Spione Spies Masters Of Cinema Series | Desertcart Japan
Spione (Spies) - Masters of Cinema series
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Newly restored to its original length, Fritz Lang's penultimate silent film, Spione [Spies], is a flawlessly constructed labyrinthine spy thriller. Hugely influential, Lang's famous passion for meticulous detail combines with masterful storytelling and editing skills to form a relentless story of intrigue, espionage, and blackmail. An international spy ring, headed by Haghi (Rudolf Klein-Rogge), uses technology, threats, and murder to obtain government secrets. As master spy, president of a bank, and music hall clown, Haghi leads several lives using instruments of modern technology to spearhead a mad rush for secrets — secrets that assert his power over others. Setting in stone for the first time many elements of the modern spy thriller, Spione remains remarkably fresh and captivating over 75 years since its first release. Lang carefully reveals the elaborate methods of the spies as they move through his unknown city, no doubt creating a mirror of troubled Weimar Germany. Made by Lang's own production company and, like M and Metropolis, written by Lang with his wife Thea von Harbou, Spione is "the Grandaddy of decades of intrigue epics. In its rigorous austerity it remains the most modern of the bunch." (Elliott Stein, Village Voice).
Synopsis
An international spy ring, headed by Haghi (Rudolf Klein-Rogge), uses technology, threats and murder to obtain government secrets. As master spy, president of a bank, and music hall clown, Haghi leads several lives using instruments of modern technology to spearhead a mad rush for secrets; secrets that assert his power over others. Agent No 326 (Fritsch) is ordered to stop the spy ring but instead falls in love with one of the spies... Fritz Lang's espionage epic, his penultimate silent film newly restored to its original length! A flawlessly constructed labyrinthine spy thriller and hugely influential, Lang's famous passion for meticulous detail combines with masterful storytelling and editing skills to form a relentless story of intrigue, espionage, and blackmail.
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From the Back Cover
An international spy ring, headed by Haghi (Rudolf Klein-Rogge), uses technology, threats, and murder to obtain government secrets. As master spy, president of a bank, and music hall clown, Haghi leads several lives using instruments of modern technology to spearhead a mad rush for secrets — secrets that assert his power over others. Setting in stone for the first time many elements of the modern spy thriller, Spione remains remarkably fresh and captivating over 75 years since its first release. Lang carefully reveals the elaborate methods of the spies as they move through his unknown city, no doubt creating a mirror of troubled Weimar Germany. Made by Lang's own production company and, like M and Metropolis, written by Lang with his wife Thea von Harbou, Spione is "the Grandaddy of decades of intrigue epics. In its rigorous austerity it remains the most modern of the bunch." (Elliott Stein, Village Voice).
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F**F
Lang's Marvelous Exploration of Modernity Hits the Heights
Fritz Lang's 1928 silent espionage thriller, Spione (Spies) is one of his very best films and one of the best silent films period. Masters of Cinema present it here in a terrific pin-sharp Friedrich-Wilhelm-Murnau-Stiftung restoration which runs the full 145m and does full justice to Lang's terrific visual sense, Fritz Arno Wagner's astounding photography and Otto Hunte and Karl Vollbrecht's top art direction. The film is presented with an electronic score by Donald Sosin (not the original Werner R. Heymann and Artur Guttmann score used for the premiere) which drives the narrative forward superbly. Some might want a more 'natural' symphonic score, but the electronic effects are completely in tune with Lang's modernist project. The scoring for the build up to the train crash I found especially gripping. There are few of the extras one has come to expect from this source, but the Jonathan Rosenbaum review 'Inside the Vault' is interesting as is the production gallery of photographs on the DVD itself. There is no commentary, but this isn't as damaging as the lack of one for the Eureka Dr. Mabuse, the Gambler release which I recently reviewed. There, some knowledge of Weimar Republic history is essential for a full appreciation (perhaps that is provided by David Kalat in the commentary for the more recently-released MoC complete Mabuse edition which I haven't seen). Spione, however, is remarkable for lacking any of Dr. Mabuse's social critique, existing completely divorced from the socio-economic conditions of the time. I would certainly welcome a commentary telling us more about Lang's superb editing, his extraordinarily innovative use of off-screen space, the striking narrative ellipses and (in a film where the camera rarely moves) the terrific sense of movement present in almost every frame. We all have eyes I suppose, so my advice is simply watch carefully and discover the film's astonishingly effective precision story-telling for yourselves. If you want a close analysis, then I recommend the chapter on Spione in Tom Gunning's excellent book, Fritz Lang: Allegories of Vision and Modernity.Viewed casually Spione doesn't seem to be 'Ein Fritz Lang Film' at all. Gone is the gloomy-doomy politico-socio-economic analysis of post-war Germany of Dr. Mabuse. Gone too, are the utopian architectural visual effects and fastidious crowd-control of Metropolis. And gone (apart from the odd scene or two) is the explicit Expressionism which informs Die Spinnen, Der mude Tod as well as Mabuse and Metropolis. New for Lang is a fresh obsession with close-up framing, a liberal splash of (very effective) comedy, an extraordinarily rapid cutting style, the afore-mentioned stunning use of off-screen space, a sentimental love story, and even a happy ending. In Spione Lang threw all his established film know-how up into the air and reformulated what would become through M the recognizable Lang style of the best films of his American years even if he never again recaptured this film's effervescence. Above all else in Spione is a sense of sheer joy at playing with the essentials of film-making (camera, editing, story-telling, acting) as if for the first time. Anybody dismissive of Lang as being a cold, manipulative purveyor of Teutonic gloom should view this and think again.Spione may bring fresh technique to Lang's cinematic style, but look beneath the glittering surface of plots and counter-plots in this spy yarn, and the film is as Langian as any he ever made. First and foremost, the film is the second of his master criminal movies (if we exclude the slightly different Die Spinnen) and a useful way into it is a simple comparison with Dr. Mabuse, the Gambler. The similarities are startling. Both films have Rudolf Klein-Rogge as their master criminals, Mabuse and Haghi respectively. Both films utilize similar framing devices. Both start with murder and the stealing of documents leading through extensive montage to pictures of the master criminals relaxed, job done. Mabuse's face is shown super-imposed over the empty stock exchange floor, a 'Master of the Universe'. The forceful opening montage of explosive action in Spione ends with a police detective asking the rhetorical question, 'who is behind all this [mayhem]?' and the huge close up of Haghi's face and the title, 'I am'. Both films end on policemen breaking into buildings. Dr. Mabuse stages a last stand gunfight as he defends his house while Haghi lets loose gas to stop the Haghi Bank from being breached. Both films end with codas. Mabuse escapes to his counterfeiting factory where he goes mad while Haghi reverts to disguise as Nemo, the clown, finally killing himself on stage having been cornered by the police. The framework is similar, but Lang inserts important differences. Mabuse is introduced in his dressing room, leafing through various possible identities and is connected with the theft and murder by various technologies, the stop watch, the telephone, the train and the car. He prevails because he has control over technology and the process is closely (one could say 'laboriously') charted by Lang. Mabuse has to make the effort of fielding phone calls, disguising himself as the Russian diplomat and then the stockbroker before going to the stock exchange in person to effect his master-plan. Haghi operates on an altogether more sinister, unseen level. The theft and the murders are shown at such pace and with such breath-taking efficiency that we are blown away by the sheer control over technology Haghi commands, but without even seeing him do anything. Lang is suggesting here that the new technological surface evidenced in Spione is much more advanced, more efficient, more abstract with Haghi seemingly behind all evil all of the time. The endings of both films also show Haghi finishing with the advantage. Mabuse ends up mad, out of his mind. Haghi ends up dead, but he has absolute control over everything we see in the film right until the end. He has lost his power, but he can still manipulate events on the screen right up to the final curtain which he brings down himself.Fritz Lang's vision of modernity as consisting of a pattern of interlocking technological systems which feed one another is crucial for understanding