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Berlin - Die Sinfonie der Großstadt

  • 1927
  • Not Rated
  • 1 Std. 5 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,6/10
5042
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Edmund Meisel and Walter Ruttmann in Berlin - Die Sinfonie der Großstadt (1927)
Dokumentarfilm

Dieser Film zeigt uns einen Tag in Berlin: den Rhythmus der Zeit, vom frühen Morgen bis in die tiefe Nacht.Dieser Film zeigt uns einen Tag in Berlin: den Rhythmus der Zeit, vom frühen Morgen bis in die tiefe Nacht.Dieser Film zeigt uns einen Tag in Berlin: den Rhythmus der Zeit, vom frühen Morgen bis in die tiefe Nacht.

  • Regie
    • Walter Ruttmann
  • Drehbuch
    • Carl Mayer
    • Walter Ruttmann
    • Karl Freund
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Paul von Hindenburg
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,6/10
    5042
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Walter Ruttmann
    • Drehbuch
      • Carl Mayer
      • Walter Ruttmann
      • Karl Freund
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Paul von Hindenburg
    • 36Benutzerrezensionen
    • 24Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos24

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    Paul von Hindenburg
    Paul von Hindenburg
    • Self
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Walter Ruttmann
    • Drehbuch
      • Carl Mayer
      • Walter Ruttmann
      • Karl Freund
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
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    Snow Leopard

    A Fascinating Classic

    This fascinating classic never loses its ability to capture the attention and stimulate the imagination of its viewers. The technique is creative and resourceful, the photography is beautiful, and the images are memorable. Everything fits together to make the idea work wonderfully well.

    The opening sequence with the train is an exciting and well-conceived way to start the movie. As the pace picks up, the rush of images creates an abstract but very realistic sensation, and this train 'ride' is so enjoyable that you almost don't want it to stop.

    But it's when the train reaches the station that the main part of the movie begins, presenting a very interesting stylized portrait of a typical day in Berlin, through a carefully-chosen variety of scenes and sights. It's interesting to see how the train imagery keeps coming back from time to time, and this, along with the obvious passage of time as the day progresses, gives it a coherence that makes it much more than just a collage of interesting images and scenes.

    There are many interesting individual sequences, but what makes it such a gem is the way that everything fits together. The overall effect is remarkable, and it really has to be seen to be appreciated.
    chaos-rampant

    Neon flowers blossoming on the gates of the future

    Place: Berlin. Span: one day in the life of the city circa 1927 captured by the camera. We enter by train.

    One way to watch this, the most obvious I guess, is as a historic document, a snapshot of life as it was once. The old world just barely impregnated with faint traces of an archaic modernity; street cars, neon signs, busy streets, things we have now but were then just beginning to greet people. So with this mindset, as a museum piece that depicts an old version of our world.

    This is fine, but I urge you to engage it differently if you can.

    What if instead of merely observing exhibits from behind a glass panel, we get out from the museum into actual life? Instead of settling in for this as a historic - meaning dead, embalmed, academic - glimpse, we invigorate it with life that we know, with sunlight, texture, sound, breath that was then as real as it is now? How would it be in absolute stillness to feel present in the middle of a modern life?

    This is how the film was intended after all, it's plainly revealed this way. Not a fossil for generations of curious tourists from the future, but a celebration of life 'now', modern, busy life out the window.

    So no longer an old world that faintly reminds us of our own, but a new world, exciting, alluring, mysterious, alive with myriad possibilities. New things everywhere, novel pathways to travel, environments to experience. What I mean is, try to see the city as though you just got off the train and were visiting for the first time. It ends with the camera spinning around a flashing neon sign cut to match with fireworks erupting in the night sky.

    I urge you to inhabit this, settle for nothing less. Let its neon flowers blossom in you.
    8st-shot

    Incredible historical document of a lost city.

