friend. The friend spends the night with a waitress and catches syphilis.

A mechanic tries to cure his syphilis by going to a quack. It does not help him. His wife gives birth to a child infected with the disease and commits suicide.

A married woman attends dancing classes. There she meets a young man who gives her syphilis.

Cast

Production

The film was made to inform and warn the public about syphilis. It was produced by in collaboration with the Swiss Society to Combat Sexually Transmitted Diseases, the German Association for the Fight Against Sexually Transmitted Diseases and the Main Health Department of the City of Berlin. Filming took place from 9 February to 27 March 1931 in Berlin and Zürich, with studio scenes in the Lignose-Hörfilm Atelier and Grunewald-Atelier in Berlin.[1]

Release

The film was released in Germany on 14 April 1931. It premiered in Switzerland on 18 April the same year.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Feind im Blut. German. Filmportal.de. Deutsches Filminstitut. 28 May 2015.