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M

ओरिजिनल टाइटल: M - Eine Stadt sucht einen Mörder
  • 1931
  • Passed
  • 1 घं 57 मि
IMDb रेटिंग
8.3/10
1.8 लाख
आपकी रेटिंग
लोकप्रियता
2,432
99
M (1931)
Official Trailer देखें
trailer प्ले करें2:32
1 वीडियो
99+ फ़ोटो
Psychological ThrillerSerial KillerSuspense MysteryCrimeMysteryThriller

जब जर्मन शहर में पुलिस एक बाल-हत्यारे को पकड़ने में असमर्थ होती है, तो अन्य अपराधी मैनहंट में शामिल हो जाते हैं।जब जर्मन शहर में पुलिस एक बाल-हत्यारे को पकड़ने में असमर्थ होती है, तो अन्य अपराधी मैनहंट में शामिल हो जाते हैं।जब जर्मन शहर में पुलिस एक बाल-हत्यारे को पकड़ने में असमर्थ होती है, तो अन्य अपराधी मैनहंट में शामिल हो जाते हैं।

  • निर्देशक
    • Fritz Lang
  • लेखक
    • Thea von Harbou
    • Fritz Lang
    • Egon Jacobsohn
  • स्टार
    • Peter Lorre
    • Ellen Widmann
    • Inge Landgut
  • IMDbPro पर प्रोडक्शन की जानकारी देखें
  • IMDb रेटिंग
    8.3/10
    1.8 लाख
    आपकी रेटिंग
    लोकप्रियता
    2,432
    99
    • निर्देशक
      • Fritz Lang
    • लेखक
      • Thea von Harbou
      • Fritz Lang
      • Egon Jacobsohn
    • स्टार
      • Peter Lorre
      • Ellen Widmann
      • Inge Landgut
    • 460यूज़र समीक्षाएं
    • 157आलोचक समीक्षाएं
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  • टॉप रेटेड मूवी #107
    • पुरस्कार
      • कुल 2 जीत

    वीडियो1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:32
    Official Trailer

    फ़ोटो128

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    टॉप कलाकार79

    बदलाव करें
    Peter Lorre
    Peter Lorre
    • Hans Beckert
    Ellen Widmann
    • Frau Beckmann
    Inge Landgut
    Inge Landgut
    • Elsie Beckmann
    Otto Wernicke
    Otto Wernicke
    • Inspector Karl Lohmann
    Theodor Loos
    Theodor Loos
    • Inspector Groeber
    Gustaf Gründgens
    Gustaf Gründgens
    • Schränker
    Friedrich Gnaß
    • Franz
    Fritz Odemar
    Fritz Odemar
    • The Cheater
    Paul Kemp
    Paul Kemp
    • Pickpocket with Six Watches
    Theo Lingen
    Theo Lingen
    • Bauernfänger
    Rudolf Blümner
    • Beckert's Defender
    Georg John
    Georg John
    • Blind Panhandler
    Franz Stein
    • Minister
    Ernst Stahl-Nachbaur
    Ernst Stahl-Nachbaur
    • Police Chief
    Gerhard Bienert
    Gerhard Bienert
    • Criminal Secretary
    Karl Platen
    • Damowitz
    Rosa Valetti
    Rosa Valetti
    • Bartender
    Hertha von Walther
    Hertha von Walther
    • Prostitute
    • निर्देशक
      • Fritz Lang
    • लेखक
      • Thea von Harbou
      • Fritz Lang
      • Egon Jacobsohn
    • सभी कास्ट और क्रू
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    सारांश

    Reviewers say 'M' is a pioneering film, celebrated for its innovative sound, expressionist visuals, and intricate depiction of a serial killer. Peter Lorre's performance is lauded for its depth. The film delves into psychological and sociological themes, creating a suspenseful atmosphere. Some find the pacing slow and note its age, yet many regard it as a timeless masterpiece, influencing later serial killer films.
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    फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं

    8Nazi_Fighter_David

    Moments of menace..

