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Fritz Lang

Friedrich Christian Anton Lang (German: [fʁɪt͡s ˈkʁɪsti̯an ˈantɔn laŋ]; December 5, 1890 – August 2, 1976), known as Fritz Lang, was an Austrian film director, screenwriter, and producer who worked in Germany and later the United States.[2] One of the best-known émigrés from Germany's school of Expressionism, he was dubbed the "Master of Darkness" by the British Film Institute.[3] He has been cited as one of the most influential filmmakers of all time.[4]

Fritz Lang
Fritz Lang in 1969
Born
Friedrich Christian Anton Lang

(1890-12-05)December 5, 1890
DiedAugust 2, 1976(1976-08-02) (aged 85)
Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park
Citizenship
  • Austria
  • Germany (later renounced)
  • United States[1]
Alma materTechnical University of Vienna
Occupations
  • Film director
  • producer
  • screenwriter
  • actor
Years active1910–1976
Spouse(s)
Lisa Rosenthal
(m. 1919; died 1921)

(m. 1922; div. 1933)

Lily Latté
(m. 1971)

Lang's most celebrated films include the groundbreaking futuristic Metropolis (1927) and the influential M (1931), a film noir precursor. His 1929 film Woman in the Moon showcased the use of a multi-stage rocket, and also pioneered the concept of a rocket launch pad (a rocket standing upright against a tall building before launch having been slowly rolled into place) and the rocket-launch countdown clock.[5][6] His other major films include Dr. Mabuse the Gambler (1922), Die Nibelungen (1924), and after moving to Hollywood in 1934, Fury (1936), You Only Live Once (1937), Hangmen Also Die! (1943), The Woman in the Window (1944), Scarlet Street (1945) and The Big Heat (1953). He became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1939.

Life and career

Early life

Lang was born in Vienna, as the second son of Anton Lang (1860–1940),[7] an architect and construction company manager, and his wife Pauline "Paula" Lang (née Schlesinger; 1864–1920). His mother was born Jewish and converted to Catholicism. His father was described as a “lapsed Catholic.” [8]He was baptized on December 28, 1890, at the Schottenkirche in Vienna.[9] He had an elder brother, Adolf (1884–1961).[10]

Lang's parents were of Moravian descent.[11] At one point, he noted that he was “born [a] Catholic and very puritan".[12] Ultimately describing himself as an atheist, Lang believed that religion was important for teaching ethics.[13][14][15]

After finishing school, Lang briefly attended the Technical University of Vienna, where he studied civil engineering and eventually switched to art. He left Vienna in 1910 in order to see the world, traveling throughout Europe and Africa, and later Asia and the Pacific area. In 1913, he studied painting in Paris.

At the outbreak of World War I, Lang returned to Vienna and volunteered for military service in the Austrian army and fought in Russia and Romania, where he was wounded four times and lost sight in his right eye,[16] the first of many vision issues he would face in his lifetime. While recovering from his injuries and shell shock in 1916, he wrote some scenarios and ideas for films. He was discharged from the army with the rank of lieutenant in 1918 and did some acting in the Viennese theater circuit for a short time before being hired as a writer at Decla Film, Erich Pommer's Berlin-based production company. In 1919, he married for the first time to Lisa Rosenthal, a Jewish woman; in 1921, she died under mysterious circumstances, of a single gunshot wound deemed to have been fired by a sidearm weapon from World War I.[17][18]

Expressionist films: the Weimar years (1918–1933)

Lang's writing stint was brief, as he soon started to work as a director at the German film studio UFA, and later Nero-Film, just as the Expressionist movement was building. In this first phase of his career, Lang alternated between films such as Der Müde Tod ("The Weary Death") and popular thrillers such as Die Spinnen ("The Spiders"), combining popular genres with Expressionist techniques to create an unprecedented synthesis of popular entertainment with art cinema.

 
Lang and Thea von Harbou in their Berlin flat, 1923 or 1924

In 1920, Lang met his future wife, the writer Thea von Harbou. She and Lang co-wrote all of his movies from 1921 through 1933, including Dr. Mabuse, der Spieler ("Dr. Mabuse the Gambler," 1922 - which ran for over four hours, in two parts in the original version, and was the first in the Dr. Mabuse trilogy), the five-hour Die Nibelungen (1924), the dystopian film Metropolis (1927), and the science fiction film Woman in the Moon (1929). Metropolis went far over budget and nearly destroyed UFA, which was bought by right-wing businessman and politician Alfred Hugenberg. It was a financial flop, as were his last silent films Spies (1928) and Woman in the Moon, produced by Lang's own company.[citation needed]

In 1931, independent producer Seymour Nebenzahl hired Lang to direct M for Nero-Film. His first "talking" picture, considered by many film scholars to be a masterpiece of the early sound era, M is a disturbing story of a child murderer (Peter Lorre in his first starring role) who is hunted down and brought to rough justice by Berlin's criminal underworld. M remains a powerful work; it was remade in 1951 by Joseph Losey, but this version had little impact on audiences, and has become harder to see than the original film.

