The silent German film classic
Varieté
is a torrid, melodramatic tale of family betrayal, infidelity, sexual
obsession and moral intrigue that was released to great acclaim and success in
1925. It takes place against a big city backdrop of ribald and often
Rabelaisian film sounds and sights encompassing the worlds of carnival, vaudeville, theatrical entertainment and stage performance - mostly set in the
teeming metropolis that was modern Berlin of the 1920s, at the height of the
Weimar Republic. The film is one of the high-points of the German
post-expressionist silent cinema to emerge from this period during the
Republic’s all-too-brief heyday, with erotically charged subject matter that throws
a symbolic spotlight on the unprecedented social and sexual politics of a politically
fragile but culturally vital post-World War 1 era, when the arts reached a
creative peak in the midst of political and economic turmoil that would
eventually see a nascent democracy unravel completely and totalitarian forces
taking over. This was a period when the arts had their roots planted firmly --
in the phrase of the anti-fascist writer Arnold Zweig -- “in the dual
sensibility of the vast destructiveness of war and the powerful creativity of
revolution.” German society was undergoing a series of radical social and
political changes in the aftermath of its defeat in the Great War, with the old,
militaristic Wilhelmine order being forced to give way to revolutionary enthusiasms
unleashed by a fledgling democracy that had emerged amid the unruly forces of a
modernity governed by rapid industrialisation. The era nurtured a freeing of
the creative spirit, that existed simultaneously with a loosening of attitudes
to censorship leading to great innovations in music, theatre, art, photography,
design and film during the 1920s, all of which seemed to revel in breaking with
the stolid rules of the past. However, the artistic volatility of the period was
also defined by great social conflict, primarily because the censorious,
morally conservative and highly militaristic proclivities of the provincial
aristocracy had never really been anything like fully vanquished by the
revolution of 1918-19. Conservative forces would continue to regard the
flowering of modernist innovation in the arts as a form of ‘cultural
Bolshevism’ promoted by cosmopolitan elites in Berlin. The travails created by
hyperinflation and, in the early 1930s, mass unemployment were to add more and
more fuel to an already bitter, violently polarised society full of stark
ideological divergences, social contradictions, and the opposing desire for both
unlimited freedom and total mastery and control … A society, in other words, constantly
at war with its own increasingly bifurcated sense of itself.
Guided by the innovative directorial
hand of Ewald André Dupont, and with exquisite cinematography by Karl Freund, the
cinematic masterpiece Varieté (now available in the UK in
glorious HD thanks to its recent Blu-ray release by Eureka Entertainment for the
Masters of Cinema series) provides us with an ideal point of reference for
understanding some of the forces at play in German society during this tumultuous
time. For one thing, the movie gives us an insight into the development of
German cinema, acting as a great demonstration piece that draws together the
startling innovations in photography and camera movement pioneered by French
filmmakers several years previously, but here utilised for the purposes of breath-baiting
audience spectacle. Dupont took ‘the unfastened camera’ of Murnau’s The
Last Laugh and created a dizzying spectacle which aimed to capture the vertiginous
sensations of the trapeze, inter-cutting the realism and subjectivity of this
imagery with expressionistic, sometimes almost surrealistic flights of fancy. Meanwhile, much of the vivid imagery and thematic
undercurrents which lend this popular melodrama its particular fervent flavour
seem to draw on contemporary social fears that relate to the changing role of
women in German industrial society before and after the Great War. Concerns
that the institution of marriage was being undermined after the establishment of the Republic by women going out to
work more frequently, and about the provocativeness of a newly empowered form
of female sexuality that was becoming more visible in public life, went
hand-in-hand with increased awareness of a new social phenomenon: the independent ‘new woman’. All
were ills associated with the increasingly modern forms of mechanised industrial consumer
society -- which was an issue that particularly occupied German social, political and
ethical theorists of the day. Such fears indicate that a crisis of masculinity was
taking place in interwar Berlin at this time. For the historically aware modern
viewer, this film now stands as an embodiment of many of the contradictions and
ambivalences of the period; it is a movie that benefits considerably from the freeing
effect produced by the new moral licence that came to the fore in
Berlin during a period of lax censorship, and which allowed the film’s frank
depiction of sexual longing and erotic obsession. But it also plays on those
same fears to intersect with concerns that were being expressed by social
conservatives and leftist thinkers alike, who all worried at the time that
modern(ist) capitalist society was irrevocably altering or upsetting the
balance of the relationship between the sexes.