    The economy, austerity and directness of the films of Fritz Lang made him one of the most profound, and precise filmmakers...

    Lang, a master of the German expressionist film, shot his first talkie, a crime drama considered a landmark in the story of suspense movies... It was a shocking idea for its time, based on the real-life killer Peter Kurten, headlined as the Vampire of Düsseldorf...

    'M' is about a terrorized city, and a plump little man with wide eyes (often chewing candy) who is a pathological child-killer, unable to control his urge for killing...

    The film embodies several Lang themes: the duality between justice and revenge, mob hysteria, the menacing anticipation of watching a helplessly trapped individual trying fruitlessly to escape as greater forces move inexorably in, and, for probably the first time in the cinema, it adds a new dimension to suspense: pity... For the killer is clearly mentally sick... He cannot overcome the overwhelming compulsion of his murderous disease, and yet, we see him hunted down and almost lynched as a criminal, rather than treated as a sick man...

    Early in the film, the killer is heard whistling the Grieg theme from 'In the Hall of the Mountain King'. This theme inexorably becomes imbued with menace... And when we see no more than a girl looking in a shop window, the melody on the sound-track told us chillingly that the murderer is there, just out of sight...

    The Murderer is played by Peter Lorre in a virtuoso performance that has barely been matched in all the thrillers he has made since 'Casablanca,' 'The Maltese Falcon,' and 'The Mask of Dimitrios.' When the photographs of his victims, all little girls, are shown to him, he jumps back and twitches with horror...

    With powerful visuals, Lang's motion picture is Lorre's first film... His performance as the corpulent, hunted psychopath is a masterpiece of mime and suggestion... Lorre is the archetypal outsider-outside the law and society because of his compulsive crimes, outside the balancing society of the underworld because he is not a professional criminal... He had only twelve lines of dialog...

    In the most famous of all about a pathological killer - Alfred Hitchcock's 'Psycho' - Anthony Perkins lacked not only the threat of the tortured Peter Lorre, but also the dimension of invoking our incredulous sympathy...

    'Psycho' reeked with blood and horror, whereas the suspense of 'M' is subtle... A child's balloon without an owner, a rolling ball, are enough to tell us that another murder had been committed... The audience, trapped in its seats, torn by ambivalent feelings towards the killer, watched him trapped as the net is pulled tight...
    10EThompsonUMD

    Influential and unforgettable masterpiece.

    Fritz Lang's highly influential career as a film director began in post World War I Germany, where he was a leading figure in the German Expressionist film movement, and ended in the United States in 1953 with the production of The Big Heat, a film noir classic. Perhaps his greatest film, M (Germany, 1931) forms an historical bridge between expressionism and film noir. Like the former it uses strange and disturbing compositions of light and dark in order to symbolize the inner workings of the human mind; like the latter it more realistically sets its story in a modern urban setting and blends in sociological issues along with the psychological and moral ones.

    Even though M was Lang's (and Germany's) first sound film, many historians cite it as the initial masterpiece of cinema to appear following the introduction of sound into films in the late 1920's. While most early "talkies" return films to their static, visually monotonous, stage- imitative beginnings and thus limit rather than expand the artistic possibilities of the medium, M avoids the failing by skillfully balancing asynchronous, off-screen sounds with the more limiting use of synchronous dialogue. The film's editing, particularly its elaborate use of parallel cutting, also contributes kinetic energy and fluidity to the storytelling. Of course, many of the film's sound effects are also imaginative and memorable, none more so than the compulsive whistling of the film's central character, the stalker and serial killer of little girls Hans Beckert (magnificently played by Peter Lorre).

