- Forbidden (1984 film)
Infobox Film
name = Forbidden
image_size =
caption =
director =Anthony Page
producer = Hans Brockman
Mark Forstater
Gerald I. Isenberg
Ingrid Windisch
writer = Michael Hastings
Leonard Gross (non-fiction )
narrator =Jacqueline Bisset
starring =Jacqueline Bisset Jurgen Prochnow Irene Worth
music =Tangerine Dream
cinematography = Wolfgang Treu
editing = Thomas Schwalm
distributor = Anthea Films
released = December 1984 (UK )
March 1985 (US)
runtime = 114 min. (USA )
157 min (Canada )
country =UK /West Germany
language = English
budget =
gross =
preceded_by =
followed_by =
website =
amg_id = 1:18156
imdb_id = 0089161"Forbidden" is a 1984 made-for-television film tells the tale of a wealthy German countess who hid her Jewish boyfriend in her apartment in
World War II .Jacqueline Bisset portrayed the Countess andJurgen Prochnow starred as her lover. The plot is loosely based on a true story originally told in the non-fiction book "The Last Jews In Berlin" byLeonard Gross .Plot
German countess Nina von Hadler (Bisset) is a student in veterinary medicine in
Berlin , Germany on the eve ofWorld War II . Ostracized by her family due to her liberal views and anti-Hitler sentiment, she lives alone, independent and strong-willed. The film opens with Nina studying at the library the dayGermany invadesCzecheslovakia . She is angered and tells a classmate she knows the reasonsHitler gave for the invasion (to allegedly rescue ethnic Germans) are a pack of lies.One day while on errands Nina witnesses
Brownshirts attacking a vendor. She also sees a man attempting to help the vendor. She confronts them and demands to know why he is being attacked. They say they beat him because he sells to Jews. She tells him to leave the man alone or she will report them to her brother-in-law, a high-rankingNazi official. Later, while attending an informal party hosted by her friend, she recognizes the man who came to the assistance of the vendor. Her friend, Erica, tells her that his name is Fritz Friedlander and he is a writer. She sis immediately attracted to him, but Erica warns Nina that because Fritz is Jewish, it would be illegal to date him because of theNuremberg Laws . The headstrong Nina ignores this adviceThey must meet at one of her summer homes to escape discovery. Fritz's mother Ruth (Worth) is vehemently opposed to their relationship, as she fears for her son's life. Fritz is arrested and sent to a
concentration camp to doforced labor , but is released. The Nazis are starting their round-up of Jews, Nina suggests that Fritz go into hiding - in her flat.If someone comes in while he's there, he must hide underneath the sofa, which has a compartment expressly designed by Nina for such a situation. She offers to hide Ruth as well, but Ruth is too terrified to accept the offer. So Fritz writes a fake suicide note that his mother takes to Gestapo headquarters.Later, Nina takes in another Jewish man named Max. She feels that in addition to saving him, she can provide a companion for Fritz. One day, Nina comes home from school to find Fritz and Max singing Jewish songs at the top of their lungs. Max is forced to find another hiding place. All the while, Nina must deal with her overtly curious neighbor and cleaning lady, Frau Schmidt.
Nina discovers that she is pregnant. Unable to claim Fritz as a father, she asks a Swedish friend, rumored to be
gay , to register as the baby's father, as this will make him lookheterosexual and thus avoid Nazi persecution. Nina then finds out that Ruth has been called-up by the Nazis. Because her husband was a judge and served inWorld War I , she will be sent to the "privileged" campTheresienstadt . When Fritz and Nina come to say goodbye, Ruth realizes that Nina is pregnant, she insists that no matter what happens, they must survive for their unborn child.The arrests of Berlin's Jewish population escalates, as do air attacks from the
Allies . Nina goes into premature labor and is rushed to the hospital. The baby, in an incubator, dies when the hospital loses power after being hit by a bomb. Heartbroken, Fritz sneaks out of his hiding place to see Nina and his dead son's casket.Unbeknownst to Fritz, Nina is working in the Resistance, aiding Jews and other people hounded by the Nazis. One night, she is discovered attempting to hide some Jews in a warehouse and is shot. The bullet only grazes her face, and she manages to escape, but the incident has shaken her. When Fritz asks what happened, she tells him she got kicked by a horse while at veterinary school.
Suffering from
cabin fever , Fritz sneaks out on a warm spring day and goes to his old neighborhood. While sitting on a park bench, he is joined by a mysterious gentleman who engages Fritz in conversation. The man tells Fritz that he is aJew-catcher , a Jewish person hired by the Nazis to find other Jews who are evading capture. When the man asks Fritz if he realized that he was sitting in what used to be a Jewish neighborhood, Fritz claims ignorance and says his goodbyes. The man starts to follow him and Fritz begins to run, with the man in hot pursuit. He barely escapes.When he returns home, he finds Nina desperately waiting for him. He tells her what happened. She has worse news for him; the Resistance has discovered that the Nazis are taking the Jews to
death camps inPoland andgassing them. She still believes his mother is still safe inTheresienstadt . She then tells him about a train going toSwitzerland . She and her friends are smuggling several Jews onboard. She professes her love for him, but wants him to go where he will be safe. That night, they go to the train depot, where he and other refugees are placed in boxes with a small supply of food and water. As she leaves, she sees Fritz running up to her; he loves her so that he's unable to leave her. Together they return home.By the winter of 1944-45, Berlin is in ruins and it is clear that Germany is losing the war. Nina's flat has been badly damaged by bombs, but is still habitable. She finds a little girl who has lost her family in a bombing raid. Her name is Lucie and Nina takes her to live with them. She tells Lucie that Fritz is their "secret friend" and she must never tell anyone about him. Things are fine until one day several Nazis appear at her home and accuse her of hiding Jews in her apartment. They search the place, finding no one. The head Nazi asks her about her couch and what is in it. Nina says it hasn't been opened in years, so she doesn't know. The officer then shoots it several times, destroying the lock, and depart. Nina opens the sofa only to find that Fritz was not in it; he'd hidden in a broom closet.
Germany is invaded by the Russians. Nina knew that the Russians wanted revenge for the millions of countrymen murdered by the
Third Reich . Attempting to hide in the cellar, they are caught by the Russians and forced outside. Nina yells to the soldiers that Fritz is Jewish, but they ignore her. Once outside, Fritz is forced to kneel as the Russians prepare to shoot him. He starts singing "Shalom Israel". The Russian soldier lowers his gun and says that he is Jewish too. During the voice-over while the camera pans over a bombed-out and devastated Berlin, Nina tells the audience that Ruth Friedlander was transferred from Theresienstadt toAuschwitz , where she was gassed. Eventually she and Fritz married with Fritz dying in 1973 and Nina surviving long enough to tell the story.See also
*
List of Holocaust films
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