Les araignées - Le lac d'or
Titre original : Die Spinnen, 1. Teil - Der Goldene See
NOTE IMDb
6,5/10
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MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueKay Hoog finds a message that indicates that some Incas are still alive, but the secret organisation "Die Spinnen" wants the Incas' gold....Kay Hoog finds a message that indicates that some Incas are still alive, but the secret organisation "Die Spinnen" wants the Incas' gold....Kay Hoog finds a message that indicates that some Incas are still alive, but the secret organisation "Die Spinnen" wants the Incas' gold....
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 nomination au total
Hans Lanser-Ludolff
- Partygast im Klub
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
This film has an enormous amount of action and adventure in it. Characters are jumping from one country to the next in the matter of minutes. There is hardly a dull moment. My only problem with this film is that it seems to jump around too fast. One episode is barely finished, and boom, you're zapped to another location. If this movie had not been made in 1919, I would swear it had copied MTV's jump cut style. All in all, The Spiders, is a good introduction in the silent film adventure genre.
German critics were apparently dismissive of this, Fritz Lang's third feature film (and first surviving one), deriding as sensationalism and nothing more. I don't disagree, but I also don't really see much wrong with it. The narrative and thematic ambitions are modest, focused more on purely entertaining spectacle rather than self-conscious art, but there's nothing wrong with that. It's not the most successful entertainment of the silent period or anything, but it functions well enough.
Kay Hoog (Carl de Vogt) is a sportsman living in San Francisco when he discovers a message in a bottle bobbing about at sea. The message describes a treasure trove of ancient gold hidden in the caves under a lost population of Incans in South America. He openly describes, reads, and shows the letter at his sailing club in front of Lio Sha (Ressel Orla), a secret operative of the criminal enterprise known as The Spiders. With the knowledge of the treasure and the message that contains some direction, she takes the information back to the Spiders' secret headquarters (including a 1919 version of a television she uses to listen in on the conversation that doesn't include her), and they decide to go after the message and the gold.
They attack and rob Hoog in the middle of the night (leaving him alive so the movie can happen), and the chase is on. Hoog takes the train down to the southern reaches of Mexico where he meets up with a scientist who works on weather balloons that he plans on hitching a ride with to get him over the mountains and to the Incan city as fast as possible. He has to steal back that message from the bottle first (for reasons? For action-adventure reasons). He faces down Lio Sha and her newly hired of bandits in a tense and exciting little exchange where he gets the paper, escapes through the roof, leads a horse chase to the scientist about to take off in the balloon where Kay jumps onto the final rope and climbs all the way up. You know...silent stunts are awesome because they were so wildly irresponsible.
Kay gets to the Incan city first, and the Incan city is really the showstopper of the film. It's a relatively small set (especially in comparison to the sets that Lang would build for Metropolis a few years later), but they are wonderfully densely designed and detailed that Lang fills with actors, giving it a dense, lived-in quality. The first person Kay meets, though, is the Incan princess Naela (Lil Dagover). Both protected from the regular human sacrifices the Incans make and also being groomed as an executioner by her father. The Incans capture Lio Sha when her party camps nearby, and Naela is trying to protect her new love Kay by hiding him in the caves and helping him build a makeshift raft that will take him to safety.
Now, the big action set piece that ends the film is curious. I don't know if it's the rough around the edges work of new screenwriters (Lang and his wife Thea von Harbou), or an intelligent subversion of action/adventure convention because it's about Kay saving Lio. They're never less than adversaries, and Kay's motive seems to be more about saving Naela the fate of having to actively participate in Lio's murder, but it's interesting nonetheless. It also coincides with Lio's men arriving on the scene for a big, brash shootout (kind of a less-comedic version of the finale to John Ford's Bucking Broadway) that ends in the caverns of gold that have been booby-trapped and lead to some fun water effects.
Good guys win, get out safely, and, because this is meant to be a serialized story of increasing stakes focused on a singular good guy, things go wrong in the final moments that give Kay the kind of motive to keep on with the fight.
Is this deep stuff? Not at all. Is it built on a fair bit of coincidence and convenience? Very much so. Is it amusing and fun? Yes, it is. It is completely unchallenging, but a fun adventure story that works well enough in the realm of spectacle while it's on. I wouldn't go so far as to call it good, but as a very early attempt from a director in the nascent German film industry, it does its job.
Kay Hoog (Carl de Vogt) is a sportsman living in San Francisco when he discovers a message in a bottle bobbing about at sea. The message describes a treasure trove of ancient gold hidden in the caves under a lost population of Incans in South America. He openly describes, reads, and shows the letter at his sailing club in front of Lio Sha (Ressel Orla), a secret operative of the criminal enterprise known as The Spiders. With the knowledge of the treasure and the message that contains some direction, she takes the information back to the Spiders' secret headquarters (including a 1919 version of a television she uses to listen in on the conversation that doesn't include her), and they decide to go after the message and the gold.
They attack and rob Hoog in the middle of the night (leaving him alive so the movie can happen), and the chase is on. Hoog takes the train down to the southern reaches of Mexico where he meets up with a scientist who works on weather balloons that he plans on hitching a ride with to get him over the mountains and to the Incan city as fast as possible. He has to steal back that message from the bottle first (for reasons? For action-adventure reasons). He faces down Lio Sha and her newly hired of bandits in a tense and exciting little exchange where he gets the paper, escapes through the roof, leads a horse chase to the scientist about to take off in the balloon where Kay jumps onto the final rope and climbs all the way up. You know...silent stunts are awesome because they were so wildly irresponsible.