how his films developed. These systems overlook and control mankind to the extent that in a Lang picture the protagonist is never in charge of his own fate. He is always locked into a 'destiny machine' (Tom Gunning's term) which determines his direction. All of Lang's films show characters trapped and manipulated by powers beyond their control so that fate, paranoia and fear of surveillance are the dominant forces that propel his narratives. At the beginning of both films, Mabuse and Haghi are locked into a destiny machine sending them towards complete omniscience. Later on, jolts in the relative workings of the interlocking systems of modernity puts a second party in control of the machine, dooming our master criminals to destruction. Mabuse is doomed when the detective chasing him (von Wenk) finally makes the connection between Sandor Weltmann, the conjuror, the elderly gambler who tricked him earlier and the psychoanalyst, Dr. Mabuse. He knows who Mabuse is and from that point he is in the driving seat. The core of the film's narrative rests on parallels drawn between Mabuse and von Wenk, master detective and master criminal who both use the same methods. With Haghi however, the destiny machine controling him changes course when his agent Sonja Baranikowa (Gerda Maurus) falls in love with ace secret agent, Number 326 (Willy Fritsch). It is the intrusion of desire, especially as magnificently spelled out in the train wreck when Sonja's love token (a Madonna and child amulet) falls on 326 waking him up and saving him from death, that spells out Haghi's demise. This is the first time in Lang's films that erotic desire has featured so prominently in disrupting the destiny of the main protagonists. This theme became even more important for Lang in America, especially with his trilogy of desire, The Woman in the Window, Scarlet Street and Secret Beyond the Door..., except by that time the Hollywood studio production code and Siegmund Freud had combined to ensure erotic desire was viewed as destructive rather than liberating.The sheer abstraction of the new technological surface in Lang's vision of modernity is rendered by the director in a number of ways. The action of the film is driven by a series of telephone messages, telegrams, overheard conversations, wire taps and coded communications, all of which intersect on Haghi's desk, behind which he sits (in a Dr. Strangelove-like wheelchair!), presiding over the world. He has complete control of surveillance and so can manipulate the multiple sub-plots that the film charts - the blackmailing of Lady Leslane (Hertha von Walther) to provide information in return for Haghi not exposing her opium addiction, the manipulation of Colonel Jellusic (Fritz Rasp) by Sonja into selling military secrets, the theft by Kitty (Liene Dyers) of a treaty signed by Japanese diplomat Matsumoto (Lupu Pick) which would influence the Far East political situation. We never know why Haghi needs the information. His identity is never revealed. Lang later said he had Trotsky in mind. Others have suggested Lenin. The only certainty is that he represents 'the threat to world peace', whatever that may be exactly. In fact we don't even know what country we are situated in (another contrast with Dr. Mabuse where we are never allowed to forget we are in Weimar Germany). Haghi seemingly 'lives' in Haghi Bank, but behind the main office is a bizarre set (the only Metropolis-like monolithic construction in Spione) which consists of a huge cage with metal passageways and stairs running in all directions with people rushing to and fro to suggest - what exactly? A spy factory? A prison? A hospital? The set is deliberately abstract to suggest Haghi's extraordinary command over the new technology. This is a command rendered by complete control of surveillance with characters being clearly defined ('marked for death' if you like) by surveillance photographs taken of them, and often just by abstract numbers. Note the photographs of agents and criminals which the police commander Jason (a very funny performance by Craighall Shaw) shows 326. All are of dead (or soon to be dead) people and are marked by numbers. Lang deliberately gives his hero a number for a name (326) while the double agent is simply '719'. Other numbers to appear are Jellusic's claim check number at the telegraph office (the ridiculous square root of 37083+6), Morrier's prison number (37), 326's hotel room number 119/120 and Sonja's address (24 Parkstrasse), and most clearly of all the number of the train car (LDZ 33 133 no.8) in which Haghi dooms 326 to death. The build up to the train crash is remarkable in the way the number (first seen by Sonja on Haghi's desk) reverberates in her brain (and in the film's editing), finally revealing that quite opposite to Haghi's promise of letting her go with 326 in exchange for her taking secrets out of the country, he is actually arranging 326's death. Spione is structured like a huge jigsaw puzzle with Haghi placing the pieces one by one to further his ultimate plans (whatever they may be). Love erupts to abrubtly change this plan so that it is Haghi who is trapped at the end with 326 and Sonja's erotic desire dissolving his power.Another distinctly Langian angle in Spione is the way characters tend to double each other. The powerful master criminal/master detective dialectic in Dr. Mabuse is reversed in Spione as Haghi's opposite number here (Jason) is deliberately played for fun by Lang. Haghi's complete mastery is mirrored you could say by Jason's complete absurdity. In the same way the film suggests the love of power (Haghi) mirroring the power of love (Sonja and 326's erotic attachment). In fact the film features two almost pornographic scenes which parallel each other. There's the scene where 326 meets Sonja in her apartment wherein he declines everything he is offered to be met by the question 'well, what DO you want?'. The camera cuts away as they hold hands and the series of images Lang gives us (including the first shop window to appear in a Lang film) lampoons the censorship controls of the time. When we go back to the couple they are still holding hands in the same position, but the time of day has obviously changed. We KNOW they have just made love even if Lang is not allowed to show it. Sonja's eventual spurning of 326 as she is called away to deal with Jellusic finishes with 326 finding her apartment completely empty. His (for the moment) loss of love is mirrored by Matsumoto's loss of love when he learns that Kitty has stolen the important treaty from his case in the afterglow of their love-making. That scene where Kitty throws herself at Matsumoto sees her barely able to stay in the provocative kimono she wears for the occasion. Earlier in the film Lang even has 326 and Matsumoto meet in the Olympic Hotel and it is obvious that they are meant (destined) to be doppelgangers. Over-riding the whole film of course is the doubling of Haghi with Lang himself. Haghi's mysterious absolute control over all events portrayed mirrors exactly the reality of Lang's complete control over making the film even down to the fact that it's the first product of 'Fritz Lang GmbH', his own production company. Rosenbaum points out the doppelganger relationship between Klein-Rogge and Lang as the actor had been the partner of Thea von Harbou before she took up with Lang. Further complicating matters is the fact that Spione is based on a book by von Harbou which she wrote concurrant with the film and that also during the film Lang had a supposedly sado-masochistic sexual relationship with Gerda Maurus. Reality does impinge on the fancy of Spione's multiple sub-plots even if it wasn't the socio-economic reality of the time.Finally, there's Spione's huge influence on films and books - everything from Graham Greene to Ian Fleming and even Thomas Pynchon. Rosenbaum mentions Gravity's Rainbow, but the Pynchon book it most influences is V. This opens up the debate over Fritz Lang's place in the post-modern movement. If Spione (with it's paranoid world view which accepts abstraction and even confusion as a definition of the modern world) is a post-modern work, then that makes it an astonishingly prescient work of art for 1928. Just staying with film history, Spione certainly does bridge the gap between Louis Feuillade's serial-inspired works (especially Fantomas and Les Vampires) and Hitchcock's early spy thrillers. The 39 Steps is especially indebted to Spione from its depiction of paranoia in the world of spies to its direct allusion to 'the master criminal in charge of it all', and from its overt use of theatricality even down to its stealing of certain devices and motifs, like the bullet stopped by a book, except that in Spione it's stopped by a thick wad of cash! Then there is Spione's relationship to Metropolis which compares with North by Northwest's relationship to Vertigo. Spione and North by Northwest were deliberately meant as commercial rebounds to counteract the failures of the films that preceded them and both films' obsessions with spies and spying (a beautiful blonde serving as a pivot in both) make for obvious similarities. All in all, Spione is a remarkable film and it is amazing that it still seems to be languishing in neglect. I note the small number of reviews here on Amazon compared with those for Metropolis and even for Lang's next film, Woman on the Moon. This is crazy to me as Spione knocks both into a cocked hat. Buy this superlative MoC release and see what I mean.
