Our Heavenly Bodies (German: Wunder der Schöpfung, literally: Wonder of the Creation) is a 1925 German educational film written by Hanns Walter Kornblum and Ernst Krieger which attempts to represent everything known about the cosmos at the time. It covers the origin and mechanics of the Solar System, gravitation, the stars, and the nature of galaxies.

Our Heavenly Bodies
Directed byHanns Walter Kornblum
(animated scenes)
Johannes Meyer
Rudolf Biebrach
Written byHanns Walter Kornblum
Ernst Krieger
StarringPaul Bildt, Willy Kaiser-Heyl, Theodor Loos, Oscar Marion
Cinematography(animated scenes) Hermann Boeheln, Otto von Bothmer, Wera Cleve, Bodo Kuntze, Eowald Matthias Schumacher,
(nature and studio scenes) Max Brinck, Friedrich Paulmann, Hans Scholz, Friedrich Weinmann
Music byIgnatz Waghalter (composer of score)
Production
companies
Kultur department of the Universum-Film AG (Ufa) and Colonna-film G.m.b.H.
Release date
  • 1925 (1925)
Running time
92 min
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman silent

The film is a prime example of the early German "Kulturfilm", which are regarded as predecessors of the modern film documentary.[1] It features a large variety of special effects and animations, as well as fantastical depictions of travel around the Solar System and to the stars. Prints were color-tinted and color-toned for effect.[2][3]

The film has been reconstructed in 2008 by Munich Film Archive[4] using material from the National Audiovisual Institute (Finland)[5] in Helsinki and the Deutsche Kinemathek in Berlin. The current rights holder is the Friedrich-Wilhelm-Murnau Foundation.[2][6]

Acts

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1) On the Road to Truth (German: Auf dem Weg zur Wahrheit)
A history of cosmology.

2) The Night Sky (German: Der nächtliche Himmel)
The Moon: its motion and faces, its tides, lunar eclipses; the fixed stars, Berlin-Babelsberg Observatory, constellations, the North Star, comets, meteors and falling stars.

3) The Star of Day (German: Das Gestirn des Tages)
Sunspots, auroras, solar eclipse, solar prominences, night, day and meridians, heating of the equator vs. poles, earthly seasons.

4) A Flight to the Moon (German: Ein Flug zum Mond)
Introduces a "fantasty ship" pulled by "huge electrical energies", calls it a "space ship". Depicts its launch, discusses the nature of the vacuum of space, the idea of a Moon-day, the Earth as seen from the Moon.

5) The Sun's Children (German: Der Sonne Kinder)
Continues the imaginary journey to Mercury (mentions that it's thought that Mercury always presents the same face to the Sun), Venus, Mars, its seasons and polar caps, the observed canals. Depicts an imaginary landing, and people bouncing around in reduced gravity. Asteroids. A depiction of Gulliver's Travels in Lilliput illustrates Jupiter's size. The moons of Jupiter. Depicts a person labouring to crawl on the surface of Jupiter, and giants residing on Jupiter. Saturn's rings as "numberless small bodies", depicts the rings as seen from Saturn, and Saturn's moons; Uranus; Neptune, its discovery, and its one big moon.

6) At the Gates of Infinity (German: An den Toren der Unendlichkeit)
Explains that there is no up or down in space, and attempts to show people in zero gravity; discusses nebulas. The travellers use a flat view screen to look back on Earth, where they witness historical events. As the ship proceeds to travel faster than light, the travellers view the same historical events in reverse. The ship then proceeds much faster than light to visit binary starsAlgol, globular cluster. The fantasy comes to an end as they leave the last star of the Milky Way. (In 1924 it was controversial whether the Milky Way comprised the universe or not.[7])

7) Becoming and Waning in Outer Space (German: Werden und Vergehen im Weltenraum)
Discusses the relative movements of stars; that the shape of constellations is a matter of perspective; a mass of gas taking a spiral disk shape, wherein knots form to become planets — in their youth as gas, forming a solid kernel — formation of (terrestrial) planets; erosion of surface of Earth, prehistoric creatures. Speculates on the future of the Earth — shows people freezing, then a very extended depiction of the world burning up upon being hit by another heavenly body.

Further Credits

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Scientific review:

Constructions:

Film Reconstruction

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  • Stefan Drössler
  • Christian Ketels
  • Gerhard Ullmann

"Thanks to"

  • Antti Alanen
  • Annette Groschke
  • Juha Kindberg
  • Konrad und Wolfgang Kornblum
  • Eva Orbanz
  • Jon Wengström

Reception and legacy

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The film is described as being "overwhelming", a "wild success" at the time, in contrast with the Ufa's later, better known production Metropolis.[8]

Scenes of the film are often described as forerunners of space science-fiction films, especially Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey.[9] The spirit and content of the film more closely parallels that of Carl Sagan's TV series Cosmos: A Personal Voyage.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b In Depth: Wunder der Schöpfung, 2006 interview at Dundee Contemporary Arts.
  2. ^ a b Entry for Wunder der Schöpfung at Silentera.com
  3. ^ Five things you always wanted to know about silent film (but were afraid to ask) Archived 5 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine article at WOW
  4. ^ Entry for Wunder der Schöpfung at Edition Filmmuseum
  5. ^ Entry for Wunder der Schöpfung in the Elonet database of the National Audiovisual Archive Finland
  6. ^ Entry for Wunder der Schöpfung at Friedrich-Wilhelm-Murnau Foundation
  7. ^ Hubble shows that the Universe goes beyond the Milky Way
  8. ^ Lichtbühne, 18 Jarhrgang, Nummer 179, 15 September 1925. See also "Internationale Stummfilmtage - 25. Bonner Sommerkino 2009". Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 4 March 2010.
  9. ^ Entry for Wunder der Schöpfung at Filmmuseum Potsdam
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