Kay gets to the Incan city first, and the Incan city is really the showstopper of the film. It's a relatively small set (especially in comparison to the sets that Lang would build for Metropolis a few years later), but they are wonderfully densely designed and detailed that Lang fills with actors, giving it a dense, lived-in quality. The first person Kay meets, though, is the Incan princess Naela (Lil Dagover). Both protected from the regular human sacrifices the Incans make and also being groomed as an executioner by her father. The Incans capture Lio Sha when her party camps nearby, and Naela is trying to protect her new love Kay by hiding him in the caves and helping him build a makeshift raft that will take him to safety.
Now, the big action set piece that ends the film is curious. I don't know if it's the rough around the edges work of new screenwriters (Lang and his wife Thea von Harbou), or an intelligent subversion of action/adventure convention because it's about Kay saving Lio. They're never less than adversaries, and Kay's motive seems to be more about saving Naela the fate of having to actively participate in Lio's murder, but it's interesting nonetheless. It also coincides with Lio's men arriving on the scene for a big, brash shootout (kind of a less-comedic version of the finale to John Ford's Bucking Broadway) that ends in the caverns of gold that have been booby-trapped and lead to some fun water effects.
Good guys win, get out safely, and, because this is meant to be a serialized story of increasing stakes focused on a singular good guy, things go wrong in the final moments that give Kay the kind of motive to keep on with the fight.
Is this deep stuff? Not at all. Is it built on a fair bit of coincidence and convenience? Very much so. Is it amusing and fun? Yes, it is. It is completely unchallenging, but a fun adventure story that works well enough in the realm of spectacle while it's on. I wouldn't go so far as to call it good, but as a very early attempt from a director in the nascent German film industry, it does its job.
An early adventure movie from Fritz Lang featuring Kay Hoog, a dashing adventurer who bears more than a passing resemblance to Indiana Jones, and who was originally to be the hero of a series of four movies, only two of which were ever made. Hoog, as played by Carl de Vogt, is something of a solemn character lacking in dynamism, but he's locked in a pleasingly involving battle with the sinister Die Spinnen organisation in his search for a hoard of Inca gold. The film takes itself a little too seriously on occasion for what is essentially a Boys Own story, but Lang keeps it clipping along at a fast enough pace to keep his audience entertained.
A surprisingly weak film. The pacing is haphazard. The special effects are ineffectual. It's hard to believe that these pitiful sets were from the set designer for The Cabinet of Dr Caligari. The actors use guns the way that inexperienced toddlers might. And the Americans, Peruvians, and Inca all look very, very German. This film is only for the compleatist, desiring to view all of the films of Fritz Lang or of this genre. Don't come here for entertainment.
This serial-esque action epic is told in two parts. In the first part, "The Golden Lake", man-of-action Kay Hoog (Carl de Vogt) heads for South America to look for a secret city of Incas living in temples much as they did centuries ago. They have a Harvard professor prisoner, and are also sitting atop a huge gold mine. Kay is challenged in his quest by the Spiders, a secret multi-national criminal organization. Their chief agent Lio Sha (Ressel Orla) has the hots for Hoog, but she won't let that get in her way of taking the gold for her gang. Kay makes cute with Inca priestess Naela (Lil Dagover), which really peeves Lio Sha. In the second part, "The Diamond Ship", Kay Hoog is once again racing against the Spiders, this time in search of the Buddha diamond, a fabulous gem that is foretold to be the great emancipator of Asia from the control of the West.
There's a lot going here, with secret societies, hidden cities, cowboys, pirates, guys dressed like ninjas, a samurai, safecrackers in top hats and domino masks, human sacrifice, clairvoyants, hot air balloon rides, and much more. Despite the 137 minute running time, I was rarely bored, although the first half is much better than the second. It also ends rather abruptly, as this was originally intended to be quickly followed up by another 2-hour, 2-part installment in the war between Hoog and the Spiders, but that never got made. Instead, Lang was inspired to bring Mabuse to the screen, and the rest is history.
Forgive me for reviewing both episodes together, but things just fit together better in this format.
There's a lot going here, with secret societies, hidden cities, cowboys, pirates, guys dressed like ninjas, a samurai, safecrackers in top hats and domino masks, human sacrifice, clairvoyants, hot air balloon rides, and much more. Despite the 137 minute running time, I was rarely bored, although the first half is much better than the second. It also ends rather abruptly, as this was originally intended to be quickly followed up by another 2-hour, 2-part installment in the war between Hoog and the Spiders, but that never got made. Instead, Lang was inspired to bring Mabuse to the screen, and the rest is history.
Forgive me for reviewing both episodes together, but things just fit together better in this format.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesOriginally planned as a series of four films. The last two parts not made were titled 'Um Asiens Kaiserkrone' (part 3) and 'Im Spinnennetz' (part 4).
- ConnexionsEdited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Une histoire seule (1989)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- The Spiders - Episode 1: The Golden Sea
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 21 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1
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By what name was Les araignées - Le lac d'or (1919) officially released in Canada in English?
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