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Hollywood in Berlin, 1945: a note on Billy Wilder and the origins of ‘A Foreign Affair’

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Pages 311-316 | Published online: 15 Sep 2006

NOTES

  • For a valuable analysis of the meaning of A Foreign Affair quite different from that presented by Willett, see Bernard F. Dick, Billy Wilder (Boston: Twayne, 1980), pp. 63–66. The complete credits are found in Axel Madsen, Billy Wilder (Bloomington, IA, Indiana University Press, 1969) [Cinema One Series published by Indiana University Press in conjunction with Sight and Sound and the Education Department of the British Film Institute], p. 154. For a didactic summary of writings about Wilder see Steve [sic] Seidman The Film Career of Billy Wilder G. K. Hall Boston 1977
  • See Culbert D. American film policy in the re-education of Germany after 1945 The Political Re-Education of Germany & Her Allies After World War II Pronay Nicholas Wilson Keith Croom Helm London 1985 173 202 in 1985
  • Indeed, A Foreign Affair was banned by the ICD for viewing in Berlin at the time of its release. The reasons are touched on by Stuart Schulberg, in 1948 an ICD Film Section officer, in A communication: a letter about Billy Wilder Quarterly Review of Film, Radio and Television 7 435 435

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