    Sound is also an important contributor to M's rich and influential use of off screen space. One famous example is the scene that introduces Beckert as a shadow against his own Wanted poster, creepily intoning to his next victim, Elsie Beckmann, "You have a very pretty ball." Not only is Beckert's shadow a bow toward Lang's expressionist artistic roots, but it ironically places the murderer in the implied space in front of the image - that is, among us, the human community of viewers of which he is an innocuous-appearing, albeit monstrous, member. Another example of Lang's use of off-screen space is the montage of shots whose common denominator is Elsie's absence from them: an empty chair at the Beckmann dinner table, the vertiginous stairwell down which Elsie's mother searches compulsively and futilely for signs of her daughter's arrival, the attic play area that awaits Elsie's return from school. Most memorable of all - and most often alluded to visually in other films - is the series of shots that indirectly record Beckert's assault and murder of the innocent child, representing these off screen events metonymically via the entry of Elsie's ball from bushes along on the right edge of the frame and the release of her balloon from telephone wires and off the left edge of the frame. Never in the history of cinema has something so terrible been communicated through such powerfully understated images.

    Beyond its technical brilliance, the keys to M's lasting impact are its psychologically convincing portrait of Hans Beckert's twisted compulsion and the still relevant ambivalence of his capture and "trial." Unlike contemporary cinematic examples of the serial killer, Beckert is not presented simply as a grotesque psychopath. Nor is the issue of how society should deal with him at all clear-cut. To be sure, the gut-reaction of most film audiences is to root on the underworld mobsters and petty thieves who, beating the established authorities to their mutual quarry, capture Beckert and bring him to a mock- formal trial whose conclusion is foregone. Like many in America today, Beckert's accusers are disinclined to listen to insanity pleas and would just as soon be rid of the "monster" in the surest way possible: a summary death penalty with as little fretting about legal rights as possible.

    Considering the heinousness of Beckert's crimes and the imperfections of a legal/medical system that could well turn him loose to kill again, this emotional response is hard to resist. Yet M is by no means an endorsement of vigilantism - quite the contrary. Through the unlikely rhetorical persuasions of Beckert's unkempt "court appointed" defense attorney and Beckert's own impassioned monologue, Lang strongly implies that impatience with democratic judicial procedure and a paranoid eagerness to scapegoat others (guilty or not) in the name of order are symptomatic of the social hysteria breeding Nazism in 1930s Germany. That the ruthless killer who heads the underworld looks, dresses, and gestures like a Gestapo officer is no accident. Moreover, the letter "M" chalked on Beckert's back by one of his pursuers not only stands for "murderer" but also alludes to God's marking of Cain. While the popular misconception holds that the mark of Cain symbolizes his evil, it in fact represents God's warning to Cain's flawed fellow creatures not to mete out wrathful vengeance, but to leave justice in God's hands. Translated into secular terms (and literally entering the shot from the top of the frame), God's hands in M belong to the legitimate authorities that intervene at the last moment to arrest and try Hans Beckert "in the name of the Law."
    8TheNabOwnzz

    A masterful take on compulsive immorality

    M has to be one of the most influential movies ever made, both technically and psychologically. With an outstanding Peter Lorre, suspense that outsuspenses Hitchcock, excellent cinematography and a deep sociological layer added to it, M is one of the masterpieces of the psychological thriller genre.

    It is a film devoid of typical humanitarian propaganda, yet it is not the case that we immediately feel the need to relate to the child murderer Hans Beckert ( Peter Lorre ) since Fritz Lang also shows us the effects his gruesome crimes have in the form of the police constantly raiding establishments, the grieving parents & random people accusing eachother of the murders. It is not a movie that forces its opinion on you, but causes you to think about what is truly right and wrong. Hans later claims he cannot help himself because he has an irresistible compulsive urge to kill which cannot be stopped, much to the dismay of other career crooks who claim they only commit crimes to survive and take no pleasure or feel no compulsion towards it. It is a psychological kind of movie that is still as relevant as ever today as it was in 1931.

    Peter Lorre is ofcourse the perfect fit for the psychopathic child murderer, he has the perfect innocent wide eyed look for a psychopath, who seems to even be likeable when he is not murdering children. His signature whistle by Edvard Grieg - In the Hall of the Mountain King is a nice creepy addition to his character which he uses to lure kids to their doom. Ofcourse the incredible shot at the start which focuses on Hans's shadow on the poster that lists his crimes and reward for capture while talking to a little girl before killing her is a great ironic symbolism to announce his character.

