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Metropolis (film)

 
Metropolis (film)

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Metropolis (film)



 
 
Metropolis is a silent
Silent film

A silent film is a film with no synchronized recorded sound, especially spoken dialogue. The idea of combining motion pictures with recorded sound is nearly as old as film itself, but because of the technical challenges involved, synchronized dialogue was only made possible in the late 1920s with the introduction of the Vitaphone system....
 science fiction film
Science fiction film

Science fiction film is a film genre that uses Speculative fiction, science-based depictions of phenomena that aren't necessarily accepted by mainstream science....
 directed by Fritz Lang
Fritz Lang

Friedrich Christian Anton "Fritz" Lang was an Austrian-Germany-United States filmmaker, screenwriter and occasional film producer. One of the best known ?migr?s from Germany's school of German Expressionism, he was dubbed the "Master of Darkness" by the British Film Institute....
 and written by Lang and Thea von Harbou
Thea von Harbou

Thea Gabriele von Harbou was a Germany actress and author of Prussian aristocratic origin. She was born in D?hlau in the Kingdom of Bavaria.In 1905, she published her first novel in the Deutsche Roman-Zeitung....
. Lang and von Harbou, who were married, wrote the screenplay in , and the story was novelized by von Harbou in 1926
1926 in literature

The year 1926 in literature involved some significant events and new books....
. It is set in a futuristic urban dystopia
Dystopia

A dystopia is the vision of a society that is the opposite of utopia. A dystopian society is one in which the conditions of life are suffering, characterized by human misery, poverty, oppression, violence, disease, and/or pollution....
 and examines a common science fiction theme of the day: the social crisis between workers and owners
Management

Management in business and human organization activity is simply the act of getting people together to accomplish desired goals. Management comprises planning, organizing, staffing, leadership or directing, and Control an organization or effort for the purpose of accomplishing a goal....
 in capitalism
Capitalism

Capitalism is an economic system in which wealth, and the means of producing wealth, are private property and controlled rather than commonly, publicly, or state-owned and controlled....
. The film stars Alfred Abel
Alfred Abel

Alfred Abel was a Germany film actor, director, and producer. He appeared in over 140 silent and sound films between 1913 and 1938. Abel is also known as the ?Lewis Stone of German films.? His most famous performance is his role as Joh Fredersen in Fritz Lang's 1927 in film Metropolis ....
 as the leader of the city, Gustav Fröhlich
Gustav Fröhlich

Gustav Fr?hlich was a Germany actor. He landed secondary roles in a number of films and plays before landing his breakthrough role of Freder Fredersen in Fritz Lang's 1927 in film Metropolis ....
 as his son, who tries to mediate between the elite caste and the workers, Brigitte Helm
Brigitte Helm

Brigitte Eva Gisela Schittenhelm was a German actor, best remembered for her role as the dual role Maria and her double the Maschinenmensch in Fritz Lang's 1927 silent film, Metropolis ....
 as both the pure-at-heart worker Maria and the debased robot version of her, and Rudolf Klein-Rogge
Rudolf Klein-Rogge

Rudolf Klein-Rogge was a Germany stage and film actor of the 1920s and 30s. He is best known for his roles as the mad scientist Rotwang in Fritz Lang's film Metropolis , and as the title character in Lang's Doctor Mabuse series....
 as the mad scientist
Mad scientist

A mad scientist is a stock character of Genre fiction, specifically science fiction. The mad scientist may be villainous, benign or neutral, and whether psychosis, eccentricity , or simply bumbling, mad scientists often work with fictional technology in order to forward their schemes, if they even have a coherent scheme....
 who created the robot.

Metropolis was produced in Germany
Germany

Germany , officially the Federal Republic of Germany , is a country in Central Europe. It is bordered to the north by the North Sea, Denmark, and the Baltic Sea; to the east by Poland and the Czech Republic; to the south by Austria and Switzerland; and to the west by France, Luxembourg, Belgium, and the Netherlands....
 in the Babelsberg Studios
Babelsberg Studios

The Babelsberg Studios, located in Potsdam-Potsdam-Babelsberg, Germany, is the oldest large-scale film studio in the world. Founded in 1911, it covers an area of about ....
 by Universum Film A.G.