Such ideas turn out to
describe the subtext to much of Dupont’s film perfectly, but, like his previous
picture, The Humble Man and the Chanteuse, it had its origins in a much
older piece of pre-war sensationalist fiction. The movie is based on a novel
which went by the title The Oath of
Stephan Huller, and was written and published in 1912 by the then
domestically well-known novelist Felix Hollaender (son of the Composer
Friedrich Hollanender), who would later work with Max Reinhardt at the
Deutsches Theater. In fact, the novel, and variations on its pulp themes and
theatrical setting provided material for a number of movie adaptations. The
first screen interpretation appeared in the year of the novel’s publication and
was directed by the Danish filmmaker and actor Viggo Larsen -- mainly today associated
with his portrayal of Sherlock Holmes in several early silents. Reinhard Bruck
supplied another retelling in 1921, as did Nicolas Farkas in 1935, although by
this point Hollaender’s novel was no longer being credited as a source, so
familiar had the love triangle subject matter become to audiences. A year
later, British International Pictures released The Three Maxims,
directed by a contemporary of Michael Balcon and Alexander Korda by the name of
Herbert Wilcox and starring his wife, the actress Anna Neagle, who was to
become one of Britain’s most popular wartime attractions as the star of copious
lightweight musicals, comedies and costume dramas in the mid-40s. This fluffy, mild-mannered
version was based on the Farkas re-telling, and strips away the darker tone
that marks Dupont’s classic of ten years before. Finally, German-American
director Kurt Neumannd (of the Johnny Weissmüller Tarzan series) produced a
circus-themed variant of the story’s love triangle plotline in 1951. However,
Dupont’s distillation of the novel’s melodramatic possibilities remains to date
the most artistically compelling interpretation of the material, despite the
shorter American cut stripping out the first act and removing much of the risqué moral
tension of the piece. The director’s virtuoso use of the camera as a tool for
conveying vertiginous impressions of the various characters’ subjective
disorientations and their tormented mental states captures the intensity of
experienced sensation, while standing alongside documentary-like images and scenes
that act as a record of contemporary German life; the film’s innovations denote
the director’s artful negotiation and management of both expressionist and New
Objectivity sensibilities, and their associated techniques.
Ewald André Dupont was born in
the German town of Zeitz on Christmas day, 1891. After coming to prominence as
a leading critic and newspaper columnist, he broke into the nascent German film
industry as a screenwriter for Stern-Film-GmbH. Two years later, having by then
produced at least sixteen scripts for detective serials by directors such as
Joe May, he progressed to directing not only his own but also other writers’
murder mystery stories, many of which – such as The White Peacock and Whitechapel
(both released in 1920) -- were set in England, often incorporating
colourful variety stage performance and music hall settings. A prolific and well-respected
leading light of Germany’s silent film industry, E.A. Dupont went on to direct twenty-three
movies in just seven years, but it was his twenty-fourth, Varieté, which has
secured him his place in cinematic history, if only amongst film scholars and
cineastes. Unfortunately, Dupont is one of those early film artists who found
it difficult to adapt when the sound era came along. Much of his later work has
been overlooked and, consequently, his name has largely been forgotten by the
public. Yet Varieté was a huge international smash in 1925, even without
the racier images and plot points stripped from the U.S. version (re-titled
Vaudeville) in order to make the German original Hays Code compliant (local
state censorship boards were prone to removing still more material). Dupont was
invited to Hollywood off of the back of the success of the film, but was able
to make only one movie there -- for Carl Laemmle’s Universal Pictures. This was
the romantic drama Love Me and the World is Mine, starring Mary Philbin (from The Phantom of the Opera), which
went $350,000 over-budget and was not a success. A subsequent move to Britain
resulted in several notable, visually extravagant productions made for British
International Pictures: Moulin Rouge (1928) and the lavishly
expensive Piccadilly (1929), starring Chinese American movie star Anna
May Wong. He also helmed Atlantic (1929), an early talkie based
on the Titanic disaster and made in two versions for English
and German markets respectively, which were shot simultaneously at Elstree
Studios with different casts. But Dupont found he was never able to reproduce in
the talkies the subtle majesty of his best silent era work, and critical and
commercial appreciation largely eluded him from here on in. He found it
increasingly difficult to find decent directorial work and ended up flitting
from company to company, often spending long stretches without employment. Although
he remained active in various fields of the film industry throughout most of
his life, when he did direct in later years it was mainly for low grade
B-movies or TV series episodes. He died in Los Angeles of cancer in 1956.