During the climactic final scene in M, Lang allegedly threw Peter Lorre down a flight of stairs in order to give more authenticity to Lorre's battered look. Lang, who was known for being hard to work with, epitomized the stereotype of the tyrannical Germanic film director, a type embodied also by Erich von Stroheim and Otto Preminger; Lang wore a monocle adding to the stereotype.

In the films of his German period, Lang produced a coherent oeuvre that established the characteristics later attributed to film noir, with its recurring themes of psychological conflict, paranoia, fate and moral ambiguity.

At the end of 1932, Lang started filming The Testament of Dr. Mabuse. Adolf Hitler came to power in January 1933, and by March 30, the new regime banned it as an incitement to public disorder. Testament is sometimes deemed an anti-Nazi film, as Lang had put phrases used by the Nazis into the mouth of the title character. A screening of the film was cancelled by Joseph Goebbels, and it was later banned by the Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda.[19] In banning the film, Goebbels stated that the film "showed that an extremely dedicated group of people are perfectly capable of overthrowing any state with violence", and that the film posed a threat to public health and safety.[20]

Lang was worried about the advent of the Nazi regime, partly because of his Jewish heritage,[21] whereas his wife and co-screenwriter Thea von Harbou had started to sympathize with the Nazis in the early 1930s, and later joined the NSDAP in 1940.[citation needed] They soon divorced. Lang's fears would be realized following his departure from Austria, as under the Nuremberg Laws he would be identified as half-Jewish by ethnicity even though his mother was a converted Roman Catholic, and he was raised as such.

Emigration

According to Lang, propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels called Lang to his offices to inform him – apologetically – that The Testament of Dr. Mabuse was being banned but, nevertheless, he was so impressed by Lang's abilities as a filmmaker (especially Metropolis), that he offered Lang the position of head of German film studio UFA. Lang said it was during that meeting he had decided to leave for Paris – but that the banks had closed by the time the meeting was over. Lang claimed that, after selling his wife's jewelry, he fled by train to Paris that evening, leaving most of his money and personal possessions behind.[22][23][24][25] However, his passport of the time showed that he traveled to and from Germany a few times during 1933.[26]

Lang left Berlin for good on July 31, 1933, four months after his meeting with Goebbels and his initial departure. He moved to Paris,[27] having divorced Thea von Harbou, who stayed behind, earlier in 1933.[28][29]

In Paris, Lang filmed a version of Ferenc Molnár's Liliom, starring Charles Boyer. That was Lang's only film in French (excluding the French version of Testament). He then moved to the United States.[27]

Hollywood career (1936–1957)

Lang made twenty-three features in his 20-year American career, working in a variety of genres at every major studio in Hollywood, and occasionally producing his films as an independent. He became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1939.[30]

Signing first with MGM Studios, Lang's crime drama Fury (1936) saw Spencer Tracy cast as a man who is wrongly accused of a crime and nearly killed when a lynch mob sets fire to the jail where he is awaiting trial. However, in Fury, he was not allowed to represent black victims in a lynching scenario or to criticize racism, which was his original intention.[31][32] By the time Fury was released, Lang had been involved in the creation of the Hollywood Anti-Nazi League, working with Otto Katz, a Czech who was a Comintern spy.[33] He made four films with an explicitly anti-Nazi theme, Man Hunt (1941), Hangmen Also Die! (1943), Ministry of Fear (1944) and Cloak and Dagger (1946). Man Hunt, wrote Dave Kehr in 2009, "may be the best" of the "many interventionist films produced by the Hollywood studios before Pearl Harbor" as it is "clean and concentrated, elegant and precise, pointed without being preachy."[30]

 
Lang with Gloria Grahame and Broderick Crawford on the set of Human Desire

His American films were often compared unfavorably to his earlier works by contemporary critics, although the restrained Expressionism of these films is now seen as integral to the emergence and evolution of American genre cinema, film noir in particular. Scarlet Street (1945), one of his films featuring Edward G. Robinson and Joan Bennett, is considered a central film in the genre.

One of Lang's most praised films noir is the police drama The Big Heat (1953), known for its uncompromising brutality, especially for a scene in which Lee Marvin throws scalding coffee on Gloria Grahame's face. As Lang's visual style simplified, in part due to the constraints of the Hollywood studio system, his worldview became increasingly pessimistic, culminating in the cold, geometric style of his last American films, While the City Sleeps (1956) and Beyond a Reasonable Doubt (1956).

Last films (1959–1963)

Finding it difficult to find congenial production conditions and backers in Hollywood, particularly as his health declined with age, Lang contemplated retirement. The German producer Artur Brauner had expressed interest in remaking The Indian Tomb (from an original story by Thea von Harbou, that Lang had developed in the 1920s which had ultimately been directed by Joe May),[34] so Lang returned to Germany[35] to make his "Indian Epic" (consisting of The Tiger of Eschnapur and The Indian Tomb).

Following the production, Brauner was preparing for a remake of The Testament of Dr. Mabuse when Lang approached him with the idea of adding a new original film to the series. The result was The Thousand Eyes of Dr. Mabuse (1960), whose success led to a series of new Mabuse films, which were produced by Brauner (including the remake of The Testament of Dr. Mabuse), though Lang did not direct any of the sequels. Lang was approaching blindness during the production,[36] and it was his final project as director.