K**M
Lang’s Influential Espionage Caper
The influence of Fritz Lang’s 1928 silent film Spione ('Spies’) has been widely acknowledged, from the espionage classics of Alfred Hitchcock (the 'MacGuffin’ here – a ‘Japanese secret treaty’ – making me think immediately of The 39 Steps) through to the James Bond films. But, Spione is not only a fast-moving mix of comedy, romance, subterfuge and criminal megalomania, but it is also a prime example (perhaps the prime example that I’ve seen) of Lang’s mastery of the art of silent era story-telling – full of subtle plot pointers and oblique motifs and references (blink and you’ll miss them – which is why Spione requires multiple viewings for full appreciation) – a talent Lang was to further exploit throughout his career, perhaps most compellingly in his masterpiece, M. The other particularly notable elements about Lang’s film are its focus (as noted by Jonathan Rosenbuam in his excellent essay on the film in the Masters of Cinema version) on the criminal side of the 'good vs. evil’ divide – here, the scenes between Rudolf Klein-Rogge’s criminal mastermind, the audacious (Dr Strangelove-like) wheelchair-bound Haghi, and Gerda Maurus‘ coerced spy, Sonya Baranilkowa, are (for me) easily the most engaging – and the film’s (for the time) risqué sexual content (I’m sure the sight of Sonya writhing, BDSM-style, on Haghi’s 'restraining chair’ would certainly never have made it through the US censors of the time!).Of course, as well as being a film whose success is heavily dependent on its (admittedly rather convoluted!) plotting, characterisations and acting performances, Spione also provides another stunning (and prescient) sensorial treat for cinema-goers. In addition to the skilful translation of the evocative art design of Otto Hunte and Karl Vollbrecht (Haghi’s underworld labyrinth, time passing during No. 326 and Sonya’s 'mutual seduction’, the boxing ring-cum-nightclub, the hallucinatory world of Lupu Pick’s Japanese diplomat, Dr Masimoto, the spectacular train crash, the criminals’ chase to the Hotel Atlantic, etc) into the often stark visual imagery of the restored MoC film version, cinematographer Fritz Arno Wagner follows the tradition of Lang’s visual collaborators with some lingering facial close-ups (again, particularly of Haghi and Sonya) accentuating the film’s emotional punch – and promoting Lang’s unerring eye for the idiosyncratic beauty of the female form, here particularly Maurus and Lien Deyers (the latter as seductress, Kitty, of Dr Masimoto), Margarete Schon and Hanna Ralph from Die Nibelungen, and, from Lang’s US period, the likes of Sylvia Sidney, Joan Bennett and Gloria Grahame. For me, the other outstanding feature of the MoC version of the film is Donald Sosin’s original score – a mix of piano and ‘electronic music’ – mirroring the film’s moods, characterisations and plot to perfection and guaranteeing Spione a five star rating from this viewer (I have not heard the film’s original score by Werner R Heymann, but doubt that it could surpass Sosin’s).There are, of course, many other dimensions to, and features of, Lang’s film – Willy Fritsch’s endearing, at times Chaplinesque, performance, as No. 326; the skilful interweaving of the film’s disparate, and apparently 'random’, plots; the obsession with numbers and embryonic technology (and, more generally, the technical mechanics of the 'world of spies’ – miniature cameras, invisible ink, etc) – which have been written about extensively elsewhere, all of which contribute to what is a highly entertaining, technically accomplished and visionary piece of cinema.
N**R
Eureka!
It's difficult to believe that this was released in 1928, Lang described it as " a small film with a lot of action ", he wasn't kidding as it still knocks spots off so called ' actioners ' today. I was going to give it four stars because there are specks, minor scratches etc. on the print but that would be nitpicking. Even at 150 mins it never outstays it's welcome and the 72 mins documentary plus the 52 page booklet is the icing on the cake.
A**S
Deserves greater recognition
A Good Film is well worth seeing again and again. In many respects this film is the template for all future thrillers, spy films etc. The presentation and package was excellent. The availability of different musical soundtracks also great. I need to see this a number of times analysing why it is so good a movie. The Bond movies were not as original as we like to think but never mind this film may help us to appreciate the spy thriller films that came afterwards.
C**L
Silent but special
A very interesting film. Not usually a fan of silent films but this is well worth a watch
B**N
Four Stars
good murnau movie and i have a pash for Gerda Maurus mmmmm.....
S**P
Both Standard DVD and BluRay together
These dual format disk sets are brilliant. Lovely collection of old films.
C**P
Three Stars
Not bad
E**N
Fritz Lang auf dem Weg in die Neue Sachlichkeit
Wie kann man »Spione« charakterisieren? Vielleicht erst mal: »Spione« ist ein eher ›kleiner‹ Film zwischen Fritz Langs beiden aufwändigen Science-Fiction-Filmen »Metropolis« (1927) und »Frau im Mond« (1929). Er ist, wie man damals sagte, ein ›Sensationsfilm‹, der zahlreiche übliche Kolportageelemente enthält und sich gleichzeitig auf viele aktuelle Ereignisse jener Jahre – vor allem auf kriminelle Vorkommnisse – bezieht. Letzteres arbeitet die in Deutschland produzierte Doku zum Film, die auf der Blu-ray beigegeben ist (71 Minuten, auf Deutsch mit optionalen englischen Untertiteln), sehr schön heraus.Zweitens könnte man sagen: »Spione« ist Langs Versuch, sich nach dem kommerziellen Desaster von »Metropolis« zu rehabilitieren. Die Ufa hatte ihn für das »Metropolis«-Debakel verantwortlich gemacht und versucht zu feuern, was aber aufgrund vertraglicher Bindungen nicht gelang. Lang musste nun jedoch zeigen, dass er die Fähigkeit besitzt, einen kommerziell erfolgreichen Film hinzulegen, und zwar ohne Budgetüberschreitungen. Was die Story angeht, griff er (wieder zusammen mit seiner damaligen Frau Thea von Harbou) auf Bewährtes zurück: die Idee einer im Geheimen operierenden Verbrecherorganisation mit zentralem Mastermind. Lang hatte das mit »Die Spinnen« (1919) zuerst erprobt, in »Vier um die Frau« (1921) zum Teil weitergesponnen und natürlich mit dem »Mabuse« (1922) zu einem Höhepunkt geführt. Der unter Druck stehende Lang geht also auf Nummer sicher und knüpft an seine frühen Erfolge an. Und so ist es kein Zufall, dass Mabuse-Darsteller Rudolf Klein-Rogge in »Spione« den ebenso mächtigen wie geheimnisvollen Chef des internationalen Spionagerings, Haghi, spielt.Drittens aber – und das macht den Film erst so richtig interessant – ist auch eine Neuorientierung in »Spione« zu erkennen. Lang rückt nicht nur vom Monumentalen ab (was sicherlich auch an den strikten Budgetvorgaben lag), sondern auch von dem oftmals ornamentalen Stil seiner früheren Filme. In »Spione« gibt es nichts Expressionistisches, nichts Gotisches und keinen Jugendstil mehr. Der Film sieht vielmehr aus wie ein Bekenntnis zum Stil der damaligen Jahre, nämlich der sogenannten Neuen Sachlichkeit. Schmucklosigkeit herrscht vor, klare geometrische Formen prägen das Bild. Das Spiel der Darsteller ist zurückgenommener als beispielsweise in »Metropolis«. Dazu kommt, dass Lang nun weniger innerhalb totaler oder halbtotaler Einstellungen inszeniert, als er Szenen vielmehr in unterschiedliche, präzise definierte Einzeleinstellungen auflöst. Das ist bereits der Stil von »M – Eine Stadt sucht einen Mörder« und von vielen der Lang’schen Hollywoodfilme.Insgesamt also sehr sehenswert, auch wenn »Spione« letztlich ein reiner Kolportagefilm ist, der aber dennoch als eine Art Seismograph der Stimmungen und Vorstellungen der späten Weimarer Republik fungiert (ähnlich wie der erste Mabuse-Film ein ›Zeitbild‹ der frühen Weimarer Republik war).Der lange Zeit nicht zugängliche Film wurde 2003/04 von der Friedrich-Wilhelm-Murnau-Stiftung restauriert. Die vorliegende Dual-Format-Edition aus der exzellenten ›Masters-of-Cinema‹-Reihe bietet die Wahl zwischen zwei Musikfassungen (von Donald Sosin und von Neil Brand). Der Film liegt mit den originalen (bzw. teilweise wiederhergestellten) deutschen Zwischentitel vor (mit optionalen englischen Untertiteln). Das 52-seitige Booklet enthält neben zeitgenössischem Material zwei informative Texte von Murielle Joudet und von Jonathan Rosenbaum.Fazit: Sicherlich nicht der größte aller Lang-Filme, aber unbedingt sehenswert. Die Dual-Format-Edition der ›Masters-of-Cinema‹-Reihe lässt nichts zu wünschen übrig.