The plot of Varieté
can be boiled down to the most basic elements of melodrama: hope,
lust, jealousy, revenge and redemption. Ex-trapeze artist Boss Huller runs a seedy
carnival near the port of Hamburg, living unhappily on-site in a cramped
caravan with his downtrodden drudge of a wife and their infant son. A
mysterious, nameless young foreign woman, orphaned aboard the ship she was
brought to the country on (which gives her the name Berta-Marie) after her
mother died of fever during their long ocean voyage, is practically sold to him
and subsequently given a job as a sideshow dancer. Soon she reawakens in Huller
the desire and determination to once more take up his old profession --
previously abandoned after a crippling accident -- as a trapeze catcher. Newly
inspired, and now under his young charge’s hypnotic sexual spell, Huller leaves
his wife and child for this inscrutable, casually provocative muse (who he has
by-now trained as his assistant), and moves to Berlin, where the couple perform
in a death-defying, open-air trapeze act. They come to the attention of a
famous Italian trapeze artist called Artinelli, who has also recently moved to
Berlin -- despondent and grief-stricken after the loss of his brother-&-partner
during an accident that occurred when the duo were performing in London. Artinelli
offers Huller and Berta-Marie a professional contract and they start performing
together as a trio at the famous Berlin Wintergarten, soon becoming a huge vaudevillian
attraction there. In no time at all they are the toast of Berlin thanks to a
spectacular, blindfolded triple-somersault performed without safety net, which
fills the famous variety theatre with awed spectators. However, the inevitable
happens, and the caddish Artinelli (who has always had one crafty eye on the
sultry Berta-Marie), lures the young woman into his bed with promises of greater
riches if they dump Huller and set off together for a glittering career in
America. Huller finds out, sees red, and murders Artinelli in a raging fit of sexual
jealousy. He ends up in prison, from where he relates the entire story to a
sympathetic prison Governor in exchange for redemption that’s delivered in the
form of a written note of forgiveness from his abandoned wife and child.
The book-ending prison sequences used to
frame the story as a flashback do not reveal the face of Boss Huller until we
return to them at the very end of the film, after his story has been told and
the hearty, strapping, bull-necked figure of a man with a twinkle in his eye
we’ve been watching gradually come apart at the seams is shown to have been
made stooped, tired, prematurely aged and psychologically broken as the result
of the events depicted. This performance constitutes one of the Swiss-born actor
Emil Jannings’ most iconic screen appearances. A popular actor in Weimar cinema
after starting out as a stage performer who, like the film’s novelist author,
became associated with director Max Reinhardt’s ensemble at the Deutsches Theatre,
forming connections with many leading lights of Weimar culture such as
photographer Frieda Riess and The Blue Angel screenwriter &
polymath Karl Vollmoller, Jannings had already worked with Ernst Lubitsch and
had just starred in FW Murnau’s The Last Laugh -- the first of several collaborations that
would go on to produce the silent classics Tartuffe and Faust – when he came to
make his appearance in Dupont’s Varieté. Despite his becoming the
only German actor to win an Academy Award for best performance, Jannings' reputation went into terminal decline thanks to his willingness to appear in
Nazi propaganda films during the ‘30s; but at this point in the mid-1920s, he
was still at his peak professionally. The opening prison segment leading into the
extended flashback that provides the meat of the story, demonstrates the film’s
winning combination of Jannings’ gestural performance and Dupont’s intelligent
staging and knack for striking composition, which work together throughout to
make Varieté
still a moving spectacle even when its innovations in camera movement no longer
retain the ability to dazzle as they would have done during the picture’s
heyday. Jannings was, famously, for the entirety of this opening segment, required
to convey Huller’s crushed dejection while acting with his back to the camera, with
the particulars of his haggard, dead-eyed countenance saved up for a ‘reveal’ when
we return to his present situation at the end of the movie -- at which point it
becomes a window through which we see the damage that Huller’s years of misdeeds
have wrought upon his psyche. Upon a re-watch we can also see how Dupont makes
use of visual rhymes and synonyms during this opening prologue, to prefigure elements