In 1963, he appeared as himself in Jean-Luc Godard's film Contempt.

Death and legacy

On February 8, 1960, Lang received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for his contributions to the motion picture industry, located at 1600 Vine Street.[37][38]

 
Grave of Lang, at Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills

Lang died from a stroke in 1976 and was interred in the Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills Cemetery in the Hollywood Hills of Los Angeles.[39][40]

While his career had ended without fanfare, Lang's American and later German works were championed by the critics of the Cahiers du cinéma, such as François Truffaut and Jacques Rivette. Truffaut wrote that Lang, especially in his American career, was greatly underappreciated by "cinema historians and critics" who "deny him any genius when he 'signs' spy movies ... war movies ... or simple thrillers."[41] Filmmakers that were influenced by his work include Jacques Rivette, William Friedkin, Steven Spielberg, Christopher Nolan, Luis Buñuel, Osamu Tezuka, Alfred Hitchcock, Jean-Luc Godard and Stanley Kubrick.[citation needed]

Lang is credited with launching or developing many different genres of film. Phillip French of The Observer believed that Lang helped craft the "entertainment war flick" and that his interpretation of the story of Bonnie and Clyde "helped launch the Hollywood film noir".[42] Geoff Andrew of the British Film Institute believed he set the "blueprint for the serial killer movie" through M.[43]

In December 2021 Lang was the subject for BBC Radio 4's In Our Time.[44]

Preservation

The Academy Film Archive has preserved a number of Lang's films, including Human Desire and Man Hunt.[45]

Filmography

Awards

  • Silver Hand in 1931, for his film M, by the German Motion Picture Arts Association[46]
  • Commander Cross, Order of Merit in 1957 and 1966
  • Golden Ribbon of Motion Picture Arts in 1963 by the Federal Republic of Germany
  • Order of Arts and Letters from France in 1965
  • Plaque from El Festival Internacional del Cine de San Sebastian in 1970
  • Order of the Yugoslavia Flag with a Golden Wreath in 1971
  • Honorary Professor of Fine Arts by the University of Vienna, Austria, in 1973