J**4
Hervorragend restaurierte Annäherung an die Originalversion
"Spione" aus dem Jahr 1928 war ein Stummfilm des Regisseurs Fritz Lang, der bei der größten deutschen Filmfirma UFA angestellt war. Er war ein Superstar zu der Zeit, aber auch schwierig und für die Filmfirma unberechenbar. Er neigte dazu seine Budgets heillos zu überziehen und sein damals letzter Film "Metropolis" hätte die UFA fast in den Ruin getrieben und floppte zudem auch noch an der Kinokasse. Leider war er unkündbar, und sein Vertrag sah noch zwei Filme für die UFA vor. Um sich zu rehabilitieren musste er zeigen, dass er auch kostengünstig erfolgreiche Filme drehen konnte. Sein nicht zu überschreitendes Budget betrug deshalb gerade einmal ein Sechstel der Produktionskosten von "Metropolis". Und tatsächlich blieb er im Rahmen des Erwarteten und legte trotzdem einen Film vor der für damalige Verhältnisse äußerst erfolgreich war. Das verdankte er vor allem seinem Riecher für die besten verfügbaren Schauspieler. Entweder waren sie schon große Stars oder wurden es durch diesen Film.Rudolf Klein-Rogge spielte als Ex-Mann seiner Frau und Drehbuchautorin Thea von Harbou schon seit "Der Müde Tod"(1921) für Lang, und war auch zum Beispiel durch Robert Wienes "Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari" sehr berühmt. Auch hier liefert er als Oberspion Haghi in wechselnden Masken eine grandiose Performance. Seinen Gegenpol bei der Polizei "Nr. 326"spielte Willy Fritsch, der bis dato und auch in späteren Rollen ("Die drei von der Tankstelle") vor allem auf strahlende Liebhaber abonniert war. Es machte ihm sichtlich Spaß, in den ersten Szenen des Films als heruntergekommener Penner eingeführt zu werden. Begleitet wird er von einem Diener, gespielt von Paul Hörbiger, für den der Film zum Karrieresprungbrett wurde. Verliebt in Nr 326 ist die Spionin Sonja, gespielt von der Theaterschauspielerin Gerda Maurus, die ebenfalls noch keine Filmschauspielerfahrung vorweisen konnte, und für die Lang bald seine Frau Thea von Harbou verliess. Wenn man ihre Wirkung im Film beobachtet kann man ihn gut verstehen. Auch für sie wurde der Streifen der Start einer Filmkarriere, ebenso wie für die zweite nennenswerte weibliche Rolle, die Spionin Lien Deyers. Weitere Rollen wurden von dem damals bekannten Regisseur Lupu Pick und dem seit 1916 im Film tätigen Fritz Rasp belegt, der in Metropolis den "Schmalen" gespielt hatte.Mit 150 Minuten nähert sich die Restauration der Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau Stiftung von 2014 der Originallänge an, die angeblich einmal 170 Minuten betrug. Restaurierung heisst in diesem Fall nicht dass nur die Bildqualität bearbeitet wurde. Jede Szene wurde von Lang dreimal gedreht und in verschiedenen Filmfassungen eingesetzt. Für diese Version wurden die besten Fassungen weltweit zusammengetragen und verwertet. Eine 71 Minuten lange Dokumentation über die Entstehung des Films beleuchtet dieses sehr gut und ist auch ansonsten unglaublich informativ. Die Bildqualität des 90 Jahre alten Films ist übrigens phänomenal. Wie immer bei "Eureka!" enthält das Package eine DVD und eine Blu-ray. Nur auf letzterer ist die Doku enthalten. Gratis dabei gibt es noch ein 52-seitiges Booklet. filmisch ist das werk natürlich auch nicht zu verachten. Übrigens ist der Film mit zwei verschiedenen Musikspuren aufgespielt, einmal dem Originalscore und zweitens einem Pianosoundtrack.
I**I
Una bella sorpresa
Non conoscevo questo film e sono rimasto colpito dalla velocità del montaggio iniziale, degno degli attuali action movies.Bellissimo il personaggio negativo. Un altro archetipo creato da Lang.
P**E
les espions allemands
vivent les espions de Lang ! un film terrible d'espionnage, dans des noirs et blancs somptueux. et un silence de bon aloi. très bon envoi
J**N
Ein MUSS!
Möchte ich wirklich dringend allen empfehlen, die sich für Stummfilm und die 20er interessieren! Ein hervorragender Film, wieder mal fantastisch restauriert von der Murnau Stiftung in Wiesbaden. IN einer tollen Edition mit Blu-ray und DVD. Auf der Bluray findet sich noch eine sehr tolle Doku mit INterviews der Kinder der Hauptdarsteller Fritsch und Maurus und vielen Hintergründen zur Entstehung des Films. Und ein 54seitiges Booklet. Das ist wirklich unschlagbar!
R**K
Großartig.
Wer bislang schon meinte, James-Bond-Filme seien alle gleich - aber vielleicht auch wer ein Fan der Reihe ist sollte unbedingt diesen Film ansehen: getarnte Hauptquartiere, größenwahnsinnige Superschurken mit High-Tech-Equipment und unendlich viel Geld, Mordversuche in Zügen, korrupte Militärs, gefährliche Frauen in heißen Fummeln und ein herzensbrechender Agent, der in schwachen Momenten Whisky trinkt. All das meisterhaft inszeniert und wirklich spannend in einem schwarz-weißen (!) Stummfilm (!!) von 1927 (!!!).Allein schon für die Zugszene gegen Ende lohnt der ganze Film. Die Bluray in TOP-Qualität und vorzüglicher Ausstattung.