of the plot before they are seen to later unfold and that, for the character of
Huller, act as damning, regret-inducing reminders of his past foolishness: a
large circular chamber, around which the prisoners are forced to march in
single file, anticipates the cut to an image of a Ferris Wheel fairground ride
– one of the first images that we see when the film flashes back to Huller’s
career as a carnival manager; while the long walk down a shadowy prison corridor
towards the Governor’s office that Huller has to take after being summoned
there for his assessment pending a review of his case, turns out to be a
foreshadowing of the suspenseful climax to the movie and the scene that takes
place just after Huller has murdered Artinelli (we see him washing his bloodied
hands in a basin shortly after the terrible deed) in which he walks, in a daze,
down the long hotel corridor towards the downstairs reception desk – Berta-Marie
collapsing in shock behind him -- to ask for the police to be called to the
scene of his own crime …
The first part of the
flashback provides an introduction to the younger Boss Huller (Jannings) and
his wife (Maly Delschaft) -- and their grim life together running a carnival sideshow
attraction that seems to cater mainly to the sordid lusts of various grotesquely
rendered Lumpenhund. This part of the
film plays as an expressionistic vignette within a photographic realist setting,
defined by the faces of Weimar’s poverty-stricken masses -- both its criminal-
and working-classes -- as they jostle for command of the limited space in an over-crowded
frame. In many ways these images echo the work of the German portrait and
documentary photographer August Sander, who, as part of his People of the 20th Century series,
was interested in documenting through photographic portraiture in the Weimar
era individuals who represented all aspects of German society before and after
the First World War, including travelers, circus performers, the unemployed
and the sick and disabled. Although his work was produced with socially
progressive ideals in mind, August Sander was also a proponent of physiognomy:
the belief that outward appearances reveal the inner essences of certain groups
or ‘types’ of people – and the film’s depiction of a leering, lustful,
objectifying, unruly working-class masculinity crowding into the pitiful
‘beauty contest’ tent that Huller and his wife preside over, seems to offer an
extreme example of this doctrine, suggesting a degenerate class that is lacking
in any moral grounded-ness, self-discipline or respect for order.
The Beauty Contest sideshow Boss
Huller and his wife run, offers to take the wives of male spectators and turn
them into glamourous exemplars of femininity by re-packaging and presenting
them back to their fervent husbands for a short while as erotic ‘Living
Theatre’ exhibits. A montage of the distinctly unglamorous, worn-down, tired
out and clapped-out faces of the wives and women folk, in their dirty, raggedy
clothing, gives way to Huller’s sideshow transformation of them -- which allows
the cracked, misshapen irregular features of the males packing the audience a
short term relief based on a normally unobtainable fantasy version of ‘their’
women, with hair groomed and make-up applied to convey movie star pulchritude,
and limbs and torsos scantily swathed in peek-a-boo-fine muslin robes so that
they fleetingly become akin to unreachable movie screen goddesses. It’s a
strange, disconcertingly frank depiction of the male gaze … so full of impotent,
voyeuristic longing, yet also a rough tool of oppression and manipulation of
the female form. It’s hard to avoid the conclusion that the dramatic change in
the visibility and in the status of women which had occurred during the war
years had resulted in a coarsening of German conceptions of masculinity. In the
19th century, Kaiser Wilhelm II had defined German women's position in society
in terms that described its rootedness in the tradition of 'Kirche, Kueche,
Kinder' -- or church, kitchen and children. But war and the subsequent November
Revolution upended such reactionary ideas, and brought women into the workplace
in increasing numbers. Women during this time also began to ‘command the
streets’ in the big cities, with fashion and advertising becoming increasingly important
in a consumer culture symbolised by the advent of the Department store, which was a great
help in making women going out alone unchaperoned a respectable occurrence by
providing them with ‘feminised spaces’ that were recognised as ‘safe’. After
being given the right to vote in 1919, women accounted for 52% of an electorate
which had seen its male numbers vastly depleted by war.
