Out in East Berlin - Lesbians and Gays in the DDR

Deutschland,
Length
93 minutes
Director
Jochen Hick
Cast

    Content

    Unlike the Federal Republic, by 1968 homosexuality was already de-criminalised in the German Democratic Republic’s penal code. But the ‘workers’ and farmers’ state' did not exactly welcome its gay and lesbian citizens with open arms; their sexuality was taboo and they were often marginalised from public life. The ‘bewitched’ generation that had seen the war and were now trying to live lives of inconspicuous normality felt threatened by younger homosexuals who came out and demanded spaces in which to express themselves. Thirteen moving biographies depict the private and political developments that led to opposition against the state apparatus. The founders of East Berlin’s LGBT movement, the ‘Terrorlesben’ from PrenzlauerBerg, gay Communists and church groups – they all wanted to change the system and hoped for a society in which they could be more open about their sexuality. When the first homosexuals began applying to leave the GDR they became a problem and ‘Stasi Romeos’ began schmoozing young gay men. Archive footage from broadcast news and excerpts from old GDR newsreels illustrate the historical dimension of these individual biographies.

    Gallery

    Credits

    Production company
    Galeria Alaska Productions
    Original title
    Out in Ost-Berlin - Lesben und Schwule in der DDR