References

  1. ^ Kürten, Jochen (December 4, 2015). "Born 125 years ago: Celebrating the films of Fritz Lang". Deutsche Welle. Retrieved November 18, 2017.
  2. ^ Obituary Variety, August 4, 1976, p. 63.
  3. ^ . British Film Institute. Archived from the original on December 18, 2008. Retrieved January 22, 2009.
  4. ^ "Fritz Lang: 10 essential films".
  5. ^ "The Directors (Fritz Lang)". Sky Arts. Season 1, episode 6. 2018
  6. ^ Weide, Robert (Summer 2012). "The Outer Limits". DGA Quarterly. Los Angeles, California: Directors Guild of America, Inc.: 64–71. A gallery of behind-the-scenes shots of movies featuring space travel or aliens. Page 68, photo caption: "Directed by Fritz Lang (third from right), the silent film "Woman in the Moon" (1929) is considered one of the first serious science fiction films and invented the countdown before the launch of a rocket. Many of the basics of space travel were presented to a mass audience for the first time."
  7. ^ "Architekturzentrum Wien". Architektenlexikon.at. Retrieved March 6, 2010.
  8. ^ David, Eric. "The Master of Darkness". ChristianityToday.com. Retrieved January 6, 2023.
  9. ^ Vienna, Schottenpfarre, baptismal register Tom. 1890, fol. 83.
  10. ^ "Fritz Lang". archive.nytimes.com. Retrieved February 14, 2022.
  11. ^ Ott, Frederick W. (1979). The films of Fritz Lang (1st ed.). Secaucus, NJ: Citadel Press. p. 10. ISBN 0-8065-0435-8. Retrieved January 19, 2018. Lang's father was a native of Vienna, born in the Roman Catholic parish of Alservorstadt in 1860 and has been described as a "lapsed Catholic." His mother Paula was Jewish, a Catholic convert, born in 1864 in the city of Brunn (Brno), the capital of Moravia."
  12. ^ Lang, Fritz (2003). Fritz Lang: Interviews. p. 163. ISBN 978-1-57806-577-6.
  13. ^ Tom Gunning, British Film Institute (2000). The films of Fritz Lang: allegories of vision and modernity. British Film Institute. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-85170-742-6. Lang, however, immediately cautions Prokosh, 'Jerry, don't forget, the gods have not created men, man has created the gods.' This is more than a simple statement of Feuerbach-like humanism or atheism.
  14. ^ Patrick Mcgilligan (1998). Fritz Lang: The Nature of the Beast. St. Martin's Press. p. 477. ISBN 978-0312194543. In the final years of his life, Lang had written, in German, a 20- to 30-page short story called "The Wandering Jew." It was "a kind of fable about a Wandering Jew," according to Pierre Rissient. After Lang's death, Rissient asked Latte [Fritz Lang's third wife] if he might arrange for its publication. "No," she replied, "because Fritz would want to be known as an atheist."
  15. ^ Mark Kermode (2013). Hatchet Job: Love Movies, Hate Critics. Pan Macmillan. pp. 25–26. ISBN 978-1-4472-3052-6. The Austrian-born film-maker Fritz Lang once commented that, although he was an atheist, he supported religious education because 'if you do not teach religion, how can you teach ethics?'
  16. ^ Barson, Michael (July 29, 2020). ""Fritz Lang"". britannica.com. Retrieved August 11, 2020. He was wounded four times (losing vision in his right eye)
  17. ^ "Murder and Metropolis". TheGuardian.com. February 10, 2001.
  18. ^ "Lisa".
  19. ^ Kracauer, Siegfried (1947). From Caligari to Hitler: a psychological history of the German film. ISBN 0-691-02505-3.
  20. ^ Kalat, David (2005). The strange case of Dr. Mabuse: a study of the twelve films and five novels. ISBN 0-7864-2337-4.
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on January 12, 2006. Retrieved January 22, 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  22. ^ "Fritz Lang Biography". IMDb. Retrieved September 5, 2019.
  23. ^ Michel Ciment: Fritz Lang, Le meurtre et la loi, Ed. Gallimard, Collection Découvertes Gallimard (vol. 442), 04/11/2003. The author thinks that this meeting, in fact, never happened.
  24. ^ Havis, Allan (2008), Cult Films: Taboo and Transgression, University Press of America, Inc., p. 10
  25. ^ Thomson, David (2012) The Big Screen: the story of the movies New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux ISBN 978-0-374-19189-4 pp. 64–65; Lang's version deemed suspect
  26. ^ "Fritz Lang Tells the Riveting Story of the Day He Met Joseph Goebbels and Then High-Tailed It Out of Germany". Open Culture. April 28, 2015. Retrieved March 29, 2018.
  27. ^ a b David Kalat, DVD Commentary for The Testament of Dr. Mabuse. New York City, United States: The Criterion Collection (2004)
  28. ^ Hughes, Howard (2014). Outer Limits: The Filmgoers' Guide to the Great Science-fiction Films. New York: I.B.Tauris. p. 1. ISBN 978-1-78076-165-7. Retrieved January 22, 2015.
  29. ^ McGilligan, Patrick (1997). Fritz Lang: The Nature of the Beast. New York: St. Martin's Press. p. 181. ISBN 0-312-13247-6.
  30. ^ a b Kehr, Dave (May 15, 2009). "Fritz Lang, Trailing Nazis". The New York Times.
  31. ^ Letort, Delphine; Lebdai, Benaouda, eds. (2018). Women Activists and Civil Rights Leaders in Auto/Biographical Literature and Films. Cham, Switzerland: Springer International Publishing. p. 98. ISBN 978-3-319-77081-9. Retrieved September 7, 2018.
  32. ^ Scott, Ellen C. (2015). Cinema Civil Rights: Regulation, Repression, and Race in the Classical Hollywood Era. Rutgers University Press. p. 1736. ISBN 978-0-8135-7137-9. Retrieved September 7, 2018.
  33. ^ Hoberman, J. (October 9, 2014). "Fighting the Nazis With Celluloid". The New York Times. Archived from the original on January 2, 2022. Retrieved March 26, 2021.
  34. ^ Plass, Ulrich (Winter 2009). "Dialectic of Regression: Theodor W Adorno and Fritz Lang". Telos. 149: 131.
  35. ^ Gold, H.L. (December 1959). "Of All Things". Galaxy. p. 6. Retrieved June 15, 2014.
  36. ^ Robert Bloch. "In Memoriam: Fritz Lang" in Bloch's Out of My Head. Cambridge, MA: NESFA Press, 1986, 171–80
  37. ^ "Fritz Lang | Hollywood Walk of Fame". walkoffame.com. Retrieved June 11, 2017.
  38. ^ "Fritz Lang – Hollywood Star Walk – Los Angeles Times". projects.latimes.com. Retrieved June 11, 2017.
  39. ^ Fritz Lang
  40. ^ Krebs, Albin (August 3, 1976). "Fritz Lang, Film Director Noted for 'M,' Dead at 85". The New York Times. Retrieved January 22, 2009. Friz Lang, the Viennese-born film director best known for "M", a terrifying study of a child killer, and for other tales of suspense, died yesterday in Los Angeles at the age of 85. He had been ill for some time, and had been inactive professionally for a decade.
  41. ^ Dixon, Wheeler Winston (1993). Early Film Criticism of Francois Truffaut. Indiana University Press. pp. 41–42. ISBN 0-253-11343-1.
  42. ^ French, Philip (January 2, 2000). "'Without Fritz, there'd be no Star Wars'". The Observer. ISSN 0029-7712. Retrieved July 7, 2020.
  43. ^ "Fritz Lang's M: the blueprint for the serial killer movie". British Film Institute. Retrieved July 7, 2020.
  44. ^ "BBC Radio 4 - In Our Time, Fritz Lang".
  45. ^ "Preserved Projects". Academy Film Archive.
  46. ^ "Fritz Lang papers circa 1909–1973 1931–1973".

