Metropolis (1927 film)
Metropolis | |
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File:Metropolisposter.jpg | |
Directed by | Fritz Lang |
Written by | Thea von Harbou Fritz Lang |
Produced by | Erich Pommer |
Starring | Alfred Abel Brigitte Helm Gustav Fröhlich |
Cinematography | Karl Freund Günther Rittau Walter Ruttmann |
Music by | Gottfried Huppertz |
Distributed by | Universum Film A.G. Paramount Pictures |
Release dates | 10 January 1927 6 March 1927 |
Running time | 210 min (premiere cut) 114 min/25 fps (1927 cut version) |
Country | Germany |
Languages | Silent film German intertitles |
Budget | 5,100,000 Reichsmark (estimated) |
Metropolis is a silent science fiction film created by the famed Austrian director Fritz Lang. Produced in Germany in the Babelsberg Studios during the brief years of the Weimar Republic and released in 1927, it was the most expensive silent film of the time, costing approximately 7 million Reichsmark (equivalent to around $200 million in 2005) to make.[1] The screenplay was written in 1924 by Lang and his wife, Thea von Harbou, and novelized by von Harbou in 1926. It is set in a futuristic urban dystopia, and, like its contemporary The Battleship Potemkin, addresses the then-current political themes of capitalism vs. communism.
Plot
- Note: There are multiple versions of Metropolis. The original German version remained unseen for many decades. Of this version, a quarter of the footage is believed to be permanently lost. The U.S. version, shortened and re-written by Channing Pollock, is the most commonly known and discussed.
The film is set in the year 2026, in the extraordinary Gothic skyscrapers of a corporate city-state, the Metropolis of the title. Society has been divided into two rigid groups: one of planners or thinkers, who live high above the earth in luxury, and another of workers who live underground toiling to sustain the lives of the privileged. The city is run by Johhan 'Joh' Fredersen (Alfred Abel).
The beautiful and evangelical figure Maria (Brigitte Helm) takes up the cause of the workers. She advises the desperate workers not to start a revolution, and instead wait for the arrival of "The Mediator", who, she says, will unite the two halves of society. The son of Fredersen, Freder (Gustav Fröhlich), becomes infatuated with Maria, and follows her down into the working underworld. In the underworld, he experiences firsthand the toiling lifestyle of the workers, and observes the casual attitude of their employers (he is disgusted after seeing an explosion at the "M-Machine", when the employers bring in new workers to keep the machine running before taking care of the men wounded or killed in the accident). Shocked at the workers' living conditions, he joins her cause. Meanwhile his father Fredersen learns of the existence of the robotic gynoid built by the scientist Rotwang (Rudolf Klein-Rogge) and orders Rotwang to give the robot Maria's appearance. (Rotwang had wanted to give the robot the appearance of Fredersen's dead wife, Hel; both men had been in love with her, but in the end she had married Fredersen). By doing so he wants to spread disorder among the workers that would give him the pretext to carry out a retaliatory strike against them.
