The Song of Life () is a 1931 German drama film directed by Alexis Granowsky and starring Aribert Mog, Margot Ferra and Elsa Wagner. Location shooting took place around Hamburg and at the Cecilienhaus in Berlin. It was produced in an avant garde style during the latter years of the Weimar Republic. The film proved controversial and was initially banned by the Berlin police. It was only permitted to be shown with significant cuts to its already short running time.
Driven by financial necessity Erika agrees to marry a much older and morally debauched baron. The young bride-to-be becomes so distraught that she contemplates suicide in the River Elbe. She is rescued by a young sailor, with whom she has a baby, which she eventually delivers by Caesarian section.
This film stirred up a storm upon release for its depiction of a Caesarian birth. Though not much was really shown, it was enough to cause women filmgoersâÂÂand not a few menâÂÂto faint. The film was banned outright in Germany and ran into some censorship problems in the US; still, by its very controversial nature it proved to be a hit wherever it was shown.