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An international spy ring, headed by Haghi (Rudolf Klein-Rogge), uses technology, threats, and murder to obtain government secrets. As master spy, president of a bank, and music hall clown, Haghi leads several lives using instruments of modern technology to spearhead a mad rush for secrets secrets that assert his power over others. Setting in stone for the first time many elements of the modern spy thriller, Spione remains remarkably fresh and captivating over 75 years since its first release. Lang carefully reveals the elaborate methods of the spies as they move through his unknown city, no doubt creating a mirror of troubled Weimar Germany. Made by Lang's own production company and, like M and Metropolis, written by Lang with his wife Thea von Harbou, Spione is "the Grandaddy of decades of intrigue epics. In its rigorous austerity it remains the most modern of the bunch." (Elliott Stein, Village Voice).\n\n
","image":["https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51vftGgFbiL.jpg"],"offers":{"@type":"Offer","priceCurrency":"JPY","price":"2605.00","itemCondition":"https://schema.org/NewCondition","availability":"https://schema.org/InStock","shippingDetails":{"deliveryTime":{"@type":"ShippingDeliveryTime","minValue":25,"maxValue":25,"unitCode":"d"}}},"category":"thriller","review":[{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"F***F"},"datePublished":"Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 26 June 2013","name":"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n \n Lang's Marvelous Exploration of Modernity Hits the Heights\n \n","reviewBody":"Fritz Lang's 1928 silent espionage thriller, Spione (Spies) is one of his very best films and one of the best silent films period. Masters of Cinema present it here in a terrific pin-sharp Friedrich-Wilhelm-Murnau-Stiftung restoration which runs the full 145m and does full justice to Lang's terrific visual sense, Fritz Arno Wagner's astounding photography and Otto Hunte and Karl Vollbrecht's top art direction. The film is presented with an electronic score by Donald Sosin (not the original Werner R. Heymann and Artur Guttmann score used for the premiere) which drives the narrative forward superbly. Some might want a more 'natural' symphonic score, but the electronic effects are completely in tune with Lang's modernist project. The scoring for the build up to the train crash I found especially gripping. There are few of the extras one has come to expect from this source, but the Jonathan Rosenbaum review 'Inside the Vault' is interesting as is the production gallery of photographs on the DVD itself. There is no commentary, but this isn't as damaging as the lack of one for the Eureka Dr. Mabuse, the Gambler release which I recently reviewed. There, some knowledge of Weimar Republic history is essential for a full appreciation (perhaps that is provided by David Kalat in the commentary for the more recently-released MoC complete Mabuse edition which I haven't seen). Spione, however, is remarkable for lacking any of Dr. Mabuse's social critique, existing completely divorced from the socio-economic conditions of the time. I would certainly welcome a commentary telling us more about Lang's superb editing, his extraordinarily innovative use of off-screen space, the striking narrative ellipses and (in a film where the camera rarely moves) the terrific sense of movement present in almost every frame. We all have eyes I suppose, so my advice is simply watch carefully and discover the film's astonishingly effective precision story-telling for yourselves. If you want a close analysis, then I recommend the chapter on Spione in Tom Gunning's excellent book, Fritz Lang: Allegories of Vision and Modernity.Viewed casually Spione doesn't seem to be 'Ein Fritz Lang Film' at all. Gone is the gloomy-doomy politico-socio-economic analysis of post-war Germany of Dr. Mabuse. Gone too, are the utopian architectural visual effects and fastidious crowd-control of Metropolis. And gone (apart from the odd scene or two) is the explicit Expressionism which informs Die Spinnen, Der mude Tod as well as Mabuse and Metropolis. New for Lang is a fresh obsession with close-up framing, a liberal splash of (very effective) comedy, an extraordinarily rapid cutting style, the afore-mentioned stunning use of off-screen space, a sentimental love story, and even a happy ending. In Spione Lang threw all his established film know-how up into the air and reformulated what would become through M the recognizable Lang style of the best films of his American years even if he never again recaptured this film's effervescence. Above all else in Spione is a sense of sheer joy at playing with the essentials of film-making (camera, editing, story-telling, acting) as if for the first time. Anybody dismissive of Lang as being a cold, manipulative purveyor of Teutonic gloom should view this and think again.Spione may bring fresh technique to Lang's cinematic style, but look beneath the glittering surface of plots and counter-plots in this spy yarn, and the film is as Langian as any he ever made. First and foremost, the film is the second of his master criminal movies (if we exclude the slightly different Die Spinnen) and a useful way into it is a simple comparison with Dr. Mabuse, the Gambler. The similarities are startling. Both films have Rudolf Klein-Rogge as their master criminals, Mabuse and Haghi respectively. Both films utilize similar framing devices. Both start with murder and the stealing of documents leading through extensive montage to pictures of the master criminals relaxed, job done. Mabuse's face is shown super-imposed over the empty stock exchange floor, a 'Master of the Universe'. The forceful opening montage of explosive action in Spione ends with a police detective asking the rhetorical question, 'who is behind all this [mayhem]?' and the huge close up of Haghi's face and the title, 'I am'. Both films end on policemen breaking into buildings. Dr. Mabuse stages a last stand gunfight as he defends his house while Haghi lets loose gas to stop the Haghi Bank from being breached. Both films end with codas. Mabuse escapes to his counterfeiting factory where he goes mad while Haghi reverts to disguise as Nemo, the clown, finally killing himself on stage having been cornered by the police. The framework is similar, but Lang inserts important differences. Mabuse is introduced in his dressing room, leafing through various possible identities and is connected with the theft and murder by various technologies, the stop watch, the telephone, the train and the car. He prevails because he has control over technology and the process is closely (one could say 'laboriously') charted by Lang. Mabuse has to make the effort of fielding phone calls, disguising himself as the Russian diplomat and then the stockbroker before going to the stock exchange in person to effect his master-plan. Haghi operates on an altogether more sinister, unseen level. The theft and the murders are shown at such pace and with such breath-taking efficiency that we are blown away by the sheer control over technology Haghi commands, but without even seeing him do anything. Lang is suggesting here that the new technological surface evidenced in Spione is much more advanced, more efficient, more abstract with Haghi seemingly behind all evil all of the time. The endings of both films also show Haghi finishing with the advantage. Mabuse ends up mad, out of his mind. Haghi ends up dead, but he has absolute control over everything we see in the film right until the end. He has lost his power, but he can still manipulate events on the screen right up to the final curtain which he brings down himself.Fritz Lang's vision of modernity as consisting of a pattern of interlocking technological systems which feed one another is crucial for understanding how his films developed. These systems overlook and control mankind to the extent that in a Lang picture the protagonist is never in charge of his own fate. He is always locked into a 'destiny machine' (Tom Gunning's term) which determines his direction. All of Lang's films show characters trapped and manipulated by powers beyond their control so that fate, paranoia and fear of surveillance are the dominant forces that propel his narratives. At the beginning of both films, Mabuse and Haghi are locked into a destiny machine sending them towards complete omniscience. Later on, jolts in the relative workings