The real Maria is imprisoned in Rotwang's house in Metropolis, while the robot Maria becomes an exotic dancer in the city's Yoshiwara nightclub, fomenting discord among the rich young men of Metropolis. The workers are encouraged by the robot Maria into a full-scale rebellion, and destroy the "Heart Machine", the power station of the city. However, the destruction of the machine leads to the city's reservoirs overfilling, which floods the workers' underground city and seemingly drowns their children, who were left behind in the riot. (The children are in fact saved in a heroic rescue by Freder and Maria, without the workers' knowledge.) When the workers realize this, they attack out into the gridlocked and confused upper city, foreshadowing the "destruction of the enemy in the citadel" ending still seen in films. The crowd breaks into the city's entertainment district and captures the robot Maria, whom they believe is responsible for drowning their children. They burn the robot at the stake, and when Freder sees this, he believes that it is the real Maria and despairs. However, Freder and the workers then realise that "Maria" is in fact a robot, and see the real Maria being chased by Rotwang along the battlements of the city's cathedral. Freder chases after Rotwang, resulting in a climactic scene in which Joh Fredersen watches in terror as his son struggles with Rotwang on the cathedral's roof. Rotwang falls to his death, and Maria and Freder return to the street, where Freder unites Joh and Grot, the workers' leader, fulfilling his role as the "Mediator". Template:Endspoiler
Cast
- Alfred Abel: Joh Fredersen
- Gustav Fröhlich: Freder, Joh's son
- Rudolf Klein-Rogge: Rotwang
- Fritz Rasp: The Thin Man
- Theodor Loos: Josaphat
- Erwin Biswanger: 11811
- Heinrich George: Grot, The Foreman
- Brigitte Helm: Maria[2]
Making of Metropolis
Fritz Lang was infamous both on and off the film set. He was rumored to have been involved in the death of one of his wives, although nothing was ever proven. He was notoriously sadistic as a director. He supposedly did 20 or 30 takes of a scene where Fröhlich falls to his knees – by the time Lang was satisfied, Fröhlich's knees were bleeding. Lang forced the actors to work in the extensive "flood scenes" in the dead of winter on unheated sets. He insisted that Brigitte Helm, rather than an extra, wear the robot costume despite the fact that the actress's face would not be visible. Helm's dress caught fire when a take of the "witch burning" scene got out of hand.[3]
Brigitte Helm, the female lead who portrayed Maria, was a virtually unknown 19-year-old stage actress who did not consider film acting to be legitimate. Gustav Fröhlich, who played the hero Freder, was originally just another extra until the first "Freder" didn't work out. Extras, desperate for work, were paid next to nothing, as Germany's economy was in shambles in the years after World War I. The Metropolis production employed an unbelievable 26,000 men as extras, 11,000 women, and 950 children.[3]
The feel-good ending of the movie was the idea of Fritz Lang's wife. Lang favored an ending in which the newlywed Freder and Maria depart in a rocket ship for another planet. Lang admitted in his later years that his wife's version was better.[3]
Architecture and visual effects
The film features special effects and set design that still impress modern audiences with their visual impact—the film contains cinematic and thematic links to German Expressionism, though the architecture as portrayed in the film appears based on contemporary Modernism and Art Deco. The latter, a brand-new style in Europe at the time, had not reached mass production yet and was considered an emblem of the bourgeois class, and similarly associated with the ruling class in the film.
Rotwang's Art Deco laboratory, with its lights and industrial machinery is considered by some to be a forerunner of the Streamline Moderne style, highly influential on the look of Frankenstein style laboratories and 'mad science' in pop culture. When applied to science fiction, this style is sometimes called Raygun Gothic.
The effects expert, Eugen Schüfftan, created innovative visual displays widely acclaimed in following years. Among the effects used are miniatures of the city, a camera on a swing, and most notably, the so-called Schüfftan process, later also used by Alfred Hitchcock.
The Maschinenmensch, actually played by Brigitte Helm was created by Walter Schultze-Mittendorf. A chance discovery of a sample of "plastic wood" (a kneadable substance designed as wood-filler) allowed him to sculpt the costume like a suit of armour over a plaster cast of the actress. Spraypainted a mix of silver and bronze, it helped create some of the most memorable moments on film. Helm suffered greatly during the filming of these scenes, wearing this rigid and uncomfortable costume, cutting and bruising her. But Fritz Lang insisted on her playing the part, even if nobody would know it was her. Walter Schulze-Mittendorf (Mittendorff), the sculptor, is still the owner of the copyrights for the Maschinenmensch – Robotdesign.
Themes
The film contains a scene where Maria retells a variation of the story of the Tower of Babel from the Biblical book of Genesis, but in a way that connects it to the situation she and her fellow workers face. The scene changes from Maria to creative men of antiquity deciding to build a monument to the greatness of humanity and the creator of the world, high enough to reach the stars. Since they cannot build their monument by themselves, they contract workers to build it for them for wages. The camera focuses on armies of workers led to the construction site of the monument. They work hard but cannot understand the dreams of the Tower's designers, and the designers don't concern themselves with the mind of their workers. As the film explains, "The dreams of a few had turned to the curses of many". It then ironically inverts the original story's conclusion, noting that the planners and the workers spoke the same language but didn't understand each other. The workers revolt and in their fury destroy the monument. As the scene ends and the camera returns to Maria, only ruins remain of the Tower of Babel. This retelling is notable in keeping the theme of the lack of communication from the original story but placing it in the context of relations between social classes and eliminating the presence of God.