In many ways, the story
of Varieté
is a dramatization of the psychological turmoil and paranoia of the German male
psyche of the 1920s, conveying its myriad weaknesses rooted in idealised
nostalgia, and its misogynistic fear of nearly all aspects of the new femininity
that had come to the fore during the post-war era. The film can be read as part
of the backlash against women’s emancipation and their new visibility on the
streets, which also involves a longing for a return to a pre-war notion of Woman
rooted in nurture and the family. This paranoid traditionalism was even more
suspicious of exotic foreign types of female who bring new and ‘un-German’
conceptions of femininity into circulation; also in the Weimar era, when urban centers such as Berlin became playgrounds of sexual licence and every
conceivable form of sexual experimentation, there was a popular boom in sex
counselling clinics and marriage guidance advice manuals, which were published
in order to address the sexual problems of the average man and woman in an
unprecedentedly frank way during a period when divorce rates were rocketing.
In the film, it is Boss
Huller’s inability to accept his humble circumstances and to appreciate his poor
but diligent, plump but devoted wife as she is in the present day that leads to
his downfall. Instead, his infatuation with the exotic, demure, almost doll-like
Berta-Marie becomes caught up in a nostalgic yearning to recapture the glory of
his younger and better days: his desire to recreate a period when he and his
wife were partners in a successful trapeze act. Huller’s initially cheerful
acquiescence in the mundane routines of a threadbare family life lived out in
the couple’s cramped caravette is interrupted by Berta-Marie’s unexpected
arrival, and dissatisfaction with Huller’s lot in life is kindled by her exotic
appearance, along with the re-emergence of his libido. By training the youthful
Berta-Marie as his new trapeze assistant he is replacing his wife with a
younger model, but this process also involves the complete rejection of the
family: his infant son as well as his faithful wife. A typically melodramatic
scene illustrates the torments Huller suffers in order to blank out the past
for a fantasy recreation: he strikes out at Berta-Marie for waking the baby
when she comes back to the caravette after finishing her act one night, but
just as quickly succumbs to her charms seconds later! Huller’s mid-life crisis
comes to stand for the general crisis of masculinity being played out throughout
Weimar Germany at the time. The film, of course, also itself benefited from modern
Weimar’s unusual frankness about the depiction of sex: Huller’s torrid
encounters with Berta-Marie were far steamier than anything encountered in American
movies at the time, where its scenes of partial nudity would have been
completely out of the question (hence the drastic cuts administered to the U.S.
version). Yet, this is a movie in which both the male and female protagonists
are depicted as victims of larger societal forces over which they have next to no
control, or even awareness …
The character of Berta-Marie,
her initial depiction and later development under the wing of first Boss Huller
and then Artinelli, is at the core of this movie’s complex of ideas about women
and their relationships with men in a rapidly industrialising post-war world of
‘Fordism’ dominated by the principles of consumerism. She was played by the
Hungarian actress Lya De Putti, a performer noted for her distinctive portrayal
of vamp characters in the silent film era, and rather astutely cast in Varieté
given her background in vaudeville in her native Hungary and her later career as
a ballet dancer who performed at the Berlin Winter Gardens in 1924 -- which is also
the famous venue where Huller, Berta-Marie and Artinelli are seen to perform
their extraordinary feats in the film. When Berta-Marie first appears --
presented to Huller by the Captain of a cargo ship almost as a nameless pet who
is to be taken ownership of -- her otherness and foreignness are highlighted by
the exoticness of her scanty robe, which, in its paucity, also reveals the slightly
darker complexion of her skin. Her lack of clothing also suggests something
innately sexual is to be associated with such foreign forms of otherness. Yet
there is also a strangely robotic or mechanical quality to Berta-Marie’s
ability to command sexual desire in male spectators. Her large, painted eyes
make her look like a blank doll brought to life through sheer force of male sexual
fantasy, and the gyrating movements she makes that drive the men wild when she
performs her sideshow routine have an automated, unconscious feel to them. A
similar idea -- of sexual response being produced automatically under
conditions of clockwork or robotic processes of mechanisation -- is conveyed
during Fritz Lang’s masterpiece Metropolis, when Brigette Helm’s
robot Maria performs her extraordinary fetish-dance at the decadent nightclub
Yoshiwara.