of the interlocking systems of modernity puts a second party in control of the machine, dooming our master criminals to destruction. Mabuse is doomed when the detective chasing him (von Wenk) finally makes the connection between Sandor Weltmann, the conjuror, the elderly gambler who tricked him earlier and the psychoanalyst, Dr. Mabuse. He knows who Mabuse is and from that point he is in the driving seat. The core of the film's narrative rests on parallels drawn between Mabuse and von Wenk, master detective and master criminal who both use the same methods. With Haghi however, the destiny machine controling him changes course when his agent Sonja Baranikowa (Gerda Maurus) falls in love with ace secret agent, Number 326 (Willy Fritsch). It is the intrusion of desire, especially as magnificently spelled out in the train wreck when Sonja's love token (a Madonna and child amulet) falls on 326 waking him up and saving him from death, that spells out Haghi's demise. This is the first time in Lang's films that erotic desire has featured so prominently in disrupting the destiny of the main protagonists. This theme became even more important for Lang in America, especially with his trilogy of desire, The Woman in the Window, Scarlet Street and Secret Beyond the Door..., except by that time the Hollywood studio production code and Siegmund Freud had combined to ensure erotic desire was viewed as destructive rather than liberating.The sheer abstraction of the new technological surface in Lang's vision of modernity is rendered by the director in a number of ways. The action of the film is driven by a series of telephone messages, telegrams, overheard conversations, wire taps and coded communications, all of which intersect on Haghi's desk, behind which he sits (in a Dr. Strangelove-like wheelchair!), presiding over the world. He has complete control of surveillance and so can manipulate the multiple sub-plots that the film charts - the blackmailing of Lady Leslane (Hertha von Walther) to provide information in return for Haghi not exposing her opium addiction, the manipulation of Colonel Jellusic (Fritz Rasp) by Sonja into selling military secrets, the theft by Kitty (Liene Dyers) of a treaty signed by Japanese diplomat Matsumoto (Lupu Pick) which would influence the Far East political situation. We never know why Haghi needs the information. His identity is never revealed. Lang later said he had Trotsky in mind. Others have suggested Lenin. The only certainty is that he represents 'the threat to world peace', whatever that may be exactly. In fact we don't even know what country we are situated in (another contrast with Dr. Mabuse where we are never allowed to forget we are in Weimar Germany). Haghi seemingly 'lives' in Haghi Bank, but behind the main office is a bizarre set (the only Metropolis-like monolithic construction in Spione) which consists of a huge cage with metal passageways and stairs running in all directions with people rushing to and fro to suggest - what exactly? A spy factory? A prison? A hospital? The set is deliberately abstract to suggest Haghi's extraordinary command over the new technology. This is a command rendered by complete control of surveillance with characters being clearly defined ('marked for death' if you like) by surveillance photographs taken of them, and often just by abstract numbers. Note the photographs of agents and criminals which the police commander Jason (a very funny performance by Craighall Shaw) shows 326. All are of dead (or soon to be dead) people and are marked by numbers. Lang deliberately gives his hero a number for a name (326) while the double agent is simply '719'. Other numbers to appear are Jellusic's claim check number at the telegraph office (the ridiculous square root of 37083+6), Morrier's prison number (37), 326's hotel room number 119/120 and Sonja's address (24 Parkstrasse), and most clearly of all the number of the train car (LDZ 33 133 no.8) in which Haghi dooms 326 to death. The build up to the train crash is remarkable in the way the number (first seen by Sonja on Haghi's desk) reverberates in her brain (and in the film's editing), finally revealing that quite opposite to Haghi's promise of letting her go with 326 in exchange for her taking secrets out of the country, he is actually arranging 326's death. Spione is structured like a huge jigsaw puzzle with Haghi placing the pieces one by one to further his ultimate plans (whatever they may be). Love erupts to abrubtly change this plan so that it is Haghi who is trapped at the end with 326 and Sonja's erotic desire dissolving his power.Another distinctly Langian angle in Spione is the way characters tend to double each other. The powerful master criminal/master detective dialectic in Dr. Mabuse is reversed in Spione as Haghi's opposite number here (Jason) is deliberately played for fun by Lang. Haghi's complete mastery is mirrored you could say by Jason's complete absurdity. In the same way the film suggests the love of power (Haghi) mirroring the power of love (Sonja and 326's erotic attachment). In fact the film features two almost pornographic scenes which parallel each other. There's the scene where 326 meets Sonja in her apartment wherein he declines everything he is offered to be met by the question 'well, what DO you want?'. The camera cuts away as they hold hands and the series of images Lang gives us (including the first shop window to appear in a Lang film) lampoons the censorship controls of the time. When we go back to the couple they are still holding hands in the same position, but the time of day has obviously changed. We KNOW they have just made love even if Lang is not allowed to show it. Sonja's eventual spurning of 326 as she is called away to deal with Jellusic finishes with 326 finding her apartment completely empty. His (for the moment) loss of love is mirrored by Matsumoto's loss of love when he learns that Kitty has stolen the important treaty from his case in the afterglow of their love-making. That scene where Kitty throws herself at Matsumoto sees her barely able to stay in the provocative kimono she wears for the occasion. Earlier in the film Lang even has 326 and Matsumoto meet in the Olympic Hotel and it is obvious that they are meant (destined) to be doppelgangers. Over-riding the whole film of course is the doubling of Haghi with Lang himself. Haghi's mysterious absolute control over all events portrayed mirrors exactly the reality of Lang's complete control over making the film even down to the fact that it's the first product of 'Fritz Lang GmbH', his own production company. Rosenbaum points out the doppelganger relationship between Klein-Rogge and Lang as the actor had been the partner of Thea von Harbou before she took up with Lang. Further complicating matters is the fact that Spione is based on a book by von Harbou which she wrote concurrant with the film and that also during the film Lang had a supposedly sado-masochistic sexual relationship with Gerda Maurus. Reality does impinge on the fancy of Spione's multiple sub-plots even if it wasn't the socio-economic reality of the time.Finally, there's Spione's huge influence on films and books - everything from Graham Greene to Ian Fleming and even Thomas Pynchon. Rosenbaum mentions Gravity's Rainbow, but the Pynchon book it most influences is V. This opens up the debate over Fritz Lang's place in the post-modern movement. If Spione (with it's paranoid world view which accepts abstraction and even confusion as a definition of the modern world) is a post-modern work, then that makes it an astonishingly prescient work of art for 1928. Just staying with film history, Spione certainly does bridge the gap between Louis Feuillade's serial-inspired works (especially Fantomas and Les Vampires) and Hitchcock's early spy thrillers. The 39 Steps is especially indebted to Spione from its depiction of paranoia in the world of spies to its direct allusion to 'the master criminal in charge of it all', and from its overt use of theatricality even down to its stealing of certain devices and motifs, like the bullet stopped by a book, except that in Spione it's stopped by a thick wad of cash! Then there is Spione's relationship to Metropolis which compares with North by Northwest's relationship to Vertigo. Spione and North by Northwest were deliberately meant as commercial rebounds to counteract the failures of the films that preceded them and both films' obsessions with spies and spying (a beautiful blonde serving as a pivot in both) make for obvious similarities. All in all, Spione is a remarkable film and it is amazing that it still seems to be languishing in neglect. I note the small number of reviews here on Amazon compared with those for Metropolis and even for Lang's next film, Woman on the Moon. This is crazy to me as Spione knocks both into a cocked hat. Buy this superlative MoC release and see what I mean."