The entire film is dominated by technology, with Lang using a mixture of both 1920s and futuristic devices. Much of the technology portrayed in the film is unexplained and appears bizarre—such as the enormous "M-Machine" and the "Heart Machine". Whilst the Heart Machine is implied to be the electrical power station of the city and appears to be a kind of Wimshurst machine, the purpose of the M-Machine is never revealed, despite it playing a significant part in the film. Early in the film there is a shot showing two unfamiliar types of clock: a 10 hour or metric clock and a clock with a 24 hour analog dial. While Freder is in the subterranean factories, he swaps places with an exhausted worker and takes over his seemingly pointless task—moving the dials of a gigantic clock-like device in accordance with flashing light bulbs. It is possible that the pointlessness of the task was purposeful in the movie, yet the novel reveals that it runs the massive system of Paternoster-lifts in the New Tower of Babel. If so, the machine expresses an explicitly Marxist idea of workers alienated from their produce. However, other machines featured in the film anticipate future inventions: Joh Fredersen's office has a television-like device which allows him to contact his overseers in the factories, and built into his desk is an electronic console which allows him to remotely open doors, etc. Also in his office is an automated electronic ticker-tape, with a weary and frustrated clerk constantly writing down the latest stock market prices. In the city itself, we see a mixture of futuristic monorails and airships combined with 1920s-style cars and aircraft.
Dualism is a running theme amongst many of the characters, who demonstrate that they cannot be confined to the rigid class system of the city. The workers are dehumanised, existing either as part of a mob or as work-units, almost part of the machines themselves (the shots of them working do not let the viewer see their faces), and yet they are also human beings who are being exploited. Rotwang is an intelligent philosopher, in many ways far more prescient than Joh Frederson, but also a crazed and selfish man who uses his skills for his own purposes. Joh Frederson cannot reconcile his role as leader of the city and as a father, which leads him to make rash and damaging decisions. Meanwhile, Maria expresses this theme most literally of all by being physically replicated as a robot. As such, the naive ideal of creating a simple and rigid system of life where everyone fits neatly into their role is shown to be a fallacy.
The ultimate expression of technology in the entire film is the female robot built by Rotwang, referred to as the Maschinenmensch or "Machine Human" although it is often translated as "Machine Man" in the US version. In the original German version Rotwang's creation is a reconstruction of his dead lover, a woman called Hel (a reference to the Norse goddess Hel). Both Rotwang and Joh Fredersen were in love with her. She chose Fredersen and became Freder's mother, though she died in childbirth. Rotwang, insanely jealous and angry about her death, creates the Maschinenmensch Hel. In the US version, The Machine Man is merely a fully functioning automaton which can be programmed to perform a variety of human tasks, whilst its appearance can be synthesised to resemble any human being.
In the U.S. version, the Machine Man is sentient, and has its own agenda different to that of its creators. It performs the required task of fomenting revolution, but then becomes an exotic dancer, turning the young men of Metropolis against one another for its own entertainment. This echoes themes from Karel Čapek's 1921 play Rossum's Universal Robots and anticipates the themes of many late-twentieth century films, in which seemingly unsentient machines gain consciousness and turn against the intentions of their creators.
Part of Fritz Lang's visual inspiration for the movie came during a trip to Manhattan, New York. He is quoted on the DVD of the Murnau Foundation version as saying "I saw the buildings like a vertical curtain, opalescent, and very light. Filling the back of the stage, hanging from a sinister sky, in order to dazzle, to diffuse, to hypnotize." Lang, in his later years did claim New York inspired Metropolis, but a mention of the script for Metropolis being recently finished is made in the Licht-Bild-Bühne journal of June 1924, Lang traveled to New York in October of the same year.
