The Call of the Sea

The Call of the Sea or The Oceans Are Calling (German: Die Meere rufen) is a 1951 East German drama film directed by Eduard Kubat and starring Hans Klering, Käte Alving and Evamaria Bath. A defector to West Germany returns to the East having become disillusioned by capitalist society.[1]

The Call of the Sea
Directed byEduard Kubat
Written by
  • Jan Petersen
  • Otto Bernhard Wendler
Starring
Music byHorst Hans Sieber
CinematographyEmil Schünemann
Edited byRuth Schreiber
Production
company
Distributed byProgress Film
Release date
17 December 1951
Running time
86 minutes
CountryEast Germany
LanguageGerman

It was made by the state-owned DEFA studio. The film's art direction was by Artur Günther.

Cast

  • Hans Klering as Ernst Reinhardt
  • Käte Alving as Ida Reinhardt, dessen Frau
  • Evamaria Bath as Gisela Reinhardt, beider Kind
  • Helmut Ahner as Walter Reinhardt - beider Kind
  • Herbert Richter as Franz Nölte
  • Magdalene von Nußbaum as Emmi Nölte, seine Frau
  • Viola Recklies as Inge Nölte, beider Kind
  • Hans-Joachim Martens as Heinz Nölte, beider Kind
  • Günther Ballier as Fischer Thomsen
  • Fredy Barten as Erich Pascholle
  • Albrecht Bethge as Auktionator
  • Elfie Dugall as Trude
  • Martin Flörchinger as Kurt Schöller
  • Harry Gillmann
  • Oskar Höcker as Fischmakler
  • Kurt Jung-Alsen
  • Herbert Kiper as Bürgermeister Gubitz
  • Hans-Erich Korbschmitt
  • Alfred Maack as Klüterbau
  • Hans Maikowski as Hans Freese
  • Willi Narloch as Richard Schweikert
  • Wolfgang-Erich Parge as Karl Lamprecht
  • Gustav Püttjer as Hein Bachmann
  • Ursula Rank as Käte Flemming
  • Johannes Schmidt as Heinrich Stüber
  • Walter B. Schulz as Wilhelm Lehmann
  • Friedrich Siemers as Dieter Specht
  • Friedrich Teitge as Regierungsbeamter
  • Christine von Trümbach
  • Siegfried Weiß
  • Teddy Wulff
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gollark: > While W is busy with a, other threads might come along and take b from its queue. That is called stealing b. Once a is done, W checks whether b was stolen by another thread and, if not, executes b itself. If W runs out of jobs in its own queue, it will look through the other threads' queues and try to steal work from them.
gollark: > Behind the scenes, Rayon uses a technique called work stealing to try and dynamically ascertain how much parallelism is available and exploit it. The idea is very simple: we always have a pool of worker threads available, waiting for some work to do. When you call join the first time, we shift over into that pool of threads. But if you call join(a, b) from a worker thread W, then W will place b into its work queue, advertising that this is work that other worker threads might help out with. W will then start executing a.
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gollark: Maybe I should actually benchmark it.

References

  1. Liehm & Liehm p.91

Bibliography

  • Liehm, Mira & Liehm, Antonín J. The Most Important Art: Eastern European Film After 1945. University of California Press, 1977.
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