One of the greatest artistic and technical achievements of the German silent cinema, Fritz Lang’s monumental Die Nibelungen is a passionate retelling of Nordic legend, invested with all the resources of the colossal UFA Studios.
Scripted by Lang’s wife at the time, Thea von Harbou (Metropolis), Siegfried establishes larger-than-life heroic characters who are defined by tests of valor and rigid codes of honor. In order to win the hand of Kriemhild (Margarete Schoen), Siegfried (Paul Richter) must win a bride for her brother, King Gunther (Theodor Loos). Kriemhild’s Revenge begins after the death of Siegfried, and weaves the treacherous tale of his widow’s ungodly vengeance upon his murderers. The noble qualities of the first film become liabilities in the second, as the blood oaths and vows of loyalty bring about a maelstrom of violence that results in the slaughter of entire armies (Lang would continue to explore this theme of bloodlust and revenge in such films as Fury, The Big Heat, and Rancho Notorious, but never with such ferocity). —KINO
Bringing to the screen an obsessive and fatalistic world populated by a rogues’ gallery of strange and twisted characters, Lang staked out a uniquely hostile corner of the cinematic universe; despair, isolation, helplessness, all found refuge in the shadows of his work. A product of German Expressionist thought, he explored humanity at its lowest ebb, with a distinctively rich and bold visual sensibility which virtually defined film-noir long before the term was even coined. Born Friedrich Christian Anton Lang in Vienna, Austria, on December 5, 1890, he initially studied to become an artist and architect. He first entered the German film industry as a writer, penning a series of horror movies and thrillers beginning with 1917’s Hilde Warren Und Der Tod. In 1919, he and director Robert Wiene teamed on the script of The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, and although Lang exited in the pre-production stages to begin work on another project, his major contribution to the story, a framing device… read more
Was there nothing Fritz Lang couldn't do? His German films are amazing. The first half of Die Nibelungen is astounding. Considering that it was made in in 1924 it still thrills. Siegfried's journey, his romance, his battle with the dragon is, in my humble opinion, just as thrilling as it must have been when it was originally released. The mood, the camerawork, which is so sophisticated, the performances. Wonderful.
Why humans always gotta kill things, and then think that if you eat them or bath in their blood you get super powers. Oh, and never tell anybody bout yo soft spot ya'll
"[J]ust as there are two Marias, so there have long been two Metropolises," writes Chris Fujiwara in the new issue of Film Comment. "For
A great way to start exploring the silent era – I had put off doing so, seeing silent films as little more than a formation period of cinema, but this film showed me how wrong I was. Don’t be put… read review