    Berlin, Symphony of a City is a remarkable historical document of the mighty city before its Wagnerian capitulation within less than twenty years of its filming. Along with Paris, Berlin was the epicenter of a Europe emerging from World War 1 into the Roaring Twenties and director Walter Ruttman for the most part captures the energy and pace of the 20th century metropolis.

    Moving from morning to night Symphony emphasizes the cities industrial muscle but also divides evenly portraits of the have and have nots of Berlin, the grime as well as the glitter. It is a city on the move and move it does from the crowded sidewalks to the congested avenues and its varied populace . It is in the faces of these Berliners that the film holds its greatest fascination for me watching children playing and youth sporting events with the knowledge that most of them will be of draft age for the oncoming conflagration that will reduce this city to rubble.

    The documentary does have problems with some scenes clearly staged (in one case a suicide filmed in close-up) and a roller coaster scene is overlong but overall when put into historical context this is a valuable visual document of a city that is extinct as Atlantis.
    8SnoopyStyle

    great doc and time capsule

    This is a silent era documentary showing a day in the life of Berlin starting from the morning to the late night. It shows people and places in their day to day existence. It's artistic like showing the machinery at work. It's fascinating to see people in their everyday lives. It's amazing to see the places especially since most of them were destroyed in WWII. It's great to see living lives in this time era. This is a world in between the two Great Wars. The economic crash has yet to happen. It's a Germany which still functions with its old wealth and new technology. It's a working city. It's a great time capsule and a terrific movie by itself.
    Bobs-9

    A Beautiful and haunting film

    `Berlin, Symphony of a Great City' is a film I've watched over and over with fascination. I think it's true that it is not so much about the people of Berlin, although we see many of them, but the city itself as a huge living, breathing organism. Back in the 1930s filmmaker John Grierson apparently wrote that this film `created nothing,' and that it violated the first principles of documentary by showing us nothing of importance but beautiful images. Looking at it more than 70 years after its creation, however, its documentary value seems evident to me, at least. I find it fascinating just to see what the people, clothing, uniforms, vehicles, streets, parks, restaurants, shops, theaters, nightclubs, and factories looked like in that distant time and place. It's amazing to contemplate how soon this complex, sophisticated society would be consumed in the most primitive debauchery. Do these people really look that much different from those we see on our streets every day? It makes me wonder what we're all potentially capable of.

    Some slight differences do seem apparent, however. When a fight breaks out in a public place today, people usually try to ignore it, or even duck their heads and run for cover. But in a scene where two men argue violently in the street, the Berliners of the 1920s crowd in close around the combatants, and even try to separate them and arbitrate the dispute, before a policeman moves in. Whether this was typically European at that time, or just typical of its era, I really can't say, but it seems strange to me today.

    Although I think the majority of this film was shot in a candid manner, and looks it, it's obvious that not quite all of it was un-staged, as a previous commentator has pointed out. For example, look at the argument scene just mentioned. Considering one of the camera angles (probably from a 2nd floor window), the argument must have been staged at the exact spot where this camera could catch it, and the crowd's reaction, from above. In addition, a second camera was in place at street level to move in close, which hardly suggests a serendipitous event.

    A good musical score is vitally important to bring this film to life. It's too bad the original score has been lost. It would be fascinating to know what it was like. But I think the one written by Timothy Brock for the Kino edition is superb in that it captures its changing moods and rhythms. If, as one internet reviewer commented, it seems a bit melancholy, that may be apropos considering that this beautiful city, and a great many of its inhabitants, would be consumed in fire less than 20 years later.

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      The shooting was done over 18 months though the resulting feature gives the impression of just one day in the city.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Lulu in Berlin (1984)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 23. September 1927 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Deutschland
    • Sprache
      • Deutsch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Berlin: Symphony of a Metropolis
    • Drehorte
      • Berlin Cathedral, Mitte, Berlin, Deutschland(aka Berliner Dom)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Les Productions Fox Europa
      • Deutsche Vereins-Film
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 5 Min.(65 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Sound-Mix
      • Silent
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.33 : 1

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