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Spione

  • 1928
  • Not Rated
  • 2 Std. 30 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,5/10
4211
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Max Fliess in Spione (1928)
SPIES: strange events (US)
clip wiedergeben1:24
SPIES: strange events (US) ansehen
1 Video
22 Fotos
SpionRomanzeThriller

Der Kopf einer allgegenwärtigen Spionagezentrale erfährt von der gefährlichen Romanze zwischen einer Russin in seinen Diensten und einem attraktiven Agenten des staatlichen Geheimdienstes.Der Kopf einer allgegenwärtigen Spionagezentrale erfährt von der gefährlichen Romanze zwischen einer Russin in seinen Diensten und einem attraktiven Agenten des staatlichen Geheimdienstes.Der Kopf einer allgegenwärtigen Spionagezentrale erfährt von der gefährlichen Romanze zwischen einer Russin in seinen Diensten und einem attraktiven Agenten des staatlichen Geheimdienstes.

  • Regie
    • Fritz Lang
  • Drehbuch
    • Thea von Harbou
    • Fritz Lang
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Rudolf Klein-Rogge
    • Gerda Maurus
    • Willy Fritsch
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,5/10
    4211
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Fritz Lang
    • Drehbuch
      • Thea von Harbou
      • Fritz Lang
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Rudolf Klein-Rogge
      • Gerda Maurus
      • Willy Fritsch
    • 39Benutzerrezensionen
    • 40Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Videos1

    SPIES: strange events (US)
    Clip 1:24
    SPIES: strange events (US)

    Fotos22

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    + 14
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    Topbesetzung22

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    Rudolf Klein-Rogge
    Rudolf Klein-Rogge
    • Haghi
    Gerda Maurus
    Gerda Maurus
    • Sonya Baranilkowa
    Willy Fritsch
    Willy Fritsch
    • No. 326 - Det. Donald Tremaine, English version
    Lien Deyers
    Lien Deyers
    • Kitty
    Louis Ralph
    • Hans Morrier - Hans Morriera, English version
    Craighall Sherry
    • Burton Jason…
    Paul Hörbiger
    Paul Hörbiger
    • Franz - Chauffeur
    Hertha von Walther
    Hertha von Walther
    • Lady Leslane
    Lupu Pick
    Lupu Pick
    • Dr. Akira Masimoto - Matsumoto, English version
    Fritz Rasp
    Fritz Rasp
    • Col. Jellusic - Ivan Stepanov, English version
    Grete Berger
    Grete Berger
    • Unconfirmed Role
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Julius Falkenstein
    Julius Falkenstein
    • Hotel Manager
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Heinrich Gotho
    Heinrich Gotho
    • Burton Jason's Other Assistant
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Heinrich Gretler
    • Spy in the Post Office scene
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Gustl Gstettenbaur
    Gustl Gstettenbaur
    • Boy Who Helps No. 326
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Georg John
    Georg John
    • Locomotive Engineer
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Theodor Loos
    Theodor Loos
    • Handelsminister
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Klaus Pohl
    Klaus Pohl
    • Burton Jason's Assistant
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Fritz Lang
    • Drehbuch
      • Thea von Harbou
      • Fritz Lang
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen39

    7,54.2K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    8vovazhd

    Excellent early spy thriller

    Spione (Spies) is a Fritz Lang film about spy espionage. The plot is strangely more complicated than more recent spy flicks (which is a good thing). The film focuses on No. 326, a spy that is responsible for investigating leads on a mysterious mastermind that controls a network of spies. The mastermind, known as Haghi, plots to steal an important treaty. It turns out that he leads a double life as the owner of a successful bank (which apparently makes him richer than Henry Ford). Things get complicated when Haghi sends a female spy, Sonya, to prevent No. 326 from interfering. Sonya falls in love with No. 326 while still under the supervision of Haghi, leading to the usual conflicts.

    The acting and characterization was wonderful. Haghi is the definition of bad guy: you know he is evil when you see the goatee. Confined to a wheelchair, he is the perfect blend of intelligence and deceptiveness. Agent No. 326 is an interesting character, although he loses some of his features as the film progresses. Sonya is beautiful and acted wonderfully. Among the side characters, I found that Colonel Jellusic and Doctor Masimoto stood out.

    Although a little overlong, the film is at no point slow. Mixing fast pacing with well-placed plot twists (which really build up towards the end), anyone with interest in the subject should have no problem enjoying it for the entire running time.