Rotwang's home is decorated with a pentagram which may be seen as being a symbol of Pythagoreanism, an ancient Greek philosophy, or of magic.
Release
On January 10, 1927 the film premiered in Berlin, with moderate success. The film was cut and re-edited to change many key elements before screening. Also, theatre managers saw to it that the film was screened at an incredibly fast speed of up to 26 frames per second (as at its Berlin premiere). This affected the rhythm and pace of the original film, which had most likely been cranked at the standard speed of 16 frames per second. The butchered, sped-up version which was presented to European and American audiences in 1927 was disjointed and illogical in parts.[4]
American and foreign theatre managers were generally unwilling to allow more than ninety minutes to a feature in their program, during a period when film attendance figures were high. Metropolis suffered as the original version was thought to be too long. Few people outside of Berlin saw Metropolis as Fritz Lang originally intended. In the United States, the movie was shown in a version edited by the American playwright Channing Pollock, who almost completely obscured the original plot, considered too controversial by the American distributors, and is considerably shortened. In Germany, a version similar to Pollock's was shown on August 5.[4]
The premiere theatrical release and original version is believed to have been 153 minutes long, before it was edited for its second theatrical release in Germany. A quarter of the film is believed to be lost forever.[5]
Restorations and re-releases
Several restored versions (all of them missing footage) were released in the 1980s and 1990s, running for 90 minutes.
In 1984, a new restoration and edit of the film was compiled by Giorgio Moroder, a music producer who specialized in pop-rock soundtracks for motion pictures. Moroder’s version of the film introduced a new modern rock-and-roll soundtrack for the film. Although it restored a number of previously missing scenes, his version of the film runs to only 80 minutes in length, although this is mainly due to the original intertitles being replaced with subtitles, and being run at 24fps. The “Moroder version” of Metropolis sparked heated debate among film buffs and fans, with outspoken critics and supporters of the film falling into equal camps.
Enno Patalas made an exhaustive attempt to restore the movie in 1986. This restoration was the most accurate for its time, thanks to the script and the musical score that had been discovered. The basis of Patalas' work was a copy in the Museum of Modern Art's collection.
The film fell into the United States public domain, but was eventually restored to copyright in 1998.[6] The lawsuit Golan v. Gonzalez unsuccessfully attempted to block Metropolis' copyright restoration.
The F.W. Murnau Foundation released a 123-minute, digitally restored version in 2002, undertaken by Martin Koerber. It included title cards describing the action in the missing sequences and the original music score. Lost clips were gleaned from museums and archives around the world, and computers were used to digitally clean each frame and repair minor defects. The original score has been re-recorded with an orchestral ensemble. Many scenes are still lost, however. One scene lost included the adventures of 11811, a worker who trades places with Freder. Scenes which establish the longstanding rivalry between Joh Fredersen and Rotwang have also been lost.
Most silent films were shot at speeds of between 16 and 20 frames per second, but the digitally restored version with soundtrack plays at the standard sound speed of 24 frames per second (25 on PAL and SECAM videos and DVDs). This speed often makes the action look unnaturally fast. The reason for showing the film at this speed is unclear. A documentary on the Kino DVD edition states that Metropolis may have been filmed at 25 frames per second, but this is disputed. There have been reports stating that the world premiere of Metropolis was shown at 24 frame/s, but these, too, are unconfirmed. In the 1970s the BBC prepared a version with electronic sound that ran at 18 frames per second and consequently had much more realistic-looking movement. Since there is no concrete evidence of Fritz Lang's wishes on this subject, it continues to be hotly debated within the silent film community.
