The teenager Thymian Henning (Louise Brooks) lives with her father Karl Friedrich Henning and her aunt in a comfortable house. When the pregnant housekeeper Elisabeth (Sybille Schmitz) is fired, she commits suicide and is found drowned. Her father brings the new housekeeper Meta (Franziska Kinz) and sooner he flirts with her. Thymian is seduced by the pharmacist Meinert (Fritz Rasp) that rents her father's pharmacy downstairs. Thyamin gets pregnant and her father gives the baby Erika for a nanny and puts his daughter in a reformatory. Meanwhile, the idle Count Nicolas Osdorff (André Roanne) is left by his uncle to fend for himself. Karl Henning gets married with Meta and Thymian decides to escape from the boarding school helped by Count Osdorff.
During the night, Thymian runs away from the reformatory with a friend that gives an address to Thymian and the Count. Sooner she finds that the place is a brothel and without any alternative to survive, she works in the place. Years later, her father dies and Thymian inherits everything. But she needs a new identity and she gets married with the Count and becomes a Countess. However, when she sees her little sister leaving the house with her little brother and Meta, she gives her fortune to the child. When Count Osdorff discovers that she had given up the fortune, he commits suicide. Now the Elder Count Osdorff (Arnold Korff) feels responsible for the death of his cousin and promises to assist Thymian to have a better life. But she is still haunted by her past.
"Tagebuch einer Verlorenen", a.k.a. "Diary of a Lost Girl", is a masterpiece from Georg Wilhelm Pabst with a complex story of a teenager that has her life destroyed by the intolerance of her family after an irreparable mistake in the view of a 1929 society.
The plot has many twists and subtle scenes, like the debut of Thymian in the brothel with the client kissing her and turning off the lampshade. Louise Brooks is among the most beautiful faces of the cinema history and her acting is stunning as usual. The Count's last sentence "- with a little more love, no one on this Earth would ever be lost!" closes this film with golden key. My vote is nine.
Title (Brazil): "Diário de uma Garota Perdida" ("Diary of a Lost Girl")
Plot summary
Thymian is raped by her father's assistant. When she becomes pregnant and bears a child but refuses to marry her assaulter, her outraged father sends her to a brutal reformatory. Thymian soon escapes with a friend, Erika (Edith Meinhard),only to learn that her child has died. She then finds Erika working at a brothel and, with no option, joins her. Gradually, Thymian works her way higher by marrying a count, but her past haunts her.
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With a Little More Love, No One on this Earth Would ever Be Lost!
Feels unnervingly modern
It isn't difficult to see why Georg Wilhelm Pabst's Diary of a Lost Girl caused a bit of a headache for the censors back in 1929. Even for a movie made during the Weimar Republic era, a revolutionary time for cinema when directors were consistently pushing the boundaries with controversial tales of debauchery and Germany's seedy underbelly, the themes and social insight feel unnervingly modern. Teaming up once again with his muse Louise Brooks, the Kansas-born starlet plays Thymian, the naive daughter of a wealthy pharmacist who, in the opening scene, watches their maid leave the family home in shame when Thymian's father (Josef Rovensky) gets her pregnant.
Although it's clear to the audience, Thymian is puzzled as to why the girl has left. Her father's assistant, the creepy and much older Meinert (Fritz Rasp),invites her to the pharmacy that night on the promise to tell her everything, but instead takes advantage of the young girl and gets her pregnant. When the baby arrives, Thymian refuses to reveal who the father is but her family learn the truth from her diary, and insist that the two marry to avoid damage to the family's reputation. When she refuses, Thymian's baby is taken from her and she is packed off to a reformatory watched over by the intimidating director (Andrews Engelmann) and his tyrannical wife (Valeska Gert). After rebelling against the school, Thymian and a friend escape and join a brothel,
Like many films made during the Weimar era, Diary of a Lost Girl depicts the decay in almost every aspect of German society at the time. The lives of the rich are stripped bare, and their motivations are heavily questioned when the family send Thymian away not with her 'rehabilitation' in mind, but simply to save face. The reformatory itself is a cold and bleak place, where the director's wife bangs a rhythm for the inhabitants to rigidly eat their soup too. They are less concerned with helping the girls fit back into the society that has failed them, and more about satisfying their own sadistic desires. In one particularly effective close-up, the wife seems to be achieving some sort of sexual gratification from her monstrous behaviour.
The one place Thymian feels accepted on any sort of level is the brothel, a place where she can be herself without any kind of judgement or fear of social exile. While Thymian can at times be frustratingly naive and swoonish whenever she finds herself in the arms of a man, Louise Brooks delivers a tour de force performance that helps the audience maintain sympathy for her put-upon character, even when the film is at its most melodramatic. Even though the film is now 87 years old, Brooks's acting feels completely modern. Where most silent actors switch between rigid and operatic in their performances, Brooks is naturalistic and subtle, making it clear just why Pabst was so eager to work with her again after Pandora's Box, made the same year.
An improvement over Prix de beauté (Miss Europe) and a dandy film
While I have never understood all the attention Louise Brooks has received for her films, I must admit that this one is better than most and a major improvement over the sound version of MISS EUROPE--a film I didn't particularly like and felt was highly overrated. A lot of this might be because the sound version of MISS EUROPE was so sloppily made, but regardless, I just can't see why Miss Brooks has attained god-like status among some lovers of silent cinema. Perhaps it has to do with the small number of films she made or her persona off screen.
On to the movie itself. This is a very adult movie for its time because much of the movie concerns sex and illegitimacy. Louise is the daughter of a very weak, hypocritical and immoral man who makes a habit of impregnating his maids (this is highly reminiscent of DIARY OF A CHAMBERMAID). However, when Louise becomes pregnant, he throws her out of the house! Leonard Maltin indicated in one of his reviews that Louise's character had gotten pregnant after she was raped. I couldn't see that this was necessarily the case--she appeared to have been seduced by her father's assistant, not raped. Actually, had she been clearly raped in the film, I think this would have greatly improved the movie's impact and created a wonderful parallel with her father's sex life.
After she gives birth, Louise is sent to a home for "fallen women" and her baby is taken from her. This is a very interesting part of the film, though it was handled in a very, very heavy-handed fashion and seemed too unreal--particularly when she escaped and returned for her baby. But, regardless of these shortcomings, the film is entertaining in a very salacious way! She can't afford to live and her family has disowned her so she is forced to spend several years in a brothel! Ultimately, she is removed and cared for by the father of a dead friend. The film ends with her now being a respectable woman who is one of the board members at the same home for fallen women where she'd been incarcerated! Talk about a plot twist! The acting is, despite the raciness of the film, pretty restrained and the film is well-done. I just think that maybe there's too much in the film--too many sleazy and soap opera-like elements to ring 100 true. But, I must admit that it IS entertaining!