Sunday, June 17, 2007

fritz arno wagner, cinematographer & 13 stills from mabuse

fritz arno wagner (1894-1958)

key cinematographer of the german expressionist movement, wagner worked most notable with directors f.w. murnau, g.w. pabst and fritz lang. wagner received his training from the academy of fine arts in paris, then went on to work at pathe film company as a clerk.
his most noteworthy contributions can be seen in murnau's nosferatu, pabst's die liebe der jeanne ney and die 3groschenoper, and lang's destiny, spione, m and das testament des dr. mabuse.
"but it was in the portrayal of horror that the camera of murnau and fritz arno wagner excelled" the haunted screen by lotte eisner
the influence of wagner's camera can seen notably in american film noir with its fascination with blackness (lack of light, the obsession with night), the visual influence and use of modernist architecture in film, and the persistent depiction and glorification of vice and sin.

das testament des dr. mabuse 1933
(d.
fritz lang):













13 stills from the opening sequence of fritz lang's das testament des dr. mabuse (at the forger's factory)
a beautiful early example of film noir. the pulsing drone soundtrack is also very unique, the other 2 films i immediately think of which feature such an intense audio abstraction are: the beginning of peckinpah's the getway and lynch's eraserhead.

some films:
-schloß vogeloed 1921 (d. f.w. murnau)
-der müde tod 1921 aka destiny (d. fritz lang)
-de brennende acker 1922 aka burning soil (d. f.w. murnau)
-nosferatu, eine symphonie des grauens 1922 (d. f.w. murnau)
-die liebe der jeanne ney 1927 (d. georg wilhelm pabst)
-spione 1928 (d. fritz lang)
-tagebuch einer verlorenen 1929 aka diary of a lost girl (d. georg wilhelm pabst)
-westfront 1918 1930 (d. georg wilhelm pabst)
-die 3groschenoper 1931 (d. georg wilhelm pabst)
-m 1931 (d. fritz lang)
-kameradschaft 1931 aka comradeship (d. georg wilhelm pabst)
-das testament des dr. mabuse 1933 (d. fritz lang)
-der mann, der sherlock holmes war 1937 (d. karl hartl)

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

God I love this movie.

Sokurov's movies are pretty fantastic soundwise, even though I don't like the actual *movies* themselves.

sroden said...

it's pretty great to see you breaking these scenes up into stills. so many of these images stand firmly on their own, and yet i can't help but think of their detachment from motion. this sequence of images is absolutely amazing... and yeah, the film's quite a stunner too...

the art of memory said...

it is a great film, the lang i like the most.
mr. waggish, i agree with you about sokurov, great sound, but the films never do much for me.

thanks steve, it is strange to see these films as stills, i have watched the beginning of this over and over, and the fluid camera has etched itself into my brain.
i did a version of this film a few years ago, where i rephotographed it and messed around with the sound. it has been a big inspiration.

woolgathersome said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
the art of memory said...

for me, you know, it is for the abstraction.
i remember 10 years ago so many film books had video stills that were so bad, you almost wished they weren't there. now it is a different story.
like i think i said before, i feel not unlike a translator, going over a work in detail, hope that isn't pretentious. but they certainly have a different relationship to a book then the reader has.

Anonymous said...

I seen the movie many times but Lang doesnt seem to know what this was gonna be: a lowbrow wallace movie or a hibrow art deco artwork. Several techniques are mixed together making the story sometimes ...confused.
maybe he was insecure how to deal with the then new sound movie ....
you can also see this in "m", where the komissar character appears for the first time.