À FOREIGN AFFAIR
This 1948 Billy Wilder film is set in post-War Berlin, which must have added to its interest for US audiences at the time. Wilder and his co-writer Charles Brackett do a great job of smuggling into the story details about the challenges of rebuilding Germany after the War, and the suffering the civilian population had endured. In addition of course it wouldn’t be a Wilder film without some dark humour. We learn that on the day Berlin’s gas supply is restored there are 160 suicides. Hitler and Eva Braun killing themselves after marrying in the bunker is described as the ‘perfect honeymoon’. There are some references to gas chambers and shaved heads which made me wince. The film doesn’t shy away from the fact that US servicemen in Berlin are trading small necessities and luxuries of life for sexual favours. In fact this activity is front and central to the story. Captain Pringle has no intention of returning home to Iowa given that he is enjoying a relationship wit...