Further reading

External links

  Media related to Fritz Lang at Wikimedia Commons

  • Works by or about Fritz Lang at Internet Archive
  • Fritz Lang at IMDb
  • Fritz Lang Bibliography (via UC Berkeley Media Resources Center)
  • Senses of Cinema – Biographie
  • at filmportal.de
  • Photos of Fritz Lang and cast of Hangmen Also Die by Ned Scott
  • The Fritz Lang papers at the American Heritage Center

fritz, lang, german, painter, artist, friedrich, christian, anton, lang, german, fʁɪt, ˈkʁɪsti, ˈantɔn, laŋ, december, 1890, august, 1976, known, austrian, film, director, screenwriter, producer, worked, germany, later, united, states, best, known, émigrés, fr. For the German painter see Fritz Lang artist Friedrich Christian Anton Lang German fʁɪt s ˈkʁɪsti an ˈantɔn laŋ December 5 1890 August 2 1976 known as Fritz Lang was an Austrian film director screenwriter and producer who worked in Germany and later the United States 2 One of the best known emigres from Germany s school of Expressionism he was dubbed the Master of Darkness by the British Film Institute 3 He has been cited as one of the most influential filmmakers of all time 4 Fritz LangFritz Lang in 1969BornFriedrich Christian Anton Lang 1890 12 05 December 5 1890Vienna Austria HungaryDiedAugust 2 1976 1976 08 02 aged 85 Beverly Hills California U S Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial ParkCitizenshipAustria Germany later renounced United States 1 Alma materTechnical University of ViennaOccupationsFilm directorproducerscreenwriteractorYears active1910 1976Spouse s Lisa Rosenthal m 1919 died 1921 wbr Thea von Harbou m 1922 div 1933 wbr Lily Latte m 1971 wbr Lang s most celebrated films include the groundbreaking futuristic Metropolis 1927 and the influential M 1931 a film noir precursor His 1929 film Woman in the Moon showcased the use of a multi stage rocket and also pioneered the concept of a rocket launch pad a rocket standing upright against a tall building before launch having been slowly rolled into place and the rocket launch countdown clock 5 6 His other major films include Dr Mabuse the Gambler 1922 Die Nibelungen 1924 and after moving to Hollywood in 1934 Fury 1936 You Only Live Once 1937 Hangmen Also Die 1943 The Woman in the Window 1944 Scarlet Street 1945 and The Big Heat 1953 He became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1939 Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Early life 1 2 Expressionist films the Weimar years 1918 1933 1 3 Emigration 1 4 Hollywood career 1936 1957 1 5 Last films 1959 1963 1 6 Death and legacy 1 7 Preservation 2 Filmography 3 Awards 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksLife and career EditEarly life Edit Lang was born in Vienna as the second son of Anton Lang 1860 1940 7 an architect and construction company manager and his wife Pauline Paula Lang nee Schlesinger 1864 1920 His mother was born Jewish and converted to Catholicism His father was described as a lapsed Catholic 8 He was baptized on December 28 1890 at the Schottenkirche in Vienna 9 He had an elder brother Adolf 1884 1961 10 Lang s parents were of Moravian descent 11 At one point he noted that he was born a Catholic and very puritan 12 Ultimately describing himself as an atheist Lang believed that religion was important for teaching ethics 13 14 15 After finishing school Lang briefly attended the Technical University of Vienna where he studied civil engineering and eventually switched to art He left Vienna in 1910 in order to see the world traveling throughout Europe and Africa and later Asia and the Pacific area In 1913 he studied painting in Paris At the outbreak of World War I Lang returned to Vienna and volunteered for military service in the Austrian army and fought in Russia and Romania where he was wounded four times and lost sight in his right eye 16 the first of many vision issues he would face in his lifetime While recovering from his injuries and shell shock in 1916 he wrote some scenarios and ideas for films He was discharged from the army with the rank of lieutenant in 1918 and did some acting in the Viennese theater circuit for a short time before being hired as a writer at Decla Film Erich Pommer s Berlin based production company In 1919 he married for the first time to Lisa Rosenthal a Jewish woman in 1921 she died under mysterious circumstances of a single gunshot wound deemed to have been fired by a sidearm weapon from World War I 17 18 Expressionist films the Weimar years 1918 1933 Edit Lang s writing stint was brief as he soon started to work as a director at the German film studio UFA and later Nero Film just as the Expressionist movement was building In this first phase of his career Lang alternated between films such as Der Mude Tod The Weary Death and popular thrillers such as Die Spinnen The Spiders combining popular genres with Expressionist techniques to create an unprecedented synthesis of popular entertainment with art cinema Lang and Thea von Harbou in their Berlin flat 1923 or 1924 In 1920 Lang met his future wife the writer Thea von Harbou She and Lang co wrote all of his movies from 1921 through 1933 including Dr Mabuse der Spieler Dr Mabuse the Gambler 1922 which ran for over four hours in two parts in the original version and was the first in the Dr Mabuse trilogy the five hour Die Nibelungen 1924 the dystopian film Metropolis 1927 and the science fiction film Woman in the Moon 1929 Metropolis went far over budget and nearly destroyed UFA which was