Such a characterisation of
female sexuality in an industrialised setting has ambivalent and contradictory connotations
that suggest countervailing forces of alienation and arousal existing
side-by-side in perpetual tension. The contemporary work of feminist Dada
artist Hannah Hoch encapsulates much of this thinking in innovative
photomontages critiquing the technological forces that shaped notions of gender
and race in Weimar society’s age of industrial assembly lines and advertising
propaganda. The New Woman was in many ways a creation of the window-shop culture
of Department stores and consumer products targeting working women as they took
on the roles of clerks and secretaries in large urban centres, presenting a
lifestyle image holding glamour and independence up as a spectacle to be slavishly
imitated. Lya De Putti’s character mixes unconscious, robotic, sex-by-numbers dance
motions with a primitive, raw exoticism that is a form of sexuality that echoes
themes found in the work of Hoch, who explicitly went against the notions of
racial purity that were to have such a destructive effect on German politics,
to present hybrid forms of race and images of gender fluidity which are an attempt
to provide alternatives to the shackles created by conservative gender attitudes
and society’s commodification of femininity. Yet, it is the negative effect of
this free expression on Boss Huller which is the main concern of the film,
which presents Berta-Marie as an unwitting temptress, whose proximity sends
Huller off the rails and leads him to do the unthinkable and abandon his family
in order to mould this intoxicating creature into his idealised partner.
Huller and Berta-Marie move
to Berlin in order that Huller might escape his hated domestic life, and to
recreate his youthful days as a trapeze catcher par excellence. Here the movie takes
on more of a documentary reportage tone, as it presents an introductory montage
of city attractions and images that are largely guided by a brief shift of
narrative focus that comes with the film’s depiction of the arrival in Berlin
of famous Italian trapeze artist Artinelli, played by debonair British silent
actor Warwick Ward. The backdrop to the development of the theme of a dejected
(and initially sympathetic) Artinelli’s grief over the death of his performance
partner-&-brother, during a stunt-gone-wrong at the London Coliseum, is
provided by images that capture the real-life Tiller Girls (one of the many
popular ‘girl revue’ acts that flourished internationally during the interwar
years) arriving for rehearsals at the Berlin Wintergarten, and many other rea-life
contemporary variety acts that are also shown actually performing their various
routines on stage in front of the venue’s large audiences. Dupont is able to
integrate such documentary verisimilitude with the film’s more melodramatic
spectacle with surprisingly smooth results. When the Wintergarten’s manager
presents Huller and Berta-Marie to Artinelli as prospective replacement
partners for the Italian's dead brother, it is his immediate furtive sexual interest in
Berta-Marie which alerts the viewer to the less noble aspects of his character,
setting up the clash that is to come when Huller’s blind, idealistic romantic
devotion meets Artinelli’s caddish behind-the-scenes scheming. The film’s
middle section is sustained by the obvious tension that is inevitably generated
when a romantic love triangle develops between performers who nightly hold
each-other’s lives in the others’ hands as they pirouette above the heads of their
amazed audiences.
It is at this point that the
previously inscrutable Berta-Marie is made more clearly the centre of the
narrative rather than merely a device for indicating Boss Huller’s
dissatisfaction, or for galvanising his desire to radically alter his domestic
circumstances. As the trio become the ‘toast of Berlin’, Berta-Marie is
transformed into an exemplar of the ‘new woman’ portrayed so assiduously
throughout contemporary German film and advertising during this period. Her sexually
provocative ethnicity is now de-emphasised, and instead she becomes a modern, fashionably
attired, cloche hatted woman of the streets, who enjoys the society of the city’s
smoky cafes and the raucous nightclub culture of a neon-illuminated Berlin after
dark. This movie can be read as an iteration of a contemporary consumer image
culture which Hannah Hoch was critiquing with her Dada-inspired photomontages and which Frankfurt School social theorists such as Siegfried Kracauer analysed
in collections such as Kracauer’s The
Mass Ornament. Lya De Putti’s Berta-Marie is another Weimar era female film
character in the tradition of those played regularly by the likes of Louise
Brooks or Marlene Dietrich, who expand the repertoire of possibilities that
could be made available to women of the 1920s. In presenting themselves as
spectacle they gain independence through the power the image enables them to
wield over men, but they invariably appear in narratives that judge and/or
punish them for the privilege. In this instance, Berta-Marie's urban sophistication and glamour also leave her vulnerable to the attentions of people like Artinelli, who virtually rapes her in their initial sexual encounter! The fact that this forging of an urban feminine
identity is only made possible by the all-conquering logic of industry-led
consumer capitalism is as much a source of ambivalence in the narratives of the
movies of this period as it is for the leftist ideologies expounded by Hoch and
Kracauer: while Kracauer laments the ‘distraction culture’ augmented by
mass-produced entertainments such as movies (whose methods echo the conveyor
belt production methods of industry) or the internationally popular spectacle
provided by Revue shows such as those practised by the Tiller Girls, who are “a
product of American distraction factories [and] are no longer individual girls
but indissoluble girl clusters whose movements demonstrate mathematics”, many
of these ‘distractions’ are ultimately themselves presenting a compromising
image of modern womanhood: the new modern identity Berta-Marie constructs for
herself in Berlin, which is rooted in the acquisitive values of that modernity,
results in her becoming vulnerable to the romantic follies Artinelli exploits
to woo her with the aim of stealing her away from Huller, even though he has treated her roughly in order to have his way with her. Her willingness to dump Huller
for a foolhardy dream is paralleled with Huller’s own thoughtless casting aside
of his domestic arrangements in Hamburg and the abandonment of his wife and
infant son this entails. But while male protagonists such as Boss Huller are
presented as hapless, hopeless romantic sops who cannot be entirely blamed for
their moral failings when society is radically transformed all around them by
relations between men and women that have been unsettled by female
emancipation, the situation for the female protagonists is even more tragic:
they are simultaneously offered up as powerful avatars upon which female audiences
can model themselves through the consumption of the attractive image they present,
while also being portrayed as the ultimate cause of all society’s pain and
turmoil.
