The Shadows Grow Longer

The Shadows Grow Longer
Film poster
Directed byLadislao Vajda
Written byIstván Békeffy
Heinz Pauck
Ladislao Vajda
Produced byArtur Brauner
Lazar Wechsler
StarringBarbara Rütting
Luise Ullrich
Hansjörg Felmy
Fred Tanner
Loni von Friedl
CinematographyHeinrich Gartner
Edited byHermann Haller
Music byRobert Blum
Production
companies
Praesens-Film
CCC Film
Distributed byColumbia Film
Release date
  • 1961 (1961)
Running time
91 minutes
CountriesSwitzerland
West Germany
LanguageGerman

The Shadows Grow Longer (German: Die Schatten werden länger) is a 1961 Swiss-West German drama film directed by Ladislao Vajda. The film follows a former prostitute working at a home for girls who kills her former pimp after he tries to blackmail her. Loni von Friedl won the Preis der Deutschen Filmkritik and a Filmband in Gold for her performance, and the film was later shown at the Little Carnegie Playhouse in New York and at the 59th Solothurner Filmtage in 2024.

Synopsis

The film follows a former prostitute who works at a home for girls. When her former pimp reappears and tries to blackmail her, she kills him.[1]

Main cast

Production

The film was shot in Zurich and at the CCC-Studios in Berlin-Spandau. Its sets were designed by Max Röthlisberger and Wilhelm Vorwerg.[3]

Reception

Awards

Loni von Friedl won the Preis der Deutschen Filmkritik in 1961 and received a Filmband in Gold at the Bundesfilmpreis in 1962.[4]

Critical response

Filmdienst wrote that the film’s overly contrived story prevented it from convincingly conveying its sympathetic intentions toward vulnerable young people.[2]

Solothurner Filmtage described the film as combining elements of an educational film with crime motifs and noted that it dealt with the prostitution and blackmail of young women at a time when prostitution was rarely discussed publicly.[4]

The New York Times described the film as a respectable but plodding drama and concluded that it remained “pensive rather than penetrating.” The review also singled out Barbara Rütting’s performance and said the film was strongest in scenes showing the young inmates in rebellion.[5]

Later screenings

The film was shown at the Little Carnegie Playhouse in New York in June 1962[5] and was later screened at the 59th Solothurner Filmtage in 2024.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Die Schatten werden länger (Schweiz)". Der Spiegel (in German). 29 August 1961. Retrieved 22 March 2026.
  2. ^ a b "Die Schatten werden länger". Filmdienst (in German). Retrieved 22 March 2026.
  3. ^ "Die Schatten werden länger". filmportal.de (in German). Retrieved 22 March 2026.
  4. ^ a b c "Die Schatten werden länger". Filmo (in German). Retrieved 22 March 2026.
  5. ^ a b "Screen: 'The Shadows Grow Longer':Swiss Movie Arrives at Little Carnegie Story Takes Place in a Girls' Reformatory". The New York Times. 11 June 1962. Retrieved 22 March 2026.