Discuss the particular stylistic and thematic strategies of early expressionist cinema and explore the ways in which expressionism has influenced more recent directors.

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European Cinema                                                             Michelle Madden

Discuss the particular stylistic and thematic strategies of early expressionist cinema and explore the ways in which expressionism has influenced more recent directors.

Consider two or more films in essay.

For this essay intend to discuss the stylistic and thematic strategies that were used in early expressionist cinema. To demonstrate this I will be looking at the following three German expressionist films. ‘Das cabinet Des Dr. Caligari’, more popularly known as ‘The cabinet of Dr Caligari’ (Robert Wiene 1920) and ‘Nosferatu, Eire symphonie Des grauens’, or ‘Nosferatu, a symphony of horror’ (Friedrich Murnau 1922) also, the later film, ‘metropolis’ (Fritz Lang 1927). In addition to this I will examine how expressionism has influenced more recent European directors.

Early German expressionist cinema is defined by the use of reflective light scenes and often obviously dominant use of shadows. The mise en scene featured distorted buildings and interiors, non-vertical walls and barely a right angle in sight. Theatrical backdrops displayed disordered colour compositions. Acting was anti realist involved screaming and shouting as the expression of extreme mental states and of “inner feeling”. Actor’s movements were choreographed as to complement the jarring ‘mise en scene’. Although lighting was predominantly flat, there was often an effective use of shadows for frightening effect.

‘The cabinet of Dr Caligari’ was a major success when released in 1920. Expressionism had been an important influence in theatre, painting and literature since around 1906 and when expressionism was introduced into films it was the start of a cycle of commercially successful and critically praised German expressionist films, including Fritz Lang’s ‘metropolis’ in 1927.

The expressionism that developed in Germany at the beginning of the 20th century was a reaction against and a rejection of the realism that had come to dominate art at the turn of the century. At this point methods of expressionist theatre were successfully transferred to cinema.

A quote from Frankfurter Zeitung’s book, ‘from Caligari to Hitler’ states, “expressionism here exists not in cinema but in history. Cinema merely records it”.

Also taken ‘from Caligari to Hitler’ is Siegfried kracauer’s view that expressionism is a result of people’s readiness for Hitler as in the films the following are expressed,

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Evocation on evil

Forces of darkness

Threat to sanity

And also reimposition of a healthy order through efficiency and symmetry.

His examples of this include the staggering use of geometrical symmetry in the interiors of ‘Algol’ (Werckmeister 1920). Also the architecture of ‘Metropolis’ all seemingly point to the fascist mise en scene of Leni Riefenstahls  ‘triumph of the will’ (1935) with its reconstruction of Hitler as a “god like figure and feverish rendering of his mass appeal”.

Another point of kracauer’s which is possibly more justified, is the idea that many artists had guessed that Hitler would bring ...

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