ABSTRACT

German cinema of the 1920s is still regarded as one of the 'golden ages' of world cinema. Films such as The Cabinet of Dr Caligari, Dr Mabuse the Gambler, Nosferatu, Metropolis, Pandora's Box and The Blue Angel have long been canonised as classics, but they are also among the key films defining an image of Germany as a nation uneasy with itself. The work of directors like Fritz Lang, F.W. Murnau and G.W. Pabst, which having apparently announced the horrors of fascism, while testifying to the traumas of a defeated nation, still casts a long shadow over cinema in Germany, leaving film history and political history permanently intertwined.
Weimar Cinema and After offers a fresh perspective on this most 'national' of national cinemas, re-evaluating the arguments which view genres and movements such as 'films of the fantastic', 'Nazi Cinema', 'film noir' and 'New German Cinema' as typically German contributions to twentieth century visual culture. Thomas Elsaesser questions conventional readings which link these genres to romanticism and expressionism, and offers new approaches to analysing the function of national cinema in an advanced 'culture industry' and in a Germany constantly reinventing itself both geographically and politically.
Elsaesser argues that German cinema's significance lies less in its ability to promote democracy or predict fascism than in its contribution to the creation of a community sharing a 'historical imaginary' rather than a 'national identity'. In this respect, he argues, German cinema anticipated some of the problems facing contemporary nations in reconstituting their identities by means of media images, memory, and invented traditions.

part I|142 pages

Haunted Screens

chapter 1|15 pages

Introduction

Weimar cinema's impersonations

chapter 2|43 pages

Expressionist Film or Weimar Cinema?

With Siegfried Kracauer and Lotte Eisner (once more) to the movies

chapter 3|45 pages

Caligari's Family

Expressionism, frame tales and master-narratives

chapter 4|37 pages

Erich Pommer

‘Die UFA' and Germany’s bid for a studio system

part II|150 pages

In the Realm of the Look

chapter 1|50 pages

Fritz Lang's Traps for the Mind and Eye

Dr Mabuse the gambler and other disguise artists

chapter 2|28 pages

The old and The New Regime of The Gaze

Ernst Lubitsch and Madame Dubarry

chapter 3|36 pages

Nosferatu, Tartuffe And Faust

Secret affinities in Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau

chapter 4|34 pages

Lulu and the Meter Man

Louise Brooks, G.W. Pabst and Pandora's Box

part III|66 pages

Transparent Duplicities

chapter 1|16 pages

Hallo Caesar!

Reinhold Schünzel, a German Chaplin?

chapter 2|19 pages

Transparent Duplicities

Pabst's The Threepenny Opera

chapter 3|29 pages

It's the End of the Song

Walter Reisch, operetta and the double negative

part IV|86 pages

After Weimar

chapter 1|22 pages

To Be or Not to Be

Extra-territorial in Vienna—Berlin—Hollywood

chapter 2|37 pages

Lifestyle Propaganda

Modernity and modernisation in early thirties films

chapter 3|25 pages

Caligari's Legacy?

Film noir as film history's German imaginary