Song. Die Liebe eines armen Menschenkindes

Show Life
After a dispute fuelled by jealousy, knife thrower John is stranded in an Asian port. There, he rescues the young Chinese woman Song from the violent clutches of two libertines. Deciding that she is the ideal partner for his act, they begin performing together at a vaudeville theatre. One day, John’s former mistress, the stylish dancer Gloria, turns up. John needs money to win her back, so he takes part in the robbery of a mail train and ends up losing his eyesight. He attributes all the good things that happen to him from then on to Gloria. But in reality, it is Song who has been devoted to him all along ... This melodrama set in exotic locales is considered the most mature work of Richard Eichberg, a busy director who worked across all genres. With delicate Hollywood star Anna May Wong, and heavyweight Heinrich George as the leads, Song unfolds as a dazzling visual interplay of contrasts. Moving between dive bar and cabaret, ocean liner and night train, this German-British co-production represented Weimar cinema’s first foray into the milieu of European ex-pats in a colonial setting, which was very attractive for western foreign markets.
by Richard Eichberg
with Anna May Wong, Heinrich George, Mary Kid, Hans Adalbert Schlettow, Paul Hörbiger, Julius E. Herrmann
Germany / United Kingdom 1928 English intertitles 125’ Black/White

With

  • Anna May Wong
  • Heinrich George
  • Mary Kid
  • Hans Adalbert Schlettow
  • Paul Hörbiger
  • Julius E. Herrmann

Crew

Director Richard Eichberg
Screenplay Adolf Lantz, Helen Gosewisch based on the novella “Schmutziges Geld” (1925) by Karl Vollmoeller
Cinematography Heinrich Gärtner, Bruno Mondi
Set Construction Willi A. Herrmann

Produced by

Eichberg-Film GmbH

Additional information

Film Print: British Film Institute, London