Political significance
Metropolis's theme is connected with both fascism and communism — the most powerful political ideologies of that time in Europe. The idea of the film is that the workers are oppressed, and their leader is Maria. In order to destroy the workers, Fredersen sends a robot who, disguised as Maria, leads the workers to destroy the dam and flood their homes. Many people see the film as being anti-capitalist and supportive toward communism, showing how the rich exploit the efforts of workers. This is supported by the fact that the rich live high above in a shining city while the working class lives in misery underground. Indeed, the viewer is led to believe that there is little to no chance for the workers to move up in society due to their wealthy oppressors. Others interpret this as an anti-communist message, claiming that the communists, by calling the workers to revolt are leading them to destruction. When led to revolt, the workers become savage and animalistic and almost destroy themselves and their children through their actions. Some see the film as a critique on both capitalism and communism, calling for a third option. Maria repeatedly claims that what the workers need is a Mediator. Some interpret this as a reference to the fascist concept of Corporate Statism, in which the ruling party acts as a mediator between the workers and the capitalists.
There is a rumour that Metropolis was one of the favorite films of Adolf Hitler and he tried to get Fritz Lang to make propaganda films for him. Allegedly Hitler's interpretation of the film saw the oppressors, specifically Fredersen, as being Jewish. This rumour has its roots in a passage in Siegfried Kracauer's book From Caligari to Hitler: A Psychological History of the German Film:
- Joseph Goebbels, the head of the Nazi party's Ministry of Popular Enlightenment and Propaganda organization became interested in Metropolis, too. According to Lang, "… he told me that, many years before, he and the Führer had seen my picture Metropolis in a small town, and Hitler had said at that time that he wanted me to make Nazi pictures" (Kracauer 164).
However, if this rumor is true, it would mean that Hitler was unaware of, or chose to ignore, the fact that Lang was half Jewish. (In a recent documentary about the filmmaker's life, Lang apparently told Hitler his mother converted to Catholicism but was born a Jew. The Fuhrer apparently smirked at Lang, saying it is HE who decides who is Jewish and who is not.)[citation needed]
Most of Metropolis was filmed at UFA studios at Babelsberg Studios and was enormously expensive. Some sources put the total cost at four times the original budget. The official costs accumulated to 7 million mark (about 200 million dollars now). These cost overruns were a contributing factor in UFA's financial instability through the late 1920s and its subsequent appropriation by Nazi interests.
Influence
This film has influenced many science fiction movies to the present day, including Modern Times, Frankenstein, Blade Runner, Dark City, Brazil, the Star Wars series, and The Matrix.
The "Tower of Babel" structure is a key element in several films; in turn, Metropolis's tower appears to derive from Hans Poelzig's stocky, polygonal, modernistic water tower built in Posen (Poznań) in 1911. But the earliest films to be influenced were Just Imagine of 1930, which also featured a city with much air transport among and between skyscrapers connected by bridges, and Vultan's city in the first Flash Gordon serial of 1936, which had a sweatshop controlled by an operator who moved the needle of a huge dial while standing up.
Another element of the film that is often referenced in other films is Rotwang's prosthetic right hand. Rotwang, the film's mad scientist, loses his hand and has it replaced with a black prosthesis. In the film Dr. Strangelove, the titular German mad scientist wears a black glove on his prosthetic right hand, which he cannot consciously control (it eventually performs Nazi salutes). A similar theme shows up in Dr. No, the eponymous villain having two black plastic/metal robotic hands (replacing the claws in Ian Fleming's book), and also in George Lucas' Star Wars films, in which the heroes, Anakin Skywalker and his son Luke Skywalker lose their right hands in combat and each has it replaced with a prosthesis, wearing a black glove over the robotic hand. In addition, the gold-plated robot in Metropolis bears a striking resemblance to C-3PO. Yet another example of the missing right hand archetype is the Philip K. Dick novel, The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch. An important element of the story is that Palmer Eldritch, the antagonist, possesses a robotic right arm, as well as artificial eyes, and a deformed jaw. In the film Terminator 2, the protagonist android cuts the flesh off its right hand to prove it is in fact, a robot. Later it is seen covering the metal with a black glove.
Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster decided to name Superman's base of operations after the Metropolis of the film.[7]
Several remakes have been made of the original Metropolis, including at least two musical theater adaptations (see Metropolis (musical)), and an anime version based on the original film and partially inspired by the original manga by Osamu Tezuka (see Metropolis (manga)).
Superman's Metropolis is a comic book trilogy from DC Comics in which Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman inhabit the world of German Expressionist cinema, including Metropolis.
