In the castle Vogeloed, a few aristocrats are awaiting baroness Safferstätt. But first count Oetsch invites himself.. Everyone thinks he murdered his brother, baroness Safferstat's first hus... Read allIn the castle Vogeloed, a few aristocrats are awaiting baroness Safferstätt. But first count Oetsch invites himself.. Everyone thinks he murdered his brother, baroness Safferstat's first husband, three years ago. So he is rather undesirable. But Oetsch stays; arguing he is not th... Read allIn the castle Vogeloed, a few aristocrats are awaiting baroness Safferstätt. But first count Oetsch invites himself.. Everyone thinks he murdered his brother, baroness Safferstat's first husband, three years ago. So he is rather undesirable. But Oetsch stays; arguing he is not the murderer and will find the real one...
- Centa V. Vogelschrey - von Vogelschrey's Frau
- (as L. Kyser-Korff)
- Graf Johann Oetsch
- (as Lotar Mehnert)
- Der Pater Faramund
- (as Victor Blütner)
- Ein Diener
- (as Walter Kurt-Kuhle)
- Kleines Mädchen
- (uncredited)
- Zweites Kleines Mädchen
- (uncredited)
- Küchenjunge
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Lothar Mehnert stars as Count Oetsch, and although I know absolutely nothing about him, I was very drawn to his performance. He has a striking look that I think makes for a good stage or screen presence. What else has he done? I do not know, but should seek it out.
The film is light on humor, though there is a sequence I will call "the kitchen boy dream" that I found funny. What is it implying? What does it mean? How does it connect to the big story? I have no idea.
The Kino DVD contains a book / film comparison and I would recommend this. It shows how radically different the film is in some ways from the book. While the essence is the same, I would almost have to say they are two different creatures altogether.
Worth seeing for the dreams!
Murnau demonstrates his superb command of the camera and the illumination while setting the bases of the expressionism.
The suspense distilled in Haunted Castle is well worth a Hitchcock´s movie and the plot is surprisingly complex for a silent.
Do make sure that you see it in a winter stormy night
The Sinister Cinema edition I watched was a mere 56 minutes in length, as opposed to the restored 74-minute version of the film; not surprisingly, the choppy editing (full of phony-looking transitions and an equally pointless establishing shot of the castle used ad nauseam throughout) made the plot somewhat hard to follow and the lack of detail in the print itself, not to mention the absence of an accompanying music score, didn't help matters either!
Even so, the film is worth watching for the unethical way the elderly hero goes about discovering the real identity of his brother's killer and for a couple of brief if irrelevant dream sequences, one expressionistic (and which can now be seen as a dry run for NOSFERATU [1922]) and the other surreal. Some years back, Image Entertainment had announced a DVD release of THE HAUNTED CASTLE but, for reasons known only to them, it was summarily cancelled and has yet to appear officially on any digital format.
Did you know
- TriviaThe movie was shot in 16 days and released before the serialized novel's last chapter had been printed in the "Berliner Illustrierten".
- Alternate versionsThere is an Italian DVD edition of this movie, distributed by DNA Srl, entitled "Il castello di Vogelod". The movie was re-edited with the contribution of the film history scholar Riccardo Cusin. This version is also available in streaming on some platforms. This DVD also contains another movie directed by F.W. Murnau: "Tartufo".
- ConnectionsFeatured in Dämonische Leinwand - Der deutsche Film der zwanziger Jahre (1998)
- How long is The Haunted Castle?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 15 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1