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Encyclopedia


Metropolis is a silent
Silent film

A silent film is a film with no synchronized recorded sound, especially spoken dialogue. The idea of combining motion pictures with recorded sound is nearly as old as film itself, but because of the technical challenges involved, synchronized dialogue was only made possible in the late 1920s with the introduction of the Vitaphone system....
 science fiction film
Science fiction film

Science fiction film is a film genre that uses Speculative fiction, science-based depictions of phenomena that aren't necessarily accepted by mainstream science....
 directed by Fritz Lang
Fritz Lang

Friedrich Christian Anton "Fritz" Lang was an Austrian-Germany-United States filmmaker, screenwriter and occasional film producer. One of the best known ?migr?s from Germany's school of German Expressionism, he was dubbed the "Master of Darkness" by the British Film Institute....
 and written by Lang and Thea von Harbou
Thea von Harbou

Thea Gabriele von Harbou was a Germany actress and author of Prussian aristocratic origin. She was born in D?hlau in the Kingdom of Bavaria.In 1905, she published her first novel in the Deutsche Roman-Zeitung....
. Lang and von Harbou, who were married, wrote the screenplay in , and the story was novelized by von Harbou in 1926
1926 in literature

The year 1926 in literature involved some significant events and new books....
. It is set in a futuristic urban dystopia
Dystopia

A dystopia is the vision of a society that is the opposite of utopia. A dystopian society is one in which the conditions of life are suffering, characterized by human misery, poverty, oppression, violence, disease, and/or pollution....
 and examines a common science fiction theme of the day: the social crisis between workers and owners
Management

Management in business and human organization activity is simply the act of getting people together to accomplish desired goals. Management comprises planning, organizing, staffing, leadership or directing, and Control an organization or effort for the purpose of accomplishing a goal....
 in capitalism
Capitalism

Capitalism is an economic system in which wealth, and the means of producing wealth, are private property and controlled rather than commonly, publicly, or state-owned and controlled....
. The film stars Alfred Abel
Alfred Abel

Alfred Abel was a Germany film actor, director, and producer. He appeared in over 140 silent and sound films between 1913 and 1938. Abel is also known as the ?Lewis Stone of German films.? His most famous performance is his role as Joh Fredersen in Fritz Lang's 1927 in film Metropolis ....
 as the leader of the city, Gustav Fröhlich
Gustav Fröhlich

Gustav Fr?hlich was a Germany actor. He landed secondary roles in a number of films and plays before landing his breakthrough role of Freder Fredersen in Fritz Lang's 1927 in film Metropolis ....
 as his son, who tries to mediate between the elite caste and the workers, Brigitte Helm
Brigitte Helm

Brigitte Eva Gisela Schittenhelm was a German actor, best remembered for her role as the dual role Maria and her double the Maschinenmensch in Fritz Lang's 1927 silent film, Metropolis ....
 as both the pure-at-heart worker Maria and the debased robot version of her, and Rudolf Klein-Rogge
Rudolf Klein-Rogge

Rudolf Klein-Rogge was a Germany stage and film actor of the 1920s and 30s. He is best known for his roles as the mad scientist Rotwang in Fritz Lang's film Metropolis , and as the title character in Lang's Doctor Mabuse series....
 as the mad scientist
Mad scientist

A mad scientist is a stock character of Genre fiction, specifically science fiction. The mad scientist may be villainous, benign or neutral, and whether psychosis, eccentricity , or simply bumbling, mad scientists often work with fictional technology in order to forward their schemes, if they even have a coherent scheme....
 who created the robot.