bought by right wing businessman and politician Alfred Hugenberg It was a financial flop as were his last silent films Spies 1928 and Woman in the Moon produced by Lang s own company citation needed In 1931 independent producer Seymour Nebenzahl hired Lang to direct M for Nero Film His first talking picture considered by many film scholars to be a masterpiece of the early sound era M is a disturbing story of a child murderer Peter Lorre in his first starring role who is hunted down and brought to rough justice by Berlin s criminal underworld M remains a powerful work it was remade in 1951 by Joseph Losey but this version had little impact on audiences and has become harder to see than the original film During the climactic final scene in M Lang allegedly threw Peter Lorre down a flight of stairs in order to give more authenticity to Lorre s battered look Lang who was known for being hard to work with epitomized the stereotype of the tyrannical Germanic film director a type embodied also by Erich von Stroheim and Otto Preminger Lang wore a monocle adding to the stereotype In the films of his German period Lang produced a coherent oeuvre that established the characteristics later attributed to film noir with its recurring themes of psychological conflict paranoia fate and moral ambiguity At the end of 1932 Lang started filming The Testament of Dr Mabuse Adolf Hitler came to power in January 1933 and by March 30 the new regime banned it as an incitement to public disorder Testament is sometimes deemed an anti Nazi film as Lang had put phrases used by the Nazis into the mouth of the title character A screening of the film was cancelled by Joseph Goebbels and it was later banned by the Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda 19 In banning the film Goebbels stated that the film showed that an extremely dedicated group of people are perfectly capable of overthrowing any state with violence and that the film posed a threat to public health and safety 20 Lang was worried about the advent of the Nazi regime partly because of his Jewish heritage 21 whereas his wife and co screenwriter Thea von Harbou had started to sympathize with the Nazis in the early 1930s and later joined the NSDAP in 1940 citation needed They soon divorced Lang s fears would be realized following his departure from Austria as under the Nuremberg Laws he would be identified as half Jewish by ethnicity even though his mother was a converted Roman Catholic and he was raised as such Emigration Edit According to Lang propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels called Lang to his offices to inform him apologetically that The Testament of Dr Mabuse was being banned but nevertheless he was so impressed by Lang s abilities as a filmmaker especially Metropolis that he offered Lang the position of head of German film studio UFA Lang said it was during that meeting he had decided to leave for Paris but that the banks had closed by the time the meeting was over Lang claimed that after selling his wife s jewelry he fled by train to Paris that evening leaving most of his money and personal possessions behind 22 23 24 25 However his passport of the time showed that he traveled to and from Germany a few times during 1933 26 Lang left Berlin for good on July 31 1933 four months after his meeting with Goebbels and his initial departure He moved to Paris 27 having divorced Thea von Harbou who stayed behind earlier in 1933 28 29 In Paris Lang filmed a version of Ferenc Molnar s Liliom starring Charles Boyer That was Lang s only film in French excluding the French version of Testament He then moved to the United States 27 Hollywood career 1936 1957 Edit Lang made twenty three features in his 20 year American career working in a variety of genres at every major studio in Hollywood and occasionally producing his films as an independent He became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1939 30 Signing first with MGM Studios Lang s crime drama Fury 1936 saw Spencer Tracy cast as a man who is wrongly accused of a crime and nearly killed when a lynch mob sets fire to the jail where he is awaiting trial However in Fury he was not allowed to represent black victims in a lynching scenario or to criticize racism which was his original intention 31 32 By the time Fury was released Lang had been involved in the creation of the Hollywood Anti Nazi League working with Otto Katz a Czech who was a Comintern spy 33 He made four films with an explicitly anti Nazi theme Man Hunt 1941 Hangmen Also Die 1943 Ministry of Fear 1944 and Cloak and Dagger 1946 Man Hunt wrote Dave Kehr in 2009 may be the best of the many interventionist films produced by the Hollywood studios before Pearl Harbor as it is clean and concentrated elegant and precise pointed without being preachy 30 Lang with Gloria Grahame and Broderick Crawford on the set of Human Desire His American films were often compared unfavorably to his earlier works by contemporary critics although the restrained Expressionism of these films is now seen as integral to the emergence and evolution of American genre cinema film noir in particular Scarlet Street 1945 one of his films featuring Edward G Robinson and Joan Bennett is considered a central film in the genre One of Lang s most praised films noir is the police drama The Big Heat 1953 known for its uncompromising brutality especially for a scene in which Lee Marvin throws scalding coffee on Gloria Grahame s face As Lang s visual style