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Tuesday, May 15, 2012

German Expressionism: Vol. 3


The German Expression movement began before WWI and gained momentum in the 20’s and 30’s. It influenced architecture, painting and cinema. This movement gave surrealistic shape and structure to forms that reflect psychological states. This is evident in the extreme contrast of light and dark, the use of reflective surfaces and abstract optical tricks and even anthropomorphism.

Vol. 3 – The Blue Angel (1930) – This story centers around Professor Rath (Emil Jannings) who gives up his prestigious post at the local university to pursue a lusty cabaret singer, Lola Lola (Marlene Dietrich). His subsequent downfall away from the bourgeois lifestyle and into the lower class seems sure to end only in his demise. This film is also very significant in that it is the first major German sound film and the first collaboration between Director, Josef von Sternberg and Actress, Marlene Dietrich. Their later collaborations would include “The Scarlett Empress”, “Shanghai Express”, “The Devil is a Woman” and several others.

This film is unique in the cannon of expressionism. First of all, the beginning of the story feels much more like a slapstick semi-romantic comedy than you would be accustomed to from the likes of Lang, Pabst or Murnau. Because… you know… we all know how funny and romantic the Germans were in the 1930’s. The character of Rath is ridiculed and taunted by his students, his maid and even a lowly magician. He quickly finds himself the proverbial “bull in the china shop” as he blunders around backstage at the cabaret. At one point he even walks backwards down a spiral staircase. And it’s hard not to take note of Lola Lola’s cackling laughter when he asks for her hand in marriage. All of this being said: this film still showcases many of the tropes of expressionism. Stark contrasts between light and dark, abstract camera angles and lots of reflection shots paint the canvas of this moral tale.

The light and dark of this film actually work in somewhat of an inverted way than what we’ve come to expect from most other films of this movement. As the film begins, we find Professor Rath living a dark existence. He lives in a dimly lit flat and seems to timidly lurk through the shadows of the world outside of his profession. When he meets Lola Lola, she is a bright ray of light, warm and inviting. Instantly smitten, he finds out in due time that all that glitters is not gold. His own demise seems to be directly related to the amount that he pursues this radiance.  The final act epitomizes this relationship. His wife’s betrayal comes at his lowest moment, his first time on stage, the ridiculous buffoon, under the warming glow of the spotlight.


 If you haven’t seen this film, and maybe you’ve avoided the previous installments in this series because of some sort of allergy to silent cinema, I would suggest you check it out. It’s currently available on Netflix Watch Instantly.




Enjoy.

Saturday, May 12, 2012

German Expressionism: Vol.2


The German Expression movement began before WWI and gained momentum in the 20’s and 30’s. It influenced architecture, painting and cinema. This movement gave surrealistic shape and structure to forms that reflect psychological states. This is evident in the extreme contrast of light and dark, the use of reflective surfaces and abstract optical tricks and even anthropomorphism. 

Vol. 2 – Nosferatu (1922) – Transylvania’s Count Orlok (Max Schreck) is in the market for some new real estate in Wisbourgh, Germany. Hutter (Gustav Von Wangenheim) is sent out to his castle to appropriate the deal for a home near his own house. Then things start to get weird. On his journey to the castle, the locals seem afraid to help him; he gets bit on the neck by two “mosquitos really close together” and constantly feels the presence of a dark shadow looming over him. The count then becomes obsessed with Ellen (Gretta Schroder), Hutter’s wife and her beautiful neck and decides to buy the property and become neighbors… Ok you get the point; it’s an adaptation of Bram Stoker’s Dracula or a really original prequel to Joe Dante’s “The Burbs”.


Similar to “Metropolis”, this film could definitely be considered a staple in the German Expressionistic movement. Director F.W. Murnau uses superimposed images, color tinted negative images and obscure camera angles to add more disorientation and overall surrealistic tones to the film. It is this composition of shots that makes this Nosferatu one of the most memorable and discussed films of all time. You may have never seen it but I can almost guarantee that you’ve seen clips from this film. It may have been the moment Count Orlok’s shadow climbs the staircase. Or it could be the image of him first entering Hutter’s room in the castle, stiff like some sort of a zombie rat walking straight towards the camera. My favorite is the shot of him rising from his casket, again stiff as a board, ascending 90 degrees without moving a muscle.

It’s also worth noting that: although Murnau is rightfully considered one of the Fathers of the German Expressionism movement, he wasn’t strictly a surrealist. The line between imagination and reality for him was thin and jagged. As he said:

“I like the reality of things, but not without the fantasy – they must dovetail. Is that not so with life, with human reactions and emotions? We have our thoughts and also our deeds.”

I highly recommend this film to anyone who is interested in the movement or in the history of cinema in general. I would probably say that any film that is considered to epitomize the German Expressionism movement is also very important to film history as a whole. After all, we are talking about a time in which cinema was at the very beginning of defining itself as its own art form and these films were just as much about experimentation and testing the limits of the medium as they were about their own subject matter.

I will also mention that this film is open source so feel free to download a copy. There's a pretty good one here. It is also available to stream on Netflix and Hulu so you really have no excuse.


Enjoy.
(proofread by Dolly Karma)