    I was not sure what to expect from Spione before watching it, seeing that it is a largely forgotten film. I enjoy Fritz Lang films, and this was no exception. It may not be the caliber of M, but it succeeds anyway. If you do not mind silent films and enjoy the spy/espionage genre (namely, James Bond), then you will enjoy this one.
    justpat

    The granddaddy of all spy films

    In the space of the first one minute and 37 seconds, a safe is burgled, a diplomat is killed, two secret documents are stolen, and an intertitle demands "WHO IS BEHIND THIS?" We're off in the world of Fritz Lang's "Spies"

    This film has everything that would later become spy film cliches: the ultra cool, ultra suave secret agent; the evil powerful genius, confined to a wheelchair, who dreams of world domination; his beautiful seductress, who falls for the secret agent. There are hidden microphones and disappearing ink and secret packages and bulletproof wallets. There's a motorcycle/car chase, and an in-tunnel train wreck to round out the action.
    9patherto

    Yowza! The Image restoration is gangbusters!!

    What a hoot! As the other comments have pointed out, this movie has everything and then some. The Image DVD furthers this excitement with the use of an Expressionist typeface for the intertitles and punctuation that includes "-!?", "—!!", and even at one point, "––-!!!" "Spies" offers an almost perfect print with superb music and sound effects. Newbies to silent film will have to adjust to the wild and sometimes bizarre pantomime style of the acting, but give it half a chance and "Spies" will have you on the edge of your seat, even at the 140- minute length. I love Fritz Lang's American films, like "Rancho Notorious" and "Clash by Night"—don't miss these if you have the chance—but Lang's German work shows a young director always at the top of his form, full of brilliant ideas and bursting with energy.
    9Steffi_P

    "Whose blood shall I wear around my neck tonight?"

    One of things that I think attracts young film fans to German cinema from the Weimar period is that it displays a striking stylistic extremism that captivates modern viewers not yet used to silent cinema. This ranges from Murnau's technical effects extravaganzas, to Lubitsch's off-the-wall comedy creations and, of course, Fritz Lang's angular architecture and comic-book sense of adventure.

    A mistaken impression with these pictures is that they got to be so stylised because of a higher degree of artistic freedom in the European studios. However UFA studios were just as much about collaboration and commercialism as those in Hollywood. While individual directors did have a lot of control over the look of their pictures, these overt styles owe more to the influence of German theatre, as well as German literature, painting and the opera.

    As with any cinema, anywhere, one of the most important collaborators is the screenwriter. No matter how strong or attention-grabbing your visual style is, if you haven't got the story, you haven't got anything. Spione features one of the best efforts from Lang's collaborator and wife Thea von Harbou, and is in many ways a tightened-up reworking of Dr Mabuse. Whereas that earlier picture was full of unnecessarily long title cards, Spione is far more succinct, allowing the audience to fill in the gaps. Importantly it begins with a lengthy piece of pure silent storytelling, which helps to engage us before bombarding us with verbal information. Harbou's characters are also very strong. It's a nice touch to make arch-villain Haghi wheelchair bound – a man who is weak in body but strong in means and influence.

    Lang himself was by now a master of his own highly individual technique. Space and set décor should be important to every director, but Lang is probably the only one who tells his stories more through architecture than through actors. With rooms so bizarre and angular they would probably drive most people mad if they had to live or work in them, Lang sets a tone for each location, and thus for each scene. Narrow corridors give a sense of entrapment; open doorways leading onto larger spaces give a sense of uneasiness; crisscrossing diagonals carve up the screen, often drawing our attention to things and people. One thing that especially stands out in Spione is that way Lang often creates compositions that are almost-but-not-quite symmetrical. Just as a great colour director like Vincente Minnelli might throw in a splash of blue to offset (and thus bring to life) a shot full of shades of red, Lang adds for example the nurse standing to one side of an otherwise symmetrical shot of Haghi sat at his desk.

