- Source: Inquest (1931 German film)
Inquest (German: Voruntersuchung) is a 1931 German crime film directed by Robert Siodmak and starring Albert Bassermann, Gustav Fröhlich and Hans Brausewetter. Along with another film that Siodmak made the same year Storms of Passion, it anticipates the later development of film noir. It was made by German's largest studio Universum Film, with sets designed by art director Erich Kettelhut. Paul Martin, who soon after emerged as a leading director, was assistant director to Siodmak on the film. It was based on a 1927 play of the same title by Max Alsberg and Ernst Hesse. A separate French-language version About an Inquest was also produced.
Synopsis
When a prostitute is murdered in a cheap Berlin boarding house, an investigating judge suspects that the killer is her boyfriend, unaware that his own son and daughter are also mixed up in the case.
Background
The film was shot from February 18 to March 1931 in Berlin-Tiergarten and in the Ufa studio in Neubabelsberg. The buildings were created by Erich Kettelhut. The street signs and house numbers in the picture indicate Mittelstraße 63 as the location of the action.
Cast
Albert Bassermann as Dr. Konrad Bienert, Landgerichtsrat
Gustav Fröhlich as Fritz Bernt, Student
Hans Brausewetter as Walter Bienert, Beinerts Sohn, Student
Charlotte Ander as Gerda Bienert - Bienerts Tochter
Anni Markart as Erna Kabisch
Edith Meinhard as Mella Ziehr
Oskar Sima as Karl Zülke, Portier
Julius Falkenstein as Anatol Scherr, ein Hausbewohner
Heinrich Gretler as Kurt Brann, sein Untermieter
Hermann Speelmans as Bruno Klatte, Artist
Jakob Tiedtke as Ein genierter Herr
Gerhard Bienert as Baumann, Kriminalkommissar
Heinz Berghaus as Schneider, Kriminalbeamter
Carl Lambertin as Kriebel, Kiminalbeamter
Emilia Unda
Erwin Splettstößer
References
Bibliography
Spicer, Andrew (2010). Historical Dictionary of Film Noir. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-7378-0.
External links
Inquest at IMDb
Voruntersuchung Full movie at the Deutsche Filmothek