Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. German Horror-Cinema made a really promising start in the 1920s. The german expressionists used horror to widen the possibilities of movie-making. But then the 1930s came and under the Nazi-Regime not a single horror-movie was made. Horror-Cinema in Germany had almost completely vanished after WWII.

    • The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari
    • The Golem
    • Nosferatu
    • The Hands of Orlac
    • M: Eine Stadt sucht einen Mörder
    • Vampyr
    • The Testament of Dr. Mabuse
    • Horrors of Spider Island
    • Jonathan
    • Mark of The Devil

    The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, (German: Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari) is a silent movie and a key influence to German expressionist cinema. Directed by Robert Wiene and written by two pacifists named Carl Mayer and Hans Janowitz, Caligariis considered the apex of German Expressionist cinema. The sets were painted rather than natural, and they evoke w...

    An Expressionist classic in the vein of Dr. Caligari, the film’s German title was Der Golem, wie er in die Welt kam (The Golem: How He Came Into the World). The plot retells an actual Jewish folk myth from Prague in the 1600s when the Holy Roman Emperor was severely oppressing the inhabitants of the Jewish minority ghetto. The title character is a ...

    The first true Dracula film—Bela Lugosi’s Dracula would come nine years later—Nosferatu is based directly on the 1897 Bram Stoker novel Draculawith a few key elements switched around to avoid prosecution for copyright infringement. For example, Count Dracula becomes Count Orlok, the word “nosferatu” is used instead of “vampire,” and the bloodsuckin...

    The Hands of Orlac brings director Robert Weine and actor Conrad Veidt back together after Dr. Caligarito tell the tale of a concert pianist who loses his hands in a railroad accident, only to have them replaced with a murderer’s hands. He soon finds himself with an overwhelming desire to kill. Since his new hands aren’t able to play the piano, Orl...

    Released in the USA simply as M, the full German title translates as M: A City Searches for a Murderer. This is famed director Fritz Lang’s first sound film, and he says he considers it the best film he ever made because it tells a tale of social responsibility. It involves a child killer (hauntingly played by bug-eyed Peter Lorre, who, along with ...

    This dreamy, intentionally washed-out-looking 1932 surrealistic classic was filmed with the actors silently mouthing their lines in three different languages—French, German, and English—because director Carl Theodor Dreyer wanted to release three different versions. Voiceover actors subsequently dubbed in the lines after filming was completed, alth...

    The basic plot involves a criminal genius who gives orders to his underlings while he’s confined in an asylum, then continues giving orders as a ghost after he dies. The subtext is that the Dr. Mabuse character was intended as a proxy for Adolf Hitler. Released in Germany as Das Testament des Dr. Mabuse, this offering from Fritz Lang is simultaneou...

    A West German take on the Cold War due to the fact that Spider Island is rich with uranium but infested with radioactive spiders, this low-budget softcore exploitation film involves a group of New York City strippers who are flying to a gig in Singapore, only to crash on a remote island but miraculously survive. Gary, the strip-club manager, wander...

    A post-WWII German film whose unique twist is that it casts vampires as an entire class of wealthy fascist aristocrats who rule the country and routinely suck the blood from every human and animal under their dominion. It is set in rural Germany in the 1800s, where a group of peasants, led by a “vampire researcher,” select a heroic young man named ...

    Released in Germany as Hexen bis aufs Blut gequält (Witches Tortured till They Bleed), the film’s production company earned international attention with marketing schemes such as providing “barf bags” for theatergoers and describing the movie as “Positively the most horrifying film ever made,” “Rated V for Violence,” and “Guaranteed to Make You Sic...

    • Chrissy Stockton
  2. 1970 1h 50m. 6.0 (333) Rate. In a apocalyptic 19th century landscape where wealthy vampires have taken over the world, a group of humans prepare an uprising, and select an adventurous young man to track down the leader of the undead and destroy him.

  3. People also ask

    • Vampyr (1932) "Vampyr" was Carl Theodor Dreyer's first sound film first sound film, and the liminal nature of his (highly successful) attempt to bridge the gap between the new technology and the visual vocabulary of silent cinema is a perfect match for the unsettling nature of a vampire tale.
    • M (1931) The second of Fritz Lang's films to appear on this list, "M" was Lang's first sound film. The use of sound in this crime thriller is impeccable, turning Edvard Grieg's "In the Hall of the Mountain King" into the call of death.
    • The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920) Robert Wiene's cinematic nightmare is the definitive German Expressionist film. The exaggerated angles seem to exist outside of nature.
    • Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror (1922) F.W. Murnau's adaptation of Bram Stoker's "Dracula" might not have been authorized, but it certainly still holds the title for the most chilling cinematic version of Stoker's classic novel.
  4. Dec 9, 2019 · Modern cinematic horror has found its way to numerous other parts of the world. This includes Germany, a West European country with a notable social and cultural history that a lot of outsiders know very little about. And perhaps a good place to start is these ten terrifying German horror filmes .

  5. May 15, 2024 · Starting as early as 1920, German horror began to take shape and influence the world at large with its stunning, heartbreaking, and ultimately revolutionary feats in the world of horror, and over 100 years later, Deutschland still manages to create breathtaking and haunting works of art in the horror world. From films that pushed the boundaries ...

  6. The 12 Best German Horror Movies Ranked. Germany has given the world some of its finest filmmakers, Lotte Reiniger, Ernst Lubitsch, Douglas Sirk, Wim Wenders, and Rainer Werner Fassbinder, to name but a few, as well as groundbreaking movements like German Expressionism and New German Cinema.

  1. People also search for