Professor Manuel A. Pérez-Tejada
ENGL 1101 D2
21 April 2009

Holocaust. Dinner parties set to Wagner. Genocide. Glorification of the quintessential German. Gestapo. The brilliance of blitzkrieg. The palate that paints Hitler’s Germany is dark and dissonant. In the World War II era, Germany believed that it was developing a perfect society through the Third Reich. Behind closed doors, however, even an ideal German could be found practicing the deepest of taboos. Such stories never saw the daylight under the Nazis who exterminated those caught in disagreeable behavior. Time and history have taken their toll, however, and brought closet stories such as Aimée & Jaguar to the forefront through film. Based on journalist Erica Fischer’s extensive research of a true story and the resulting book Aimée & Jaguar: A Love Story Berlin 1943, Max Färberböck’s film presents the story of lesbian lovers, one of which is a poster Aryan German and the other who is an underground Jew involved in the resistance movement (Halpern). As the reality of the practice of taboos in a society emerges, their acceptance in cinema induces the telling of stories such as Aimée & Jaguar with unusually realistic and compelling plots.
A taboo may be defined as a social or religious custom prohibiting or restricting a particular practice or forbidding association with a particular person, place, or thing. Pinpointing just what such practices or associations are, however, is almost entirely subjective. The notions that constitute a taboo vary according to conceptualizations with multiple international contexts. For Aimée & Jaguar, the multifaceted taboo is exacerbated by the locale and timing, namely the Nazi Germany of World Warl II in which the story plays out.
Aimée & Jaguar is centered around the true story of lesbian lovers Lilly Wust and Felice Schragenheim, affectionately nicknamed Aimée and Jaguar respectively. Mrs. Wust and Ilse, her former servant that ended up being Jewish and Felice’s previous lover, reminisce uncomfortably on the trying times of World War II in their old age. Thus the audience sees the narrative as a flashback (Marti). Lilly was an “Aryan poster girl married to a German officer and the mother of four strapping blond boys (Kehr).” Felice, on the other hand, is an underground resistance Jew that works for a Nazi paper, writes erotic poems, and is also secretly a promiscuous lesbian(Färberböck). As the narrative progresses, Lilly expresses to Felice that “(her) life is wonderful. (She is) free (Färberböck).” Before long, the two fall deep into love. Lilly diverges further and further from the ideal German woman she once was as she divorces her husband and secretly exchanges rings with Felice. Their relationship, however, is beset with the ominous possibility of Felice being found and taken away. Though she knows she risks her life, Felice holds to “a love larger than death” promising that “until life is over, love will last” (Färberböck). After enjoying many experiences with Mrs. Wust as lovers, Felice is finally tracked and taken by the Gestapo to her eventual death.
“National Socialism is our people’s greatest and only hope,” says Lilly’s boss at the Nazi newspaper, “The world can mock us, but it will tremble when it realizes what tremendous feats this people is capable of.” (Färberböck) Such lofty words were often spoken, but the true duality of the Berlin of World War II is repeatedly represented in the film. “Luxury and profligacy butt up against starvation and murder daily” as those in the film walk out of an elegant party to piles of burning bodies and rubble (Färberböck). Ilse, the narrator, aptly states that "That was the real Berlin. Outside people were dying and inside they were playing the proper tune (Färberböck)." Common citizens practice ignorance, saying -“If Churchill thinks he’s done us in, he’s wrong. Not while we’re dancing! (Färberböck)” Questioning the correctness of the Third Reich was the ultimate taboo of the time. It became so that “the best way (for the characters) to forget (or at least tolerate) the dichotomy (was) to act as if it isn't there (Lowerison).”
While Germany is now “legally and socially tolerant… towards homosexuals” (AFP), the Nazi’s strict intolerance of this and many other vices goes almost without saying. Lesbianism was not technically illegal or categorized as a crime worthy of the concentration camp. Lesbians wore triangles that designated them as "asocial" or as "political" prisoners as opposed to the pink triangle gay men wore to their extermination. “Because Nazi ideology saw the 'Aryan' woman as predestined to motherhood and marriage as a matter of principle, Nazis regarded lesbians as women who were not fulfilling their biological destiny and as women in need of intercourse.” Generally, Nazis commodified women and “lesbians were victimized as a result of pernicious Nazi misogyny.” (Greim). The dramatic shift of German ideology in the past decades has allowed countless stories to be exposed to the world without fear of them being suppressed by the German government. Aimée & Jaguar has come to “(represent) lesbianism as a site of resistance to the National Socialist eugenicist agenda” (Greim), a victory in that ideological community. The film has also met with success in the Berlin International Film Festival, winning the Silver Bear for best acresses. It is because of the more recent liberalization that an 87-year-old Mrs. Wust has exposed her story that was chalk full of taboos to the world. This shift in ideology of women’s role in German society has opened the realms of cinema to present these enthralling stories with less controversy.
