REVIEW: DVD Release: Metropolis
Film: Metropolis
Release date: 22nd November 2010
Certificate: PG
Running time: 150 mins
Director: Fritz Lang
Starring: Alfred Abel, Gustav Fröhlich, Rudolf Klein-Rogge, Fritz Rasp, Theodor Loos
Genre: Action/Adventure/Drama/Romance/Sci-Fi/Thriller
Studio: Eureka!
Format: DVD & Blu-ray
Country: Germany
Considered by many for over eighty years to be the Holy Grail of lost films, the missing 25-minutes of the original version of Fritz Lang’s Metropolis has finally been found. The Austrian-born director’s 1927 tour de force has been fully restored and can now be seen in all its retro-style glory, just as Lang originally intended.
Metropolis is set in a futuristic city and tells the story of a down-trodden work-force being controlled by an industrial magnate called Joh Fredersen (Alfred Abel). The workers live and toil underground in harsh conditions, whilst the privileged high castes enjoy a luxurious life in the city above.
Fredersen’s cosseted son, Freder (Gustav Frolich), falls in love with the righteous Maria (Brigitte Helm) after she visits the Eternal Gardens with a group of children from the Lower City. Freder goes looking for the girl and is soon exposed to the horrendous state of affairs the workers are made to endure, and takes the place of a labourer who works a ten-hour shift working the hands of a giant clock machine.
Learning that Rotwang (Rudolf Klein-Rogge) has created a female robot as a replacement to their mutual lost lover Hel, Fredersen instructs the mad inventor to transform her into an evil double of Maria, whom Fredersen now sees as a threat, as she prophesises the coming of a ‘Mediator’ who will liberate the oppressed workers and their children, and to let her loose in the underworld…
The newly found footage, which was discovered in 2008 in Buenos Aires, now gives merit to the subplots that are woven into the script, written by Lang and his then-wife Thea Von Harbou, such as the rivalry between Rotwang and Fredersen over their past shared love for Hel, who died giving birth to her son Freder. It also restores the importance of the character Der Schmale (Fritz Rasp), the sinister assistant to Fredersen, whose limited scenes in the re-edited version made him appear insignificant.
With a quarter of the film reinstated, Metropolis can be seen as an epic film of many battles - religion against science, man against machine, liberation against oppression, and good against evil – and poses many questions, such as should man play at being God? Nowhere in the film is this question more apparent than in the scene where Rotwang transforms his metallic creation into the likeness of Maria, a scene that could have taken reference from the biblical story of Creation: “Then God said, ‘Let us make man in our image, according to our likeness, and let them rule over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.” However, once Rotwang starts to play God, all hell breaks loose and results in a ‘big flood’.
The film is rife with religious symbolism, such as the Star of David located on the wall behind the seated robot as it is being transformed into the likeness of Maria; the Tower of Babel where Fredersen rules over the workers of the underworld; the prophecy of an apocalypse made by a monk during a sermon; the seven deadly sins sequence; and, most noticeably, the character of Maria who represents angelic and compassionate qualities resembling those of the Virgin Mary.
The film also oozes eroticism - the robot’s hour-glass figure and graceful strut resembles that of a catwalk model; and Maria’s sexual magnetism and seductive prowess over the powerless hot-blooded men of the Eternal Garden who are left mesmerised by her hypnotic sensual dance performance.
Its magnificent visuals consisting of striking towering city blocks, inspired by the skyscrapers of New York, which he witnessed during his trip to America in 1924, still captivates film-lovers to this day. It has been reported that Lang was never satisfied with the filming of Metropolis unless he had three good takes of every shot, leading to extreme rehearsals and exhaustion within the actors. Although she was a newcomer to the acting world, Helm proved her worth by playing both the empathetic Maria and the seductive Maria convincingly. But she admitted at the time that the water sequences for the flooding scenes were a strain on her health, as was the wearing of the robot suit. Clamped in her wooden armament, made from malleable wood material which had just appeared on the market, Helm suffered from lack of air due to the shot taking so long.
Shortly after its premier, the film, which ran at a little under two-and-a-half hours, was considered far too long for American audiences and thus was savagely re-edited, much to Lang’s disgust, resulting in the storyline making little sense at all. The film was a major flop for the studio, and being the most expensive film ever made, at that time, it almost brought UFA to its knees. However, the film has built up a cult following over the years, and has gained the respect it so rightly deserves. And more than eighty years after its original release, Metropolis continues to mesmerise audiences and be an influence on contemporary filmmaking, a testament to Lang’s genius as a visionary.
The words groundbreaking, timeless, classic and masterpiece are shamelessly over-used in film critique, making them almost clichés. But these are words that accurately describe this work of cinematic art. There’s no denying, especially now that it can be seen in its entirety, as Lang intended, that Metropolis is the most important film of its genre, and undoubtedly one of the greatest films ever made. SLP
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