Chamber music (1925)

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Movie
Original title Chamber music
Country of production Germany
original language German
Publishing year 1925
length 95 minutes
Rod
Director Carl Froelich
script Robert Liebmann
Walter Supper
production Henny Porten
Carl Froelich
Wilhelm von Kaufmann
music Hansheinrich Dransmann
camera Axel Graatkjaer
occupation

Kammermusik is a German silent film melodrama from 1925 by Carl Froelich with Henny Porten in the leading role.

action

Cesare von Niemeyer is a talented but difficult artist who doubts whether he will ever experience the big breakthrough as a musician. He constantly accuses his wife of being to blame and of being more than a hindrance to his career with his alleged imprisonment in their bourgeois world. At some point his wife has enough and she finally releases her Cesare.

He returns to the opera world and, thanks to his generous patron, a princess, celebrates a great success. It didn't take long before the ruler of the residence fell in love with the artist. Meanwhile, Frau von Niemeyer followed her husband and attracted the attention of the young Crown Prince. This, in turn, soon displeases Cesare, and he realizes that his wife's home comfort is not as narrow-minded and petty-bourgeois as he previously thought. Both return home as a couple.

Production notes

Chamber music originated in the winter of 1924/25, passed film censorship on March 14, 1925 and was premiered on March 19, 1925 as part of a press screening in the Primus-Palast. The mass start was on March 24, 1924. The film had six acts over a length of 2,381 meters. A youth ban was issued.

The film structures were designed by Franz Schroedter .

Web links

Individual evidence