The Eureka Entertainment dual formatted edition offers numerous ways to experience the film. The original German cut, featuring a prologue that details Boss Huller’s fall from grace into a life of adultery and lust, is the recipient of the wonderful high-definition digital restoration created by the F.W. Murnau Society; but there is also a fairly decent tinted print included of the bowdlerised American cut for completests, which has many of the more risqué elements removed. The latter comes with a fairly traditional silent movie film score, but the German version offers us three quite diverse and distinct score choices that bring out different moods and qualities in the film: Stephen Horne, house pianist at London’s BFI Southbank, gives us a solid piano-based score with many lyrical moments that emphasise the story’s inherent tragedy; while New Zealand-based composer Johannes Contag contributes a slightly more strident piece of music. Composed for chamber orchestra and pitched at recreating the atmosphere of Weimar era Berlin, it was originally intended to be performed at live screenings. Both versions provide contrasting attempts to portray the psychological profile of the various characters in the movie using musical texture and melody. The third option here might be slightly more controversial: created by the prolific post-modern vaudevillian band The Tiger Lillies, who’re fronted by accordion player and self-taught opera singer Martyn Jacques, this is a brash, often wilfully abrasive avant garde modernist opera – a sort of burlesque punk rock take on Bertolt Brecht and Jacques Brel, that seems like it would have been perfectly at home in the decadent world of 1920s Berlin, but which often settles for simply describing on-screen events rather than providing emotional colouring for them. Nevertheless, it’s an interesting experimental approach to one of Germany’s greatest pieces of interwar drama.
The Eureka Entertainment dual formatted edition offers numerous ways to experience the film. The original German cut, featuring a prologue that details Boss Huller’s fall from grace into a life of adultery and lust, is the recipient of the wonderful high-definition digital restoration created by the F.W. Murnau Society; but there is also a fairly decent tinted print included of the bowdlerised American cut for completests, which has many of the more risqué elements removed. The latter comes with a fairly traditional silent movie film score, but the German version offers us three quite diverse and distinct score choices that bring out different moods and qualities in the film: Stephen Horne, house pianist at London’s BFI Southbank, gives us a solid piano-based score with many lyrical moments that emphasise the story’s inherent tragedy; while New Zealand-based composer Johannes Contag contributes a slightly more strident piece of music. Composed for chamber orchestra and pitched at recreating the atmosphere of Weimar era Berlin, it was originally intended to be performed at live screenings. Both versions provide contrasting attempts to portray the psychological profile of the various characters in the movie using musical texture and melody. The third option here might be slightly more controversial: created by the prolific post-modern vaudevillian band The Tiger Lillies, who’re fronted by accordion player and self-taught opera singer Martyn Jacques, this is a brash, often wilfully abrasive avant garde modernist opera – a sort of burlesque punk rock take on Bertolt Brecht and Jacques Brel, that seems like it would have been perfectly at home in the decadent world of 1920s Berlin, but which often settles for simply describing on-screen events rather than providing emotional colouring for them. Nevertheless, it’s an interesting experimental approach to one of Germany’s greatest pieces of interwar drama.
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