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"K***M"},"datePublished":"Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 23 July 2015","name":"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n \n Lang’s Influential Espionage Caper\n \n","reviewBody":"The influence of Fritz Lang’s 1928 silent film Spione ('Spies’) has been widely acknowledged, from the espionage classics of Alfred Hitchcock (the 'MacGuffin’ here – a ‘Japanese secret treaty’ – making me think immediately of The 39 Steps) through to the James Bond films. But, Spione is not only a fast-moving mix of comedy, romance, subterfuge and criminal megalomania, but it is also a prime example (perhaps the prime example that I’ve seen) of Lang’s mastery of the art of silent era story-telling – full of subtle plot pointers and oblique motifs and references (blink and you’ll miss them – which is why Spione requires multiple viewings for full appreciation) – a talent Lang was to further exploit throughout his career, perhaps most compellingly in his masterpiece, M. The other particularly notable elements about Lang’s film are its focus (as noted by Jonathan Rosenbuam in his excellent essay on the film in the Masters of Cinema version) on the criminal side of the 'good vs. evil’ divide – here, the scenes between Rudolf Klein-Rogge’s criminal mastermind, the audacious (Dr Strangelove-like) wheelchair-bound Haghi, and Gerda Maurus‘ coerced spy, Sonya Baranilkowa, are (for me) easily the most engaging – and the film’s (for the time) risqué sexual content (I’m sure the sight of Sonya writhing, BDSM-style, on Haghi’s 'restraining chair’ would certainly never have made it through the US censors of the time!).Of course, as well as being a film whose success is heavily dependent on its (admittedly rather convoluted!) plotting, characterisations and acting performances, Spione also provides another stunning (and prescient) sensorial treat for cinema-goers. In addition to the skilful translation of the evocative art design of Otto Hunte and Karl Vollbrecht (Haghi’s underworld labyrinth, time passing during No. 326 and Sonya’s 'mutual seduction’, the boxing ring-cum-nightclub, the hallucinatory world of Lupu Pick’s Japanese diplomat, Dr Masimoto, the spectacular train crash, the criminals’ chase to the Hotel Atlantic, etc) into the often stark visual imagery of the restored MoC film version, cinematographer Fritz Arno Wagner follows the tradition of Lang’s visual collaborators with some lingering facial close-ups (again, particularly of Haghi and Sonya) accentuating the film’s emotional punch – and promoting Lang’s unerring eye for the idiosyncratic beauty of the female form, here particularly Maurus and Lien Deyers (the latter as seductress, Kitty, of Dr Masimoto), Margarete Schon and Hanna Ralph from Die Nibelungen, and, from Lang’s US period, the likes of Sylvia Sidney, Joan Bennett and Gloria Grahame. For me, the other outstanding feature of the MoC version of the film is Donald Sosin’s original score – a mix of piano and ‘electronic music’ – mirroring the film’s moods, characterisations and plot to perfection and guaranteeing Spione a five star rating from this viewer (I have not heard the film’s original score by Werner R Heymann, but doubt that it could surpass Sosin’s).There are, of course, many other dimensions to, and features of, Lang’s film – Willy Fritsch’s endearing, at times Chaplinesque, performance, as No. 326; the skilful interweaving of the film’s disparate, and apparently 'random’, plots; the obsession with numbers and embryonic technology (and, more generally, the technical mechanics of the 'world of spies’ – miniature cameras, invisible ink, etc) – which have been written about extensively elsewhere, all of which contribute to what is a highly entertaining, technically accomplished and visionary piece of cinema."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"N***R"},"datePublished":"Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 3 January 2016","name":"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n \n Eureka!\n \n","reviewBody":"It's difficult to believe that this was released in 1928, Lang described it as \" a small film with a lot of action \", he wasn't kidding as it still knocks spots off so called ' actioners ' today. I was going to give it four stars because there are specks, minor scratches etc. on the print but that would be nitpicking. Even at 150 mins it never outstays it's welcome and the 72 mins documentary plus the 52 page booklet is the icing on the cake."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"A***S"},"datePublished":"Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 22 January 2015","name":"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n \n Deserves greater recognition\n \n","reviewBody":"A Good Film is well worth seeing again and again. In many respects this film is the template for all future thrillers, spy films etc. The presentation and package was excellent. The availability of different musical soundtracks also great. I need to see this a number of times analysing why it is so good a movie. The Bond movies were not as original as we like to think but never mind this film may help us to appreciate the spy thriller films that came afterwards."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"4.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"C***L"},"datePublished":"Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 23 January 2020","name":"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n \n Silent but special\n \n","reviewBody":"A very interesting film. Not usually a fan of silent films but this is well worth a watch"},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"4.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"B***N"},"datePublished":"Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 15 January 2017","name":"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n \n Four Stars\n \n","reviewBody":"good murnau movie and i have a pash for Gerda Maurus mmmmm....."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"S***P"},"datePublished":"Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 22 March 2018","name":"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n \n Both Standard DVD and BluRay together\n \n","reviewBody":"These dual format disk sets are brilliant. Lovely collection of old films."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"3.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"C***P"},"datePublished":"Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 6 April 2018","name":"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n \n Three Stars\n \n","reviewBody":"Not bad"},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"E***N"},"datePublished":"Reviewed in Germany on 25 December 2017","name":"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n Fritz Lang auf dem Weg in die Neue Sachlichkeit\n \n \n","reviewBody":"Wie kann man »Spione« charakterisieren? Vielleicht erst mal: »Spione« ist ein eher ›kleiner‹ Film zwischen Fritz Langs beiden aufwändigen Science-Fiction-Filmen »Metropolis« (1927) und »Frau im Mond« (1929). Er ist, wie man damals sagte, ein ›Sensationsfilm‹, der zahlreiche übliche Kolportageelemente enthält und sich gleichzeitig auf viele aktuelle Ereignisse jener Jahre – vor allem auf kriminelle Vorkommnisse – bezieht. Letzteres arbeitet die in Deutschland produzierte Doku zum Film, die auf der Blu-ray beigegeben ist (71 Minuten, auf Deutsch mit optionalen englischen Untertiteln), sehr schön heraus.Zweitens könnte man sagen: »Spione« ist Langs Versuch, sich nach dem kommerziellen Desaster von »Metropolis« zu rehabilitieren. Die Ufa hatte ihn für das »Metropolis«-Debakel verantwortlich gemacht und versucht zu feuern, was aber aufgrund vertraglicher Bindungen nicht gelang. Lang musste nun jedoch zeigen, dass er die Fähigkeit besitzt, einen kommerziell erfolgreichen Film hinzulegen, und zwar ohne Budgetüberschreitungen. Was die Story angeht, griff er (wieder zusammen mit seiner damaligen Frau Thea von Harbou) auf Bewährtes zurück: die Idee einer im Geheimen