The potency of the film comes primarily from the ideas presented that, while still more universally accepted now, push the envelope enough to cause a more personal tension and identification with the film within the viewers. Multitudes of secrets and clashing ideologies kept in check by the great physical dominance of the Nazis induces loads of dramatic ironies that give the plot a motion, even in stillness and silence. The contrast of light and shadow is used extensively in differentiating the remaining gaiety of Berlin life and the insufferable situation on the streets. Felice’s and Lilly’s relationship is born in the shadows and develops into the natural daylight before it ends in darkness again with the arrival of the Gestapo. Lilly waits in the dark for Felice, and Felice flees with the Jews numerous times in dark situations. The camera “pans during happy, party scenes (to) help blur fact and fiction (from us and the characters), implying an out-of-control feeling” (Halpern). Low angle shots convey Felice’s compassion on a little Jewish girl, the dominance of a Nazi onlooker, and the idea of looking up to Mrs. Wust as the ideal German wonman. High angles are used in scenes where pressure is present, whether it be Nazis rounding up Jews, Mr. Wust slapping his wife, or the controversy of Felice entering into Lilly’s married life. The cinematography of Aimée & Jaguar supplements the plot to make use of taboos and the story more c
ompelling and believable.The juxtaposition of the aforementioned conflicts and taboos builds an ideal platform of tension to work with in a plot for a film. From the inciting moment where Felice finds and returns Lilly’s glasses at the symphony, we can already feel multiple tensions arousing between every character that has been introduced. As the action rises, the presence of the various taboos becomes all the more clear, and the fates that tie everything together become progressively stronger. Felice and Lilly fall deeper into love. They partake in highly erotic sexual encounters. Lilly becomes more frustrated with her married life. Felice continues to work hard for the resistance movement while trying to keep her identity as a Jew secret from her boss at the newspaper. The Gestapo are closing their iron grip over Berlin. The Allies are steadily coming to their victory. The conflict is exacerbated tremendously by the presence of taboos that make every moment uncertain. We do not know what they will do next, or what will happen as a result of what they have already done. Such uneasiness, though it may be built by other methods, is most effective when used in the context of taboos because their representation on screen is in and of itself out of the norm and excitingly unexpected. We know when we see certain things take place that a story is not just another watered down version of reality. It becomes unusually real in our minds, and we are compelled to know what end those who have defied the stigma of taboos will come to.
Aimée & Jaguar presents one of the most taboo situations history has ever concocted: two lesbians- one an underground resistance Jew and the other the quintessential Aryan German mother- in Berlin during World War II. The presence of such a combination of taboos incites a unique tension that drives the plot like few other narrative devices possibly could. The tension is high. The situation is unique.
AFP. “Germany Extends Gay Rights”. 21 April 2009. http://www.news24.com/News24/World/News/0,,2-10-1462_1613010,00.html
Kehr, Dave. “Aimée & Jaguar (1999) FILM REVIEW; In Love in Wartime Berlin, and Defying Understanding”. 21 April 2009. http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9A0DE4DB173FF932A2575BC0A9669C8B63
Lowerison, Jane. http://sandiegometro.com/reel/index.php?reelID=12:
Marti, Kris Scott. 21 April 2009. http://www.afterellen.com/archive/ellen/Movies/72004/aimeeandjaguar.html
Halpern, Leslie. “The Artistry of Aimée & Jaguar”. 21 April 2009. http://foreignfilms.suite101.com/article.cfm/artistic_elements_in_aimee_jagua
Greim, Katrin. “More to the Story: Discursive violence in Aimée & Jaguar”. 21 April 2009. http://www.genderforum.uni-koeln.de/imagendering2/greim.html
Färberböck, Max. Aimée & Jaguar : the film itself