    It was Lang's first sound picture, yet only two third of the movie was shot with actual sound while everything else was shot silent. This was primarily to keep the costs down since sound equipment was very expensive at the time. It creates a weird mix in constant transitioning from silent to sound. Yet as Lang has stated it adds another layer to the eeriness the movie has, so it only enhances the experience instead of unimmersing you out of the film.

    The cinematography is revolutionary in its use of low key lightning, which is a technique that was used many times after in the classic Film Noir era in Hollywood. The result is many Film Noirs share a visual resemblance with M due to their dark tone. Not only visually, but psychologically many themes of M have been repeated throughout the years in cinema. It was one of the first instances of a semi-sympathetic look on a pure psychopathic murderer, which has been repeated countless times in later years.

    Some might feel sorry for Beckert for having this affliction of which he cannot be helped while others would prefer to see him hang, the movie doesn't shove the right answer down our throats, and it's possible to look at it from either way without having a right answer. It is a sociological thinking man's picture that is as relevant now as it ever was.
    9AlsExGal

    Ahead of its time

    This is a very interesting film on so many levels. It's interesting to see just how far ahead German cinema was of its American counterpart at this point in time. Although there is not that much talking in this early German talking picture - Fritz Lang resisted going to sound in the first place - what conversation that does take place is well done and natural sounding. Compare it with any American film from 1931 and you can't help but see the difference.

    The murderer, artfully played by Peter Lorre, has been killing children that have no link to him personally for months. The police, despite all of their efforts, are unable to catch him, mainly because there is no rhyme or reason in his choice of victims. At first there is a focus on the victims and the hole left in their families by their killing. Then, the film shifts to two normally opposed groups - the police and the underworld. After several months of no results by the authorities, the police are unhappy because it reflects badly upon them, and the underworld is unhappy because their activities are being disrupted because of the police doing constant raids in their efforts to capture the killer.

    In a particularly well-done part of the film the scene shifts back and forth between a conference of police and one of the underworld. They discuss how they are going to catch the killer. The police settle upon the idea of looking for people with a history of past mental problems that were pronounced cured and released. The underworld decides to enlist an invisible group - the beggars - to follow every child at all times and therefore catch the killer. Both groups focus on the right suspect, the question is - who gets there first? M is a fascinating film that raises many topics - the death penalty, a group of criminals that are criminals by choice causing less stress on society than a lone criminal that acts out of an uncontrollable compulsion, and the motivations of the authorities often being their own bureaucratic survival rather than the larger issue of ending a series of horrible acts against humanity.
    9Xstal

    Mörder...

    Casting its shadow through motion picture history and continuing to do so to this day, suggesting that societies throughout the world have struggled to resolve the most despicable actions of their citizens (inc. those in the police and armed forces) and the penalties they should pay - as seen by the gamut of forfeits that can be incurred for the same crimes across the planet, as well as those that are crimes in some territories and not in others.

    Ultimately this film asks the question: what makes us who we are, how responsible are we for our actions and what should be done about it and by whom? To this day, as subjective a set of questions as you could wish to ask - but ones we will forever continue to try and answer and cinema will continue to catch in its shadows.

