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THE CABINET OF DR CALIGARI
(Das Kabinett des Dr Caligari)
Rating:   
Germany. 1919.
Director Robert Wiene, Screenplay Hans Janowitz & Carl Mayer, Story Hans Janowitz, Producer Erich Pommer, Photography (b&w) Willy Hameister, Production Design Walter Reimann, Walter Rohrig & Hermann Warm. Production Company Decla-Bioscop.
Cast:
Werner Krauss (Dr Caligari), Frederich Feher (Francis), Conrad Veidt (Cesare), Lil Dagover (Jane Olsen), Rudolf Klein-Rogge (Criminal), Hans Heinz von Twardowski (Alan), Rudolf Lettinger (Dr Olsen)
Plot: The showman Caligari appears in the town of Holwenstall with his marvel, Cesare the Somnambulist, a man who has been asleep for 23 years and is now under Caligaris hypnotic control. Caligari claims that Cesare can predict the future. The arrogant young Alan rises to accept the challenge and asks how long he will live to which Cesare replies Until dawn and that night Alan is murdered. Cesare becomes infatuated with Jane, the daughter of the towns doctor, and kidnaps her but is hunted down by the townspeople. Janes fiancee Francis follows Dr Caligari and discovers his real identity as the head of an insane asylum.
The Cabinet of Dr Caligari is one of, if not the, most influential of all silent films. It was a huge artistic success in its time. Its impact on early fantastic cinema is immeasurable, its influence being seen in the likes of the Communist sf film Aelita (1924); other German silents such as The Golem (1920) and Nosferatu (1922) and the films of Fritz Lang such as Dr Mabuse (1922) and Metropolis (1927); and the Universal horrors of the 1930s, especially The Bat Whispers (1930), Frankenstein (1931), Murders in the Rue Morgue (1932) and Son of Frankenstein (1939).
What made the entire world pay attention to The Cabinet of Dr Caligari was its distorted worldview. All the sets are built crooked and misshapen, the backgrounds are jutting angular flats and zigzag perspectives, the lighting is filled with bloated shadows. It was a triumph of the German Bauhaus movement. As such it inspired few direct imitators and one can see why, it was such a bewildering take on everything that had gone before. But most importantly in terms of its influence on the German silents and Hollywoods Golden Age, The Cabinet of Dr Caligari taught that architecture could stand for mood. Hollywood of the 1930s would tie this directly to a Gothic view of the world filled with science-unleashed monsters.
Following Siegfried Kracauers influential analysis of the film in From Caligari To Hitler: A Psychological History Of The German Film (1947), there has been the tendency to read The Cabinet of Dr Caligari in terms of Nazism with Caligari the hypnotist standing in for Hitler the demagogue, Cesare for the German masses. This is perhaps too obvious and too clumsy Hitler after all didnt come into power for another decade after Caligari came out and it is difficult to see how a film can reflect events that havent yet happened. More subtly though the film seems to resonate with the distorted worldview that echoed around the world after the Great War 1914-18. There was the feeling that the Great War had deeply scarred the world, that it had forever thrown things amok and the world could no longer be understood any longer. (The 1920s was also the decade where major artistic movements such as Surrealism, Symbolism and Cubism also came to the fore, all representing a fractured depiction of the world that radically departed from objective depiction). Hans Janowitz and Robert Wiene were inspired by a real-life murder and their intent was to show a distorted world on screen. The Cabinet of Dr Caligari was the first film in cinema to really offer a subjective depiction of events on screen ie. what was seen on screen was not real, it was not a documentary-like depiction of reality, it was a subjective simulation of it. However Dr Caligaris vision ended up being diluted by producer Erich Pommer who was responsible for creating a framing wraparound that shows the entire events as being the delusions of someone in an asylum, one where Caligari is the head doctor and the other characters are patients. It is a framework that waters down the impact of the original vision instead of being a worldview that a viewer is forced to try and adjust to, it is one that is now explained away with the safety net of only being a madmans delusion, not unakin to the old It was all a dream ending.
Today The Cabinet of Dr Caligari seems all rather dated and stagy, even occasionally laughable. Theres never any sense of place to any of the jutting, angular, shadowy settings theres nothing that differentiates say the police station from the streets, or a hillside from a boudoir the effect is more like actors playing on a single stage set. Also working against it is the hammy acting, particularly of Werner Krauss as Caligari and Lil Dagover who badly overdoes the weeping Gothic willow role. That is not to say that the film does not exert its own creepy influence. The moment Alan cockily asks Cesare how long he will live, only to be answered Until dawn, is one of those classic moments of horror and one that seems all the more chilling for its being relayed by a title card rather than sound. Conrad Veidts mime work, staggering through the darkened bloated alleyways in a peculiar spidery, skeletal gait has an unsettling effect too.
There have been two nominal remakes The Cabinet of Caligari (1962), a psycho-thriller written by Robert Bloch, which appropriates occasional moments of Caligarian imagery in an old dark house story; Dr Caligari (1990), a surreal arthouse effort from director Stephen Sayadian; the low-budget horror Dead By Dawn (2004); and The Cabinet of Dr Caligari (2005), which attempted a direct remake. Numerous films have conducted homage to Caligari and its stylized mood House of Dracula (1945), Dracula Has Risen from the Grave (1968), Dorian Grey as Reflected in the Yellow Press (1984), Dreamscape (1984), Tim Burtons Beetlejuice (1988) and The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993), The Cabinet of Dr Ramirez (1991), Guy Maddins Careful (1993) and Twilight of the Ice Nymphs (1997), Tobe Hoopers The Apartment Complex (1999) and Queen of the Damned (2002).
Director Robert Wiene would make several other horror films during the 1920s, including the lost Gothic horror Genuine (1920) and the original version of The Hands of Orlac (1924). Conrad Veidt emigrated to the US during the late 1930s where he maintained a career in movies, most famously in The Thief of Baghdad (1940) and Casablanca (1942).
Copyright Richard Scheib 1990
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