Essay aus dem Jahr 2008 im Fachbereich Medien / Kommunikation - Film und Fernsehen, , Sprache: Deutsch, Abstract: At the end of World War II Germanyâs cities were in ruins, its people shattered by 6 years of âTotal Warâ and vilified as guilty monsters around the world. Curt Reiss, returned German ÃĐmigrÃĐ and American War Correspondent, described the streets of 1945 Berlin as âendless ruins, [...]bombed out tanks, the ubiquitous machine guns and helmets shot to piecesâ. This fantastic landscape and guilty citizens fascinated filmmakers. They produced films which tried to depict the implications of defeat for Germany and for the victors. The backdrop to these films was the endless ruins and in the foreground the questions of guilt and redemption. This essay examines three films which present Germanyâs defeat, and how filmmakers dealt with questions of guilt, responsibility, Germanyâs possible redemption and the affect of victory on Allied soldiers. The films are: Die MÃķrder sind unter uns, 1946, Wolfgang Staudte, Germany, DEFA, A Foreign Affair, 1948, Billy Wilder, US, Paramount , and The Third Man, 1949, Carol Reed, UK, London Films. Elsaesser says that cinema describes its times calling it a âcolourful chronotope, [which] provides an easily recognizable but also superficial time/space iconographyâ (Elsaesser, 2003, 33). Neorealism is suggested by Ezra as the main Post-War genre used to describe the destroyed cities, shattered lives and the difficulties of re-integrating former soldiers back in to society, saying âthe privations suffered by populations of Europe were both captured and transformed into the first great genre to emerge at the end of the war, Italian Neorealismâ (Ezra, 2004,9). It is clear however that in the films under discussion this is not the principle style used by Staudte, Wilder and Reed.