operierenden Verbrecherorganisation mit zentralem Mastermind. Lang hatte das mit »Die Spinnen« (1919) zuerst erprobt, in »Vier um die Frau« (1921) zum Teil weitergesponnen und natürlich mit dem »Mabuse« (1922) zu einem Höhepunkt geführt. Der unter Druck stehende Lang geht also auf Nummer sicher und knüpft an seine frühen Erfolge an. Und so ist es kein Zufall, dass Mabuse-Darsteller Rudolf Klein-Rogge in »Spione« den ebenso mächtigen wie geheimnisvollen Chef des internationalen Spionagerings, Haghi, spielt.Drittens aber – und das macht den Film erst so richtig interessant – ist auch eine Neuorientierung in »Spione« zu erkennen. Lang rückt nicht nur vom Monumentalen ab (was sicherlich auch an den strikten Budgetvorgaben lag), sondern auch von dem oftmals ornamentalen Stil seiner früheren Filme. In »Spione« gibt es nichts Expressionistisches, nichts Gotisches und keinen Jugendstil mehr. Der Film sieht vielmehr aus wie ein Bekenntnis zum Stil der damaligen Jahre, nämlich der sogenannten Neuen Sachlichkeit. Schmucklosigkeit herrscht vor, klare geometrische Formen prägen das Bild. Das Spiel der Darsteller ist zurückgenommener als beispielsweise in »Metropolis«. Dazu kommt, dass Lang nun weniger innerhalb totaler oder halbtotaler Einstellungen inszeniert, als er Szenen vielmehr in unterschiedliche, präzise definierte Einzeleinstellungen auflöst. Das ist bereits der Stil von »M – Eine Stadt sucht einen Mörder« und von vielen der Lang’schen Hollywoodfilme.Insgesamt also sehr sehenswert, auch wenn »Spione« letztlich ein reiner Kolportagefilm ist, der aber dennoch als eine Art Seismograph der Stimmungen und Vorstellungen der späten Weimarer Republik fungiert (ähnlich wie der erste Mabuse-Film ein ›Zeitbild‹ der frühen Weimarer Republik war).Der lange Zeit nicht zugängliche Film wurde 2003/04 von der Friedrich-Wilhelm-Murnau-Stiftung restauriert. Die vorliegende Dual-Format-Edition aus der exzellenten ›Masters-of-Cinema‹-Reihe bietet die Wahl zwischen zwei Musikfassungen (von Donald Sosin und von Neil Brand). Der Film liegt mit den originalen (bzw. teilweise wiederhergestellten) deutschen Zwischentitel vor (mit optionalen englischen Untertiteln). Das 52-seitige Booklet enthält neben zeitgenössischem Material zwei informative Texte von Murielle Joudet und von Jonathan Rosenbaum.Fazit: Sicherlich nicht der größte aller Lang-Filme, aber unbedingt sehenswert. Die Dual-Format-Edition der ›Masters-of-Cinema‹-Reihe lässt nichts zu wünschen übrig."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"J***4"},"datePublished":"Reviewed in Germany on 6 December 2018","name":"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n Hervorragend restaurierte Annäherung an die Originalversion\n \n \n","reviewBody":"\"Spione\" aus dem Jahr 1928 war ein Stummfilm des Regisseurs Fritz Lang, der bei der größten deutschen Filmfirma UFA angestellt war. Er war ein Superstar zu der Zeit, aber auch schwierig und für die Filmfirma unberechenbar. Er neigte dazu seine Budgets heillos zu überziehen und sein damals letzter Film \"Metropolis\" hätte die UFA fast in den Ruin getrieben und floppte zudem auch noch an der Kinokasse. Leider war er unkündbar, und sein Vertrag sah noch zwei Filme für die UFA vor. Um sich zu rehabilitieren musste er zeigen, dass er auch kostengünstig erfolgreiche Filme drehen konnte. Sein nicht zu überschreitendes Budget betrug deshalb gerade einmal ein Sechstel der Produktionskosten von \"Metropolis\". Und tatsächlich blieb er im Rahmen des Erwarteten und legte trotzdem einen Film vor der für damalige Verhältnisse äußerst erfolgreich war. Das verdankte er vor allem seinem Riecher für die besten verfügbaren Schauspieler. Entweder waren sie schon große Stars oder wurden es durch diesen Film.Rudolf Klein-Rogge spielte als Ex-Mann seiner Frau und Drehbuchautorin Thea von Harbou schon seit \"Der Müde Tod\"(1921) für Lang, und war auch zum Beispiel durch Robert Wienes \"Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari\" sehr berühmt. Auch hier liefert er als Oberspion Haghi in wechselnden Masken eine grandiose Performance. Seinen Gegenpol bei der Polizei \"Nr. 326\"spielte Willy Fritsch, der bis dato und auch in späteren Rollen (\"Die drei von der Tankstelle\") vor allem auf strahlende Liebhaber abonniert war. Es machte ihm sichtlich Spaß, in den ersten Szenen des Films als heruntergekommener Penner eingeführt zu werden. Begleitet wird er von einem Diener, gespielt von Paul Hörbiger, für den der Film zum Karrieresprungbrett wurde. Verliebt in Nr 326 ist die Spionin Sonja, gespielt von der Theaterschauspielerin Gerda Maurus, die ebenfalls noch keine Filmschauspielerfahrung vorweisen konnte, und für die Lang bald seine Frau Thea von Harbou verliess. Wenn man ihre Wirkung im Film beobachtet kann man ihn gut verstehen. Auch für sie wurde der Streifen der Start einer Filmkarriere, ebenso wie für die zweite nennenswerte weibliche Rolle, die Spionin Lien Deyers. Weitere Rollen wurden von dem damals bekannten Regisseur Lupu Pick und dem seit 1916 im Film tätigen Fritz Rasp belegt, der in Metropolis den \"Schmalen\" gespielt hatte.Mit 150 Minuten nähert sich die Restauration der Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau Stiftung von 2014 der Originallänge an, die angeblich einmal 170 Minuten betrug. Restaurierung heisst in diesem Fall nicht dass nur die Bildqualität bearbeitet wurde. Jede Szene wurde von Lang dreimal gedreht und in verschiedenen Filmfassungen eingesetzt. Für diese Version wurden die besten Fassungen weltweit zusammengetragen und verwertet. Eine 71 Minuten lange Dokumentation über die Entstehung des Films beleuchtet dieses sehr gut und ist auch ansonsten unglaublich informativ. Die Bildqualität des 90 Jahre alten Films ist übrigens phänomenal. Wie immer bei \"Eureka!\" enthält das Package eine DVD und eine Blu-ray. Nur auf letzterer ist die Doku enthalten. Gratis dabei gibt es noch ein 52-seitiges Booklet. filmisch ist das werk natürlich auch nicht zu verachten. Übrigens ist der Film mit zwei verschiedenen Musikspuren aufgespielt, einmal dem Originalscore und zweitens einem Pianosoundtrack."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"I***I"},"datePublished":"Reviewed in Italy on 19 October 2018","name":"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n Una bella sorpresa\n \n \n","reviewBody":"Non conoscevo questo film e sono rimasto colpito dalla velocità del montaggio iniziale, degno degli attuali action movies.Bellissimo il personaggio negativo. Un altro archetipo creato da Lang."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"P***E"},"datePublished":"Reviewed in France on 6 April 2018","name":"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n les espions allemands\n \n \n","reviewBody":"vivent les espions de Lang ! un film terrible d'espionnage, dans des noirs et blancs somptueux. et un silence de bon aloi. très bon envoi"},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"J***N"},"datePublished":"Reviewed in Germany on 4 February 2016","name":"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n Ein MUSS!\n \n \n","reviewBody":"Möchte ich wirklich dringend allen empfehlen, die sich für Stummfilm und die 20er interessieren! Ein hervorragender Film, wieder mal fantastisch restauriert von der Murnau Stiftung in Wiesbaden. IN einer tollen Edition mit Blu-ray und DVD. Auf der Bluray findet sich noch eine sehr tolle Doku mit INterviews der Kinder der Hauptdarsteller Fritsch und Maurus und vielen Hintergründen zur Entstehung des Films. Und ein 54seitiges Booklet. Das ist wirklich unschlagbar!"},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"R***K"},"datePublished":"Reviewed in Germany on 4 September 2016","name":"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n Großartig.\n \n \n","reviewBody":"Wer bislang schon meinte, James-Bond-Filme seien alle gleich - aber vielleicht auch wer ein Fan der Reihe ist sollte unbedingt diesen Film ansehen: getarnte Hauptquartiere, größenwahnsinnige Superschurken mit High-Tech-Equipment und unendlich viel Geld, Mordversuche in Zügen, korrupte Militärs, gefährliche Frauen in heißen Fummeln und ein herzensbrechender Agent, der in schwachen Momenten Whisky trinkt. All das meisterhaft inszeniert und wirklich spannend in einem schwarz-weißen (!) Stummfilm (!!) von 1927 (!!!).Allein schon für die Zugszene gegen Ende lohnt der ganze Film. Die Bluray in TOP-Qualität und vorzüglicher Ausstattung."}],"aggregateRating":{"@type":"AggregateRating","ratingValue":4.714285714285714,"bestRating":5,"ratingCount":14}}