    इस तरह के और

    Metropolis
    8.3
    Metropolis
    Citizen Kane
    8.3
    Citizen Kane
    वर्टिगो
    8.2
    वर्टिगो
    High and Low
    8.4
    High and Low
    To Kill a Mockingbird
    8.3
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    The Sting
    8.2
    The Sting
    La passion de Jeanne d'Arc
    8.1
    La passion de Jeanne d'Arc
    Full Metal Jacket
    8.2
    Full Metal Jacket
    Bicycle Thieves
    8.2
    Bicycle Thieves
    Amélie
    8.3
    Amélie
    A Clockwork Orange
    8.2
    A Clockwork Orange
    A Separation
    8.3
    A Separation

    कहानी

    बदलाव करें

    क्या आपको पता है

    बदलाव करें
    • ट्रिविया
      Contrary to popular belief, Fritz Lang did not change the title from "The Murderers are Among Us" to "M" due to fear of persecution by the Nazis. He changed the title during filming, influenced by the scene where one of the criminals writes the letter on his hand. Lang thought "M" was a more interesting title.
    • गूफ़
      In one of the police crack-down scenes, the German bar hostess keeps referring to the uniformed police officer in charge as "Herr Hauptmann." The English caption translates this as "sergeant." But, in actuality, "hauptmann" is equivalent to "captain".
    • भाव

      Hans Beckert: I can't help what I do! I can't help it, I can't...

      Criminal: The old story! We never can help it in court!

      Hans Beckert: What do you know about it? Who are you anyway? Who are you? Criminals? Are you proud of yourselves? Proud of breaking safes or cheating at cards? Things you could just as well keep your fingers off. You wouldn't need to do all that if you'd learn a proper trade or if you'd work. If you weren't a bunch of lazy bastards. But I... I can't help myself! I have no control over this, this evil thing inside of me, the fire, the voices, the torment!

      Schraenker: Do you mean to say that you have to murder?

      Hans Beckert: It's there all the time, driving me out to wander the streets, following me, silently, but I can feel it there. It's me, pursuing myself! I want to escape, to escape from myself! But it's impossible. I can't escape, I have to obey it. I have to run, run... endless streets. I want to escape, to get away! And I'm pursued by ghosts. Ghosts of mothers and of those children... they never leave me. They are always there... always, always, always!, except when I do it, when I... Then I can't remember anything. And afterwards I see those posters and read what I've done, and read, and read... did I do that? But I can't remember anything about it! But who will believe me? Who knows what it's like to be me? How I'm forced to act... how I must, must... don't want to, must! Don't want to, but must! And then a voice screams! I can't bear to hear it! I can't go on! I can't... I can't...

    • क्रेज़ी क्रेडिट
      All of the original credits appear only in the beginning with no music.
    • इसके अलावा अन्य वर्जन
      In the English and French language versions, in addition to having been dubbed, had some footage re shot. These scenes include the telephone conversation between the minister and the police commissioner, and the ending of the film. Peter Lorre's performance in the trial was re shot, however this time he spoke his lines in English or French, depending upon the version. The shots of him are lit and photographed much differently than Fritz Lang's original footage. Additionally, a shot of the police arriving was inserted, taken from an earlier part of the film (whereas in the original German version no police forces are shown at all). The court scenes have been eliminated and replaced with happy endings where young children play a game similar to the one seen in the opening (English) or a smiling couple watching their children play in the street (French).
    • कनेक्शन
      Edited into Juden ohne Maske (1937)
    • साउंडट्रैक
      Le Halle du Roi de la Montagne
      in "Peer Gynt Suite No.1, Op.46" (1876)

      Written by Edvard Grieg

    टॉप पसंद

    रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
    साइन इन करें

    अक्सर पूछे जाने वाला सवाल

    • How long is M?
      Alexa द्वारा संचालित
    • What is 'M' about?
    • Is 'M' based on a book?
    • Why the title 'M'?

    विवरण

    बदलाव करें
    • रिलीज़ की तारीख़
      • 31 अगस्त 1931 (स्वीडन)
    • कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
      • जर्मनी
    • भाषा
      • जर्मन
    • इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
      • M - Eine Stadt sucht einen Mörder
    • फ़िल्माने की जगहें
      • Staaken, Spandau, बर्लिन, जर्मनी
    • उत्पादन कंपनी
      • Nero-Film AG
    • IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें

    बॉक्स ऑफ़िस

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    बदलाव करें
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    M (1931)
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    What is the streaming release date of M (1931) in Australia?
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