simplified in part due to the constraints of the Hollywood studio system his worldview became increasingly pessimistic culminating in the cold geometric style of his last American films While the City Sleeps 1956 and Beyond a Reasonable Doubt 1956 Last films 1959 1963 Edit Finding it difficult to find congenial production conditions and backers in Hollywood particularly as his health declined with age Lang contemplated retirement The German producer Artur Brauner had expressed interest in remaking The Indian Tomb from an original story by Thea von Harbou that Lang had developed in the 1920s which had ultimately been directed by Joe May 34 so Lang returned to Germany 35 to make his Indian Epic consisting of The Tiger of Eschnapur and The Indian Tomb Following the production Brauner was preparing for a remake of The Testament of Dr Mabuse when Lang approached him with the idea of adding a new original film to the series The result was The Thousand Eyes of Dr Mabuse 1960 whose success led to a series of new Mabuse films which were produced by Brauner including the remake of The Testament of Dr Mabuse though Lang did not direct any of the sequels Lang was approaching blindness during the production 36 and it was his final project as director In 1963 he appeared as himself in Jean Luc Godard s film Contempt Death and legacy Edit On February 8 1960 Lang received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for his contributions to the motion picture industry located at 1600 Vine Street 37 38 Grave of Lang at Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills Lang died from a stroke in 1976 and was interred in the Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills Cemetery in the Hollywood Hills of Los Angeles 39 40 While his career had ended without fanfare Lang s American and later German works were championed by the critics of the Cahiers du cinema such as Francois Truffaut and Jacques Rivette Truffaut wrote that Lang especially in his American career was greatly underappreciated by cinema historians and critics who deny him any genius when he signs spy movies war movies or simple thrillers 41 Filmmakers that were influenced by his work include Jacques Rivette William Friedkin Steven Spielberg Christopher Nolan Luis Bunuel Osamu Tezuka Alfred Hitchcock Jean Luc Godard and Stanley Kubrick citation needed Lang is credited with launching or developing many different genres of film Phillip French of The Observer believed that Lang helped craft the entertainment war flick and that his interpretation of the story of Bonnie and Clyde helped launch the Hollywood film noir 42 Geoff Andrew of the British Film Institute believed he set the blueprint for the serial killer movie through M 43 In December 2021 Lang was the subject for BBC Radio 4 s In Our Time 44 Preservation Edit The Academy Film Archive has preserved a number of Lang s films including Human Desire and Man Hunt 45 Filmography EditMain article Fritz Lang filmographyAwards EditSilver Hand in 1931 for his film M by the German Motion Picture Arts Association 46 Commander Cross Order of Merit in 1957 and 1966 Golden Ribbon of Motion Picture Arts in 1963 by the Federal Republic of Germany Order of Arts and Letters from France in 1965 Plaque from El Festival Internacional del Cine de San Sebastian in 1970 Order of the Yugoslavia Flag with a Golden Wreath in 1971 Honorary Professor of Fine Arts by the University of Vienna Austria in 1973References Edit Kurten Jochen December 4 2015 Born 125 years ago Celebrating the films of Fritz Lang Deutsche Welle Retrieved November 18 2017 Obituary Variety August 4 1976 p 63 Fritz Lang Master of Darkness British Film Institute Archived from the original on December 18 2008 Retrieved January 22 2009 Fritz Lang 10 essential films The Directors Fritz Lang Sky Arts Season 1 episode 6 2018 Weide Robert Summer 2012 The Outer Limits DGA Quarterly Los Angeles California Directors Guild of America Inc 64 71 A gallery of behind the scenes shots of movies featuring space travel or aliens Page 68 photo caption Directed by Fritz Lang third from right the silent film Woman in the Moon 1929 is considered one of the first serious science fiction films and invented the countdown before the launch of a rocket Many of the basics of space travel were presented to a mass audience for the first time Architekturzentrum Wien Architektenlexikon at Retrieved March 6 2010 David Eric The Master of Darkness ChristianityToday com Retrieved January 6 2023 Vienna Schottenpfarre baptismal register Tom 1890 fol 83 Fritz Lang archive nytimes com Retrieved February 14 2022 Ott Frederick W 1979 The films of Fritz Lang 1st ed Secaucus NJ Citadel Press p 10 ISBN 0 8065 0435 8 Retrieved January 19 2018 Lang s father was a native of Vienna born in the Roman Catholic parish of Alservorstadt in 1860 and has been described as a lapsed Catholic His mother Paula was Jewish a Catholic convert born in 1864 in the city of Brunn Brno the capital of Moravia Lang Fritz 2003 Fritz Lang Interviews p 163 ISBN 978 1 57806 577 6 Tom Gunning British Film Institute 2000 The films of Fritz Lang allegories of vision and modernity British Film Institute p 7 ISBN 978 0 85170 742 6 Lang however immediately cautions Prokosh Jerry don t forget the gods have not created men man has created the gods This is more than a simple statement of Feuerbach like humanism or atheism Patrick Mcgilligan 1998 Fritz Lang The Nature of the Beast St Martin s Press p 477 ISBN 978 0312194543 In the