Metropolis was produced in Germany
Germany

Germany , officially the Federal Republic of Germany , is a country in Central Europe. It is bordered to the north by the North Sea, Denmark, and the Baltic Sea; to the east by Poland and the Czech Republic; to the south by Austria and Switzerland; and to the west by France, Luxembourg, Belgium, and the Netherlands....
 in the Babelsberg Studios
Babelsberg Studios

The Babelsberg Studios, located in Potsdam-Potsdam-Babelsberg, Germany, is the oldest large-scale film studio in the world. Founded in 1911, it covers an area of about ....
 by Universum Film A.G. (UFA) and released in 1927
1927 in film

Events*January 10 - Fritz Lang's science-fiction fantasy Metropolis premieres in Germany.*April 12 - The Marx Brothers' Zeppo Marx marries Marion Benda....
 during a stable period of the Weimar Republic
Weimar Republic

The Weimar Republic was the democracy and republican period of Germany from 1919 to 1933. Following World War I, the republic emerged from the German Revolution in November 1918....
. The most expensive film of its time, it cost approximately 7 million Reichsmark
German reichsmark

The Reichsmark was the currency in Germany from 1924 until June 20, 1948. The Reichsmark was subdivided into 100 Reichspfennig....
 to make. The film was cut substantially after its German premiere, and there have been several efforts to restore it. Also, the American copyright lapsed in , which eventually led to a proliferation of versions being released on video.

Plot

There are multiple versions of Metropolis. The original, longest version remained unseen except for its initial premiere and release in Germany in 1927. Of this version, a quarter of the footage was believed to be permanently lost
Lost film

A lost film is a feature film or short film that is no longer known to exist in either studio archives or private collections. The phrase "lost film" is also used in a literal sense for instances where footage of deleted scenes, unedited and alternate versions of feature films, and recordings of early television programming are known to have...
, but the German paper Die Zeit
Die Zeit

Die Zeit is a Germany nationwide weekly newspaper that is highly respected for its quality journalism. With a circulation of 488,036 and an estimated readership of slightly above 2 million, it is the most widely read German weekly newspaper....
 reported on 2 July that a film museum in Argentina
Argentina

Argentina, officially the Argentine Republic , is a country in South America, constituted as a federation of 23 provinces and an autonomous city....
 had turned up what scholars believe to be a print of Metropolis containing the missing footage. The American version, shortened and re-written by Channing Pollock
Channing Pollock (writer)

Channing Pollock was an United States playwright, critic and writer of film scenarios.When the American distribution rights were secured for the German silent film Metropolis , Pollock was hired to write new English-language intertitles for the film....
, is the most commonly known and discussed.

Metropolis is set in the year 2027, in the extraordinary Art Deco
Art Deco

Art Deco was a popular international design movement from 1925 until 1939, affecting the decorative arts such as architecture, interior design, and industrial design, as well as the visual arts such as fashion, painting, the graphic arts and film....
 skyscraper
Skyscraper

A skyscraper is a tall, continuously habitable building. There is no official definition nor height above which a building may clearly be classified as a skyscraper....
s of a corporate city-state, the metropolis
Metropolis

A metropolis , also referred to as a metropolitan, is a big city, in most cases with over half a million inhabitants in the city proper, and with a population of at least one million living in its Agglomeration....
 of the title. Society has been divided into two rigid groups: one of planners or thinkers, who live high above the earth in luxury, and another of workers who live underground toiling to sustain the lives of the privileged. The city is run by Johann 'Joh' Fredersen (Alfred Abel).

The beautiful and evangelical Maria (Brigitte Helm
Brigitte Helm

Brigitte Eva Gisela Schittenhelm was a German actor, best remembered for her role as the dual role Maria and her double the Maschinenmensch in Fritz Lang's 1927 silent film, Metropolis ....
) takes up the cause of the workers. She advises the desperate workers not to start a revolution, and instead wait for the arrival of "The Mediator", who will be the "heart" between the "head" – Fredersen the conceiver of the city – and the "hands" – the people who labor to make it a reality. The Mediator, she says, will unite the two halves of society. The son of Fredersen, Freder (Gustav Fröhlich
Gustav Fröhlich

Gustav Fr?hlich was a Germany actor. He landed secondary roles in a number of films and plays before landing his breakthrough role of Freder Fredersen in Fritz Lang's 1927 in film Metropolis ....
), becomes infatuated with Maria, and follows her down into the workers' underworld, where he experiences firsthand the toiling lifestyle of the workers, and observes the casual attitude of their employers about the workers' well-being. He is disgusted after seeing an explosion at the "M-Machine", when the employers bring in new workers to keep the machine running before taking care of the men wounded or killed in the accident. Shocked at the workers' living conditions, he joins Maria's cause.

