Two men exchange
horror stories that they have witnessed. One, Francis, recounts the tale of a
strange attraction in a fair ground: a sinister mesmerist named Dr. Caligari
and his eerie somnambulist Cesare. Shortly after the pair arrive in a town a
string of mysterious murders start happening and Francis is sure that Caligari
is involved. The plot thickens when he discovers that Caligari is director of a
lunatic asylum and obsessed with an old article of psychiatric mesmerism.
When
we think about silent 1920s cinema, many of us forget about the fantastical and
distorted images that Georges Melies made into moving pictures. Images that are
dated yes, but still hold their intrigue and power to frighten or enliven
audiences.
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari
is a film that seeks to return to a time when cinema was not so intent upon
recreating reality, by dragging its audiences into a world of strangeness and
mystery. From the first scene of an almost spectral woman floating past two men
to the final scene of the hero in a straitjacket, nothing in this film is what
it seems and everything is made to be distorted and unbelievable.
The timeless
creepiness of Dr. Caligari comes
namely in the visual spectacle of the film. A large part of the film is of
course in black and white, but there are three filters of green, purple, and
dull red that add complexity and atmosphere to the scenes where they are used.
The film is shot more as a stage play, with the camera remaining centre-fixed
all the time and the actors and sets doing all of the work. Whilst the
performances aren’t as overdone as in Metropolis,
they are still larger than life and the costumes and makeup work in perfect
tandem with them to create suspense, beauty, and horror.
Casare the
somnambulist, whilst really just a tall, thin, and pasty man who sleeps a lot,
is made profoundly haunting by the heavy use of eye and lip makeup that is
traditional with stage plays. In those close-ups of his face, he suddenly
becomes the stuff of nightmares as he slinks through the town in his black bodystocking
armed with a knife.
Stage style eye and lip makeup also create such beauty and
poise within the heroine, making her very elegant and pure: a real damsel.
But
without a doubt the standout of the film and the title of leading man and lady
go to anyone and everyone concerned with the set design and execution.
Expressionist designers Hermann Warm, Walter Roehrig, and Walter Reimann have
created this incredibly distorted and caricatured set of the town and the
rooms, giving the film an almost puppet-show quality. There is absolutely no
straight line to be seen, shadows are elongated and tipped at angles from
whichever way they are lit, characters of authority sit hunched up on
humorously high chairs, and the patterns that decorate the interiors of
prominent buildings are both beautiful and uncanny when blended with the film’s
context.
If we are to take a slight Freudian angle, this movie is a wonderful
display of the uncanny: taking something familiar and friendly and turning it
inside out to become different and terrifying. Theatre, puppet shows, and fair
grounds become sources of peril and suspense and this is where the true horror of
Dr. Caligari lies.
That and the
unsettling Wizard of Oz-esque ending
that leaves you staring at the screen with your mouth hanging open.
Starring
Werner Krauss, Conrad Veidt, Friedrich Feher, Lil Dagover, Hans Heinrich von
Twardowski, Rudolph Lettinger, and Rudolph Klein-Rogge, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari is a captivating and unsettling
landmark of cinema that still has power to thrill and captivate modern
audiences: history, culture, art, and theatre are all represented within this
film. Filled with suspense, romance, drama, and horror, it’s a remarkable piece
of cinema.
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