FIND MOVIES
Movie List
Loading ...
or
Find Theaters and Movie Times
or
Search Movies

DVD review: Old Lang signs

By PETER KEOUGH  |  November 8, 2012



Fritz Lang shaped much of cinema history. He made one of the first superhero movies with Siegfried (1924). He anticipated the conspiracy thriller with the Dr. Mabuse movies. Metropolis (1927) set the template for much sci-fi to come. M (1931) established the cinematic serial killer. After he fled the Nazis for Hollywood, Lang helped develop film noir. Then he dipped into the New Wave, playing himself in Jean-Luc Godard's Contempt. The three early films in this outstanding Kino DVD show the origins of Lang's genius.

That doesn't mean they are all masterpieces. Two of the three are a bit rough around the edges but offer invaluable insights for Lang fans. In The Wandering Shadow (1920) a woman makes the mistake of falling for the author of a book advocating free love. She gets tangled in a contrived narrative of unlikely coincidences and ironies. More complicated is Four Around the Woman (1921), in which two of the four men are twins, one is a Mabuse-like criminal, and the fourth looks like Joseph Goebbels. A rich, if uneven start, and Lang would soon fulfill its promise.

Oddly, the earliest film comes closest to the mature work. An adaptation of Madame Butterfly, Harakiri (1919) dazzles not with its story but its images, an otherworldly domain of flowers and décor that is as transporting and suffocating as those in Lang's best movies.

FRITZ LANG: THE EARLY WORKS :: Three DVDs :: Kino Classics :: $39.95

  Topics: Reviews , Fritz Lang, review, film,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY PETER KEOUGH
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   REVIEW: WHITE ZOMBIE  |  February 12, 2013
    This Kino Classics release is worth it if only for historical purposes, since it demonstrates that from the start zombie films embodied the Marxist paradigm of capitalism (Lugosi) versus labor (zombies).
  •   REVIEW: BEAUTIFUL CREATURES  |  February 11, 2013
    Throughout his adaptation of Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl's YA novel, Richard Lagravenese drops the names of books that would have provided a more rewarding way of spending a couple of hours than watching this movie.
  •   LAST ACTION HEROES?  |  February 05, 2013
    Maybe it was the moment in The Last Stand when a guy exploded, or the scene when Arnold sawed someone in half with a Vickers machine gun, or maybe it was the 10th brain-splattering bullet to the head in Sylvester Stallone's Bullet to the Head .
  •   REVIEW: SIDE EFFECTS  |  February 08, 2013
    Ironically, the filmmaker who started his career with sex, lies, and videotape , a film boosting female sexuality and empowerment, now ends it with a so-so thriller that resorts to the same old misogyny.
  •   REVIEW: HORS SATAN  |  January 30, 2013
    God works in strange ways, especially when Bruno Dumont directs him. Or is that the devil?

 See all articles by: PETER KEOUGH