Meanwhile his father, Fredersen, consults with the scientist Rotwang
Rotwang

C. A. Rotwang is a fictional character in Fritz Lang's 1927 science fiction film Metropolis . Rotwang was played by Rudolf Klein-Rogge....
 (Rudolf Klein-Rogge
Rudolf Klein-Rogge

Rudolf Klein-Rogge was a Germany stage and film actor of the 1920s and 30s. He is best known for his roles as the mad scientist Rotwang in Fritz Lang's film Metropolis , and as the title character in Lang's Doctor Mabuse series....
), an old companion and rival. Fredersen learns that the papers found with some dead workers are plans of the catacombs beneath the city, and witnesses a speech by Maria. He also learns that Rotwang has built a robot
Maschinenmensch

The Maschinenmensch from Metropolis , played by German actress Brigitte Helm in both her robotic and human incarnations, is one of cinema's most famous icons....
, and wants to give it the appearance of Hel, his former lover who left him for Fredersen and died giving birth to Freder. Fredersen persuades him to give the robot Maria's appearance instead, as he wants to use the robot to tighten his control over the workers. Rotwang complies out of ulterior motives: he knows about Freder's and Maria's love, and plans to use the robot to deprive Fredersen of his son.

The real Maria is imprisoned in Rotwang's house, while the robot Maria is first showcased as an exotic dancer
Exotic dancer

The terms wiktionary:Exotic dancer and exotic dance can have different meanings in different parts of the world and depending on context....
 in the upper city's Yoshiwara
Yoshiwara

Yoshiwara was a famous Akasen district in Edo, present-day Tokyo, Japan.In the early 17th century, there was widespread male and female prostitution throughout the cities of Kyoto, Edo, and Osaka....
 nightclub
Nightclub

A nightclub is a Alcoholic beverage, Dance and entertainment Music venue which does its primary business after dark. People who frequent nightclubs are known as clubbers....
, fomenting discord among the rich young men of the city. The robot then descends into the worker's city and incites the workers into a full-scale rebellion, during which the "Heart Machine", the power station for the city, is destroyed. Neither Freder nor Grot, the foreman of the Heart Machine, can stop them. As the machine is destroyed, the city's reservoirs overflow, flooding the workers' underground city, which would have drowned their children, who were left behind in the riot, if not for the heroic rescue efforts of Freder and Maria.

The workers do not know that their children have been saved, and when they realize the damage they have done and that their children are lost, they attack the upper city. Under the leadership of Grot, they chase the human Maria, who they hold responsible for their riot. As they break into the city's entertainment district, they run into the Yoshiwara crowd and capture the robot Maria, while the human Maria manages to escape. The workers burn the captured Maria at the stake; Freder, believing this to be the human Maria, despairs, but then he and the workers realize that the burned Maria is in fact a robot.

Meanwhile, the human Maria is chased by Rotwang along the battlements of the city's cathedral
Cathedral

A cathedral is a Christian church that contains the seat of a bishop. It is a Religion building for worship, specifically of a denomination with an episcopal hierarchy, such as the Roman Catholic Church, Anglicanism, Orthodox Christian and some Lutheranism churches, which serves as a bishop's seat, and thus as the central church of a dioc...
. Freder chases after Rotwang, resulting in a climactic scene in which Joh Fredersen watches in terror as his son struggles with Rotwang on the cathedral's roof. Rotwang falls to his death, and Maria and Freder return to the street, where Freder unites Fredersen (the "head") and Grot (the "hands"), fulfilling his role as the "Mediator" (the "heart").

Cast

  • Alfred Abel
    Alfred Abel

    Alfred Abel was a Germany film actor, director, and producer. He appeared in over 140 silent and sound films between 1913 and 1938. Abel is also known as the ?Lewis Stone of German films.? His most famous performance is his role as Joh Fredersen in Fritz Lang's 1927 in film Metropolis ....
     as Joh Fredersen
  • Gustav Fröhlich
    Gustav Fröhlich

    Gustav Fr?hