The true story of two families' spectacular escape from East Germany during the Cold War, "Balloon" is a big screen adventure set on the border of a divided nation. DW looks at other acrobatic attempts to flee the GDR.
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In 1979, the Iron Curtain was virtually impenetrable. Rarely did anyone from East Germany manage to flee west. But a new film by Michael Bully Herbig — actor and director of German blockbuster spoof comedies including Manitu's Shoe and Dreamship Surprise: Period 1 — tells the true story of two East German families who made a spectacular and risky escape attempt a decade before the Berlin War fell.
Up, up and away
On September 16, 1979, the Strelzyk and the Wetzel families from the southeastern state of Thuringia flew to freedom in home-made hot air balloons: four adults and four children wedged in a basket measuring two square meters, and towering 30 meters above them the balloon made of 1,245 square meters of material. For half-an-hour at night, the gondola carried the families to their destination in West Germany's Bavaria, 18 kilometers from their starting point in communist East Germany.
Compelling attempts to escape the GDR
Some East German residents went to great lengths to escape a repressive GDR regime. On the anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, here's a look at some of the more acrobatic of those brave flights for freedom.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/W. Baum
Across the Baltic in a dinghy
Not everyone in the former East Germany waited until the Wall came down to go west. In 1977, a truck driver from Dresden daringly set out with his wife and daughter in a tiny rubber boat across the Baltic Sea. Fifteen hours later, a fisherman took them on board his trawler and brought them safely to Lübeck in the West. It should be noted, however, that many others died trying to flee by sea.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/W. Baum
The other shore
In 1974, biologist Carmen Rohrbach swam out from the GDR into the Baltic with her boyfriend, a rubber boat in tow. Before they could make it to Denmark, a search light went on. They released the boat and continued swimming. Captured by East German guards, Rohrbach then spent two years in prison. Today, she's still an adventurer, traveling far and wide for her research and book-writing.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/C. Rohrbach
Swimming to freedom
Axel Mitbauer, a GDR national swim team member, used pure muscle to flee. In 1969, the 19-year-old swam across the Baltic Sea from Boltenhagen to Lübeck's bay area when guards turned search lights off to allow them to cool. "I had one minute to cross both the first and second sandbanks," he recalled. He smeared himself with masses of petroleum jelly to protect himself against the icy temperatures.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/A. Altwein
Ocean escape
Over 5,000 people tried to escape the GDR via the Baltic — by boat, air mattress, swimming or even submarine. At least 174 adults and children died in the endeavor. According to Bodo Müller, who wrote a book with his wife Christine entitled "Across the Baltic Sea to Freedom," 901 people actually succeeded between the Berlin Wall's construction in August 1961 and its fall on November 9, 1989.
Image: Tom Trambow
Up from the depths
There were the more classic escape attempts, such as by this woman, who is pictured being pulled out of a West Berlin shaft in October 1964. The shaft led to an escape tunnel connecting East to West Berlin. One of several ingenious underground border crossings, 57 people escaped through the so-called "Tunnel 57" over two days before it was discovered in an East Berlin street.
Image: picture alliance/dpa
Taking the leap
19-year-old East German policeman Conrad Schumann escaped on August 15, 1961 by jumping the hastily-constructed barbed-wire fence that made up the new border erected just two days before. The image circulated around the world, with Schumann ostensibly the first of over 2,000 East German police and soldiers who made the attempt. Schumann committed suicide 37 years later in 1998.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/R.Jensen
Rear window
In September 1961, this woman first pushed her dog and then her shopping bag out of this window and into a rescue net provided by West German fire fighters. Though some people tried to pull her back into the building that stood on the border in East Berlin, she persisted and climbed out a back window to freedom in West Berlin.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Slaughterhouse 14
While most attempted escape by foot, thus risking being shot or stepping on mines, one group was exceptionally inventive. In September 1964, 14 East Germans, among them children, were smuggled across the border in a refrigerated truck as they lay under the carcasses of slaughtered pigs being transported to the West.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/F. Gentsch
Up, up and away
Surely the most compelling of escape attempts was by hot air balloon. In September 1979, two daredevil families — including four children aged 2 to 15 — successfully floated across the sky from Pößneck, Thuringia to Naila, Bavaria, then situated eight kilometers (five miles) south of the Iron Curtain. They reached a height of 2,500 meters (8,200 ft.) in the homemade balloon.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Inspiring tales
That endeavor inspired both the 1982 British-American film, "Night Crossing," as well as the 2018 thriller, "Balloon," directed by Michael Herbig.
Image: Studiocanal/M. Nagel
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The Strelzyks had actually attempted a hot air balloon escape 10 weeks previously, but their balloon crashed on East German territory, just a few hundred meters away from the border. East German border patrols found the tattered remains.
As the GDR secret police cast around for the would-be escapees, the Strelzyks involved the Wetzel family in their liberation plan and together they built a new balloon. This time, their homemade flying machine held firm and the families flew across the border unscathed. No wonder the Stasi secret police compiled extensive files numbering around 2,000 pages on the two families.
Personal fascination
Michael Bully Herbig used the facts and information from the Stasi files for his drama film, a departure from his box office topping comedies. He also talked to the families. Herbig says bringing this story to the big screen is important to him personally.
Eleven years old at the time of the sensational escape, he says he never forgot it. Still fascinated by the story, Herbig says he made a point of getting the families involved early on in the filmmaking process.
When he started making plans for Balloon, Herbig was well aware of an already existing 1982 Disney version of the dramatic East German liberation flight called Night Crossing. But it was a film the families were not completely happy with.
The Wetzels, who fled East Germany 39 years ago, were reportedly thrilled with the depiction of their flight of fancy in Balloon, which was shot in 2017 in 50 days.
Nearly 30 years after the Iron Curtain finally came down, German audiences will be able to revisit this highly symbolic moment in the history of a divided nation.
The Berlin Wall: 28 years up, 28 years fallen
From 1961 to 1989 the Berlin Wall divided a city and the world. February 5, 2018 marks the date on which the Wall will have been down for as long as it once stood: 28 years, 2 months and 27 days, to be exact.
Image: picture-alliance/W.Kumm
1961: The Wall goes up
On August 13, 1961, the East German Democratic Republic began cordoning off the Soviet sector in Berlin. All communication between East and West was cut off. In the following weeks the concrete wall began to rise, as can be seen in the above photo taken in Zimmerstrasse in the Kreuzberg neighborhood. Barbed wire crowned the wall to prevent people from climbing over the top.
Image: Stiftung Berliner Mauer/M. R. Ernst
1962: An icon behind barbed wire
The division of Berlin also split the world into East and West. The "Iron Curtain" had finally been drawn closed. Spouses, relatives, friends were brutally torn apart from one another. The communists' name for the wall, the "anti-fascist protection barrier," was a misnomer, however, since the barrier's true purpose was not to keep intruders out but to prevent those in the East from fleeing.
Image: Stiftung Berliner Mauer
1962: Early victim at the Wall
A good year after the construction of the Berlin Wall, 18-year-old Peter Fechter tried to climb over it. After reaching the top, GDR soldiers shot him. He fell down on the East Berlin side, where he lay for nearly an hour begging for help in the "death strip." Border patrols eventually picked up the wounded man, who died later in the afternoon. The world was horrified.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
1963: A symbol of hope
US President John F. Kennedy visited Berlin on June 26, 1963, sweeping his gaze across the Wall and the death strip. During his speech, he made the legendary statement: "Ich bin ein Berliner." He stressed that the US would not allow West Berlin to fall in the hands of the Soviet Union.
Image: picture-alliance/Heinz-Jürgen Goettert
1965: Deadly no-man's-land
Between the Brandenburg Gate and Potsdamer Platz, a no-man's-land with various barriers evolved which would define the appearance of the border area during the first decade of the Wall. It was a maze of fencing, barbed wire, heavy-duty vehicles and wooden watchtowers.
