Weimar Cinema: An Essential Guide to Classic Films of the Era
Taken as a whole, the sixteen remarkable films discussed in this provocative new volume of essays represent the brilliant creativity that flourished in the name of German
cinema between the wars. Encompassing early gangster pictures and science fiction, avant-garde and fantasy films, sexual intrigues and love stories, the classics of silent cinema and Germany's
first talkies, each chapter illuminates, among other things: the technological advancements of a given film, its detailed production history, its critical reception over time, and the place it
occupies within the larger history of the German studio and of Weimar cinema in general.
Readers can revisit the careers of such acclaimed directors as F. W. Murnau, Fritz Lang, and G. W. Pabst and examine the debuts of such international stars as Greta Garbo, Louise Brooks, and
Marlene Dietrich. Training a keen eye on Weimer cinema's unusual richness and formal innovation, this anthology is an essential guide to the revolutionary styles, genres, and aesthetics that
continue to fascinate us today.
ISBN-13 : 9780231130554
Publisher : Columbia University Press
Publication date : 02/01/2009
Author : Noah Isenberg (Editor)
Meet the Author
Noah Isenberg is associate professor of University Humanities at Eugene Lang College-The New School, where he teaches literature, film, and intellectual history. He is the author, most recently,
of Detour (British Film Institute, 2008).
Table of
Contents
Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Suggestion, by Hypnosis Stefan Andriopoulos 2. Of Monsters and Magicians: Paul Wegener's The Golem: How He Came into the World (1920) Noah Isenberg 3. Movies, by
Money Christian Rogowski 4. No End to Nosferatu (1922) Thomas Elsaesser 5. Fritz Lang's Dr. Mabuse, by the Gambler (1922): Grand Enunciator of the Weimar Era Tom Gunning 6. Who Gets the Last
Laugh? Old Age and Generational Change in F.W. Murnau's The Last Laugh (1924) Sabine Hake 7. Inflation and Devaluation: Gender, by Space Sara F. Hall 8. Tradition as Intellectual Montage: F.W.
Murnau's Faust (1926) Matt Erlin 9. Metropolis (1927): City, by Cinema Anton Kaes 10. Berlin, by Symphony of a Great City (1927): City Nora M. Alter 11. Surface Sheen and Charged Bodies: Louise
Brooks as Lulu in Pandora's Box (1929) Margaret McCarthy 12. The Bearable Lightness of Being: People on Sunday (1930) Lutz Koepnick 13. National Cinemas / International Film Culture: The Blue
Angel (1930) in Multiple Language Versions Patrice Petro 14. Coming Out of the Uniform: Political and Sexual Emancipation in Leontine Sagan's Mädchen in Uniform (1931) Richard W. McCormick 15.
Fritz Lang's M (1931): An Open Case Todd Herzog 16. Whose Revolution? The Subject of Kuhle Wampe (1932) Marc Silberman Filmography Contributors Index