    Even Lang's choice of camera position was strictly angular. He is either to one side, detached from the action, or he is right inside it with actors staring straight into the lens. He rarely uses, say, opposing over-the-shoulder shots that many directors would for intimate dialogue scenes, but his methods were nonetheless effective. Spione in fact features one of his most beautifully constructed romantic scenes in the first meeting between Willy Fritsch and Gerda Maurus. Lang begins with the camera to one side, simply filming the meeting as a casual observer. He then begins placing the camera between them, interspersed with close-ups of hands or other objects, making us experience the growing emotional intensity as well as that slight feeling of awkwardness. We then return to a shot to the side of the actors, but closer this time, as they move in for their first kiss. In spite of his reputation Lang could be incredibly tender and sentimental at times.

    Exaggerated acting tends to be part and parcel of that over-the-top nature of German silent cinema, and in the case of Lang's features it is often particularly apt given the comic-book style characters and situations. Spione is no exception, but it is nice to see the normally animated Rudolf Klein-Rogge getting to underplay it a little as a cool and collected villain. Lupu Pick also gives a very deep and emotionally complex performance as the Japanese ambassador.

    The upshot of this collaboration is an incredibly exciting and satisfying picture, even though it is rarely referenced as one of Fritz Lang's best. If it is remembered at all it is usually for its resemblance to later gadget-based espionage thrillers, as well as containing many of the suspense building techniques later employed by Hitchcock, such as letting the audience in on things the characters do not know. It is, nevertheless, among the most carefully constructed, exciting and purely enjoyable of Lang's silent pictures, and an improvement on the better-known Dr Mabuse.
    8claudio_carvalho

    An Epic of Espionage, Romance, Seduction and Betrayal

    The powerful criminal and leader of a spy ring Haghi (Rudolf Klein- Rogge) uses his spies that are infiltrated everywhere including in the secret service in attempts to steal documents from the French Embassy in Shanghai and from the Minister of Trade that is murdered. The press questions and mocks the officials in charge of security of state and the efficient Agent No. 326 a.k.a. the vagrant Hans Pockzerwinski (Willy Fritsch) is summoned by the Secret Service Chief (Craighall Sherry) to investigate the wave of crimes. Agent 326 immediately identifies that his chief's assistant Vincent is a spy that is providing inside information to the evil mastermind that no one knows how looks like. Meanwhile, Haghi saves the scoundrel Hans Morrier (Louis Ralph) from the gallows to serve him. Then Haghi, who is also the general director of the Haghi Bank, blackmails Mrs. Leslane (Hertha von Walther), who is the wife of the powerful Roger Lesland and habitué of an opium den, to get information of the Japanese Secret Treaty. When Haghi assigns his master spy Sonya Baranilkowa (Gerda Maurus) to get closer to the elegant Agent No. 326, they unexpectedly fall in love for each other affecting Haghi's evil scheme. Meanwhile his spy Kitty (Lien Deyers) lures and seduces the reserved and efficient Japanese agent Akira Matsumoto (Lupu Pick) to steal his documents about the recently signed Treaty that may bring war to the world.

    "Spies" is a fantastic epic of espionage, romance, seduction and betrayal by Fritz Lang and I dare to say that James Bond stories might have been inspired in this film. I saw "Spies" yesterday in a restored authorized edition of the DVD released by Kino Video, and in the Extras there is the amazing story of the restoration of this film. The 35 mm archives in nitrate throughout the world were very damaged and incomplete, but this complex version was assembled from several copies using the guidance of the copy from Prague that was the most complete and also deteriorated. The result is a film of 143 minutes running time meaning 50 minutes longer than any version previously released. My vote is eight.

    Title (Brazil): "Os Espiões" ("The Spies")

    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      UFA insisted on the film being made inexpensively, as Fritz Lang's previous film Metropolis (1927) had brought the studio to near bankruptcy. Lang therefore chose to do most of the shots in narrow settings with lots of close-ups, as no big sets had to be built up for that way of filming. Fortunately "Spione" became a huge success.
    • Patzer
      When Sonya and Franz (the chauffeur) are tied up and trying to escape, the hand cranking the camera is visible.
    • Zitate

      Haghi: Curtain -!

    • Verbindungen
      Edited into Fritz Lang, le cercle du destin - Les films allemands (2001)

    Top-Auswahl

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 13. April 1928 (Niederlande)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Deutschland
    • Sprachen
      • Noon
      • Deutsch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Spies
    • Drehorte
      • Ufa-Atelier, Neubabelsberg, Brandenburg, Deutschland(Studio)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Fritz Lang-Film
      • Universum Film (UFA)
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 2 Std. 30 Min.(150 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Sound-Mix
      • Silent
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.33 : 1

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