The rock band Queen uses some scenes of this film in the videoclip for their 1984 song "Radio Ga Ga".
The rock band Motörhead has a song titled "Metropolis" which was inspired by the movie.
Soundtracks and scores
There have been many soundtracks created for Metropolis, by many different artists. Releases include, but are not limited to:
- 1927 – Gottfried Huppertz. Berndt Heller arrangement for recent Eureka special edition DVD.
- 1984 – Giorgio Moroder. Restored and produced the 80-minute 1984 rerelease. This soundtrack includes pop tracks by Moroder performed by the likes of Pat Benatar, Bonnie Tyler, Jon Anderson and Freddie Mercury, resulting in controversy from film purists. Soundtrack available on CD. Not available on DVD, but available on out-of print laserdiscs and videotapes.
- 1991 – Club Foot Orchestra. Performed live to accompany the 80-minute Moroder version. Soundtrack available on CD.
- 1991 – The Alloy Orchestra formed to create a new original score to Moroder's version of Metropolis.
- 1994 – Rambo Amadeus, Serbia-based Montenegrin composer. At a movie screening at Sava Center, Rambo's music was played by Belgrade Philharmonic. The material was recorded in 1998 by Rambo himself along with Miroslav Savić and Heavily Manipulated Orchestra, and released as Metropolis B (Tour de Force).
- 1994 – Galeshka Moravioff. Score used in one of the variants of Filmmuseum Munich restoration.
- 1995 – Martin Matalon. Score used in another variant of Filmmuseum Munich restoration.
- 1995 – Joxan Goikoetxea. Basque composer. Availability unknown.
- 1996 – DJ Dado records techno version of the "Tower of Babel" section of Moroder's score. The German CD release contains several mixes.
- 1998 – Peter Osborne. Synth orchestral / electronic. For JEF/Eureka 139-minute B&W DVD version, released only in UK. Not available on CD.
- 1999 – Angel Tech. 3-piece group from Bristol, UK. Performed live to various versions in 1999/2000. Availability unknown.
- 1999 – Wetfish. Two-man Montreal band. Availability unknown.
- 2000 – After Quartet. Jazz group. Score by Brian McWhorter. Accompanies the 80-minute Moroder cut. Soundtrack available on CD.
- 2000 – Dan Schaaf. Performed live for festivals in 2000/2001. Available on CD.
- 2001 – Mute Life Dept. Portuguese group. Accompanied Filmmuseum Munich version, for live performance at Porto 2001. Available on CD.
- 2001 – Jeff Mills. Electronic artist. Available on CD.
- 2001 – Bernd Schultheis and Sofia's Radio Orchestra. Accompaniment for film festivals in 2001. Availability unknown.
- 2002 – The original Gottfried Huppertz score was rerecorded in this entirety for the DVD release by Kino International.
- 2004 – Abel Korzeniowski. Availability unknown.
- 2005 – South Australian group "The New Pollutants" (Benjamin Speed and Tyson Hopprich). Performed live for festivals 2005/2006. Not yet available as a release.
Trivia
This article contains a list of miscellaneous information. |
- The multiple-exposed sequences were not created in a lab, but right during the filming on the set. The film was rewound in the camera and then exposed again right away. This was done up to 30 times.
- The film took two years to shoot.
- Metropolis was the first film ever to be registered in the "Memory of the World-Register" of the UNESCO in 2001.[8]
References
- ^ Richard Scheib (2003), Metropolis review. Retrieved November 24, 2005.
- ^ "Metropolis at IMDB". IMDB. Retrieved 2007-01-25.
- ^ a b c "The Making of Metropolis". www.scifidimensions.com. Retrieved 2007-01-25.
- ^ a b "The release of Metropolis". www.michaelorgan.org.au. Retrieved 2007-01-25.
- ^ "About Metropolis". Retrieved 2007-01-25.
- ^ Golan v. Ashcroft
- ^ Jim Steranko. Foreword. Superman: Archive Editions. Volume 1
- ^ "Metropolis Trivia". IMDB. Retrieved 2007-01-25.