final years of his life Lang had written in German a 20 to 30 page short story called The Wandering Jew It was a kind of fable about a Wandering Jew according to Pierre Rissient After Lang s death Rissient asked Latte Fritz Lang s third wife if he might arrange for its publication No she replied because Fritz would want to be known as an atheist Mark Kermode 2013 Hatchet Job Love Movies Hate Critics Pan Macmillan pp 25 26 ISBN 978 1 4472 3052 6 The Austrian born film maker Fritz Lang once commented that although he was an atheist he supported religious education because if you do not teach religion how can you teach ethics Barson Michael July 29 2020 Fritz Lang britannica com Retrieved August 11 2020 He was wounded four times losing vision in his right eye Murder and Metropolis TheGuardian com February 10 2001 Lisa Kracauer Siegfried 1947 From Caligari to Hitler a psychological history of the German film ISBN 0 691 02505 3 Kalat David 2005 The strange case of Dr Mabuse a study of the twelve films and five novels ISBN 0 7864 2337 4 The religion of director Fritz Lang Archived from the original on January 12 2006 Retrieved January 22 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Fritz Lang Biography IMDb Retrieved September 5 2019 Michel Ciment Fritz Lang Le meurtre et la loi Ed Gallimard Collection Decouvertes Gallimard vol 442 04 11 2003 The author thinks that this meeting in fact never happened Havis Allan 2008 Cult Films Taboo and Transgression University Press of America Inc p 10 Thomson David 2012 The Big Screen the story of the movies New York Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 0 374 19189 4 pp 64 65 Lang s version deemed suspect Fritz Lang Tells the Riveting Story of the Day He Met Joseph Goebbels and Then High Tailed It Out of Germany Open Culture April 28 2015 Retrieved March 29 2018 a b David Kalat DVD Commentary for The Testament of Dr Mabuse New York City United States The Criterion Collection 2004 Hughes Howard 2014 Outer Limits The Filmgoers Guide to the Great Science fiction Films New York I B Tauris p 1 ISBN 978 1 78076 165 7 Retrieved January 22 2015 McGilligan Patrick 1997 Fritz Lang The Nature of the Beast New York St Martin s Press p 181 ISBN 0 312 13247 6 a b Kehr Dave May 15 2009 Fritz Lang Trailing Nazis The New York Times Letort Delphine Lebdai Benaouda eds 2018 Women Activists and Civil Rights Leaders in Auto Biographical Literature and Films Cham Switzerland Springer International Publishing p 98 ISBN 978 3 319 77081 9 Retrieved September 7 2018 Scott Ellen C 2015 Cinema Civil Rights Regulation Repression and Race in the Classical Hollywood Era Rutgers University Press p 1736 ISBN 978 0 8135 7137 9 Retrieved September 7 2018 Hoberman J October 9 2014 Fighting the Nazis With Celluloid The New York Times Archived from the original on January 2 2022 Retrieved March 26 2021 Plass Ulrich Winter 2009 Dialectic of Regression Theodor W Adorno and Fritz Lang Telos 149 131 Gold H L December 1959 Of All Things Galaxy p 6 Retrieved June 15 2014 Robert Bloch In Memoriam Fritz Lang in Bloch s Out of My Head Cambridge MA NESFA Press 1986 171 80 Fritz Lang Hollywood Walk of Fame walkoffame com Retrieved June 11 2017 Fritz Lang Hollywood Star Walk Los Angeles Times projects latimes com Retrieved June 11 2017 Fritz Lang Krebs Albin August 3 1976 Fritz Lang Film Director Noted for M Dead at 85 The New York Times Retrieved January 22 2009 Friz Lang the Viennese born film director best known for M a terrifying study of a child killer and for other tales of suspense died yesterday in Los Angeles at the age of 85 He had been ill for some time and had been inactive professionally for a decade Dixon Wheeler Winston 1993 Early Film Criticism of Francois Truffaut Indiana University Press pp 41 42 ISBN 0 253 11343 1 French Philip January 2 2000 Without Fritz there d be no Star Wars The Observer ISSN 0029 7712 Retrieved July 7 2020 Fritz Lang s M the blueprint for the serial killer movie British Film Institute Retrieved July 7 2020 BBC Radio 4 In Our Time Fritz Lang Preserved Projects Academy Film Archive Fritz Lang papers circa 1909 1973 1931 1973 Further reading EditMichaux Agnes fr Je les chasserai jusqu au bout du monde jusqu a ce qu ils en crevent Paris Editions n 1 1997 ISBN 2 86391 933 4 Friedrich Otto City of Nets A Portrait of Hollywood in the 1940s New York Harper amp Row 1986 ISBN 0 06 015626 0 See e g pp 45 46 for anecdotes revealing Lang s arrogance McGilligan Patrick Fritz Lang The Nature of the Beast New York St Martin s Press 1997 ISBN 0 312 13247 6 Schnauber Cornelius Fritz Lang in Hollywood Wien Europaverlag 1986 ISBN 3 203 50953 9 in German Shaw Dan Great Directors Fritz Lang Senses of Cinema issue 22 October 2002 Youngkin Stephen 2005 The Lost One A Life of Peter Lorre University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 2360 7 contains interviews with Lang and a discussion of the making of the film M External links Edit Media related to Fritz Lang at Wikimedia Commons Works by or about Fritz Lang at Internet Archive Fritz Lang at IMDb Fritz Lang Bibliography via UC Berkeley Media Resources Center Senses of Cinema Biographie Fritz Lang at filmportal de Photos of Fritz Lang and cast of Hangmen Also Die by Ned Scott The Fritz Lang papers at the American Heritage Center Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fritz Lang amp oldid 1132178276, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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