Image: Stiftung Berliner Mauer/W. Rupprecht
1973: Scared stiff on both sides
The East, with its death strip, but also West Berlin were marked by the Wall, particularly the city districts directly adjacent to the border sectors. In the shadows of the Wall, run-down, abandoned areas and open stretches of land developed and became makeshift parking lots, trash dumps or wild gardens. Children would play there, and artists and activists would use the grounds for activities.
Image: Stiftung Berliner Mauer/W. Schubert
1976: A new kind of Wall
Beginning in 1975, the Wall became much more massive, with the so-called "Grenzmauer" (Border Wall) measuring 3.6 meters (11.8 feet) in height. Here, a group of builders fills in the cracks between the newly installed concrete segments while a crane manages the round elements atop the wall. Border patrols monitor the construction, while a US military policeman watches the spectacle from the West.
Image: Stiftung Berliner Mauer/E. Kasperski
1984: White-washed monster
The white-washed side of the Wall marks the beginning of the border strip from the East, while St. Thomas Church in the background is located in the West. But surveillance by the Stasi, border patrols and police began far in front of the Wall. A permission slip was required to enter the area.
Image: Stiftung Berliner Mauer/M. Schuhhardt
1987: Clear demand
US President Ronald Reagan visited Berlin in June 1987, giving a speech in front of the Brandenburg Gate on the West Berlin side with the famous words: "Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate. Tear down this wall!" Some 40,000 people cheered. Over a year before, then-Soviet leader Gorbachev had initiated his policies of "glasnost" (openness) and "perestroika" (restructuring).
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
1989: An image of Freedom that went around the world
It was ultimately those who were locked in whose peaceful struggle for freedom eventually paid off. November 9, 1989 was a day that went down in history: the fall of the Berlin Wall. At least 101 people lost their lives at the Wall trying to escape the GDR between 1961 and 1989. But not a single drop of blood was shed when it finally opened up.
Image: picture-alliance/W.Kumm
1990: The work of the "Wall woodpeckers"
Chris Gueffroy, aged 20, was the last refugee to be shot at the Berlin Wall, nine months before it fell. By 1990 "Wall woodpeckers" had done their work, opening up the Wall bit by bit, with border patrols now letting families pass through.
Image: Stiftung Berliner Mauer/E. Kasperski
1991: Transformation
In June 1990, work got underway to tear down the various elements of the Wall and the accompanying barrier constructions. Remnants of the Wall were broken down and even shredded, and then used for building city streets.
Image: Stiftung Berliner Mauer/H. P. Guba
2014: Light shines where darkness once stood
By 2014 very little of the Berlin Wall remained in its original location, and few people knew where it once stood. Maybe that's why the 2014 installation entitled "Lichtgrenze" (Light Border) was so popular. The temporary project by sibling artists Christopher and Marc Bauder featured 6,880 light "balloons" marking a 15.3-kilometer-long (9.5 miles) path where part of the Wall once stood.
Image: Stiftung Berliner Mauer
2018: East Side Gallery as a monument
The "East Side Gallery" is at 1,316 meters (4,318 feet) the longest stretch of the Berlin Wall remaining. After the Wall opened up, 118 artists from 21 countries painted it in spring 1990. It draws hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Once it becomes part of the Stiftung Berliner Mauer (Berlin Wall Foundation) as planned, there will also be an information center.
Image: Stiftung Berliner Mauer
2018: 'Berlin with and without the Wall'
Many of the photos in this gallery are also being shown in a special exhibition presented by the Gedenkstätte Berliner Mauer (Berlin Wall Memorial). The show runs from February 6 to August 15, 2018 at the visitor center in the city's Bernauer Street. Many of the photos have never been shown before, and there is one for each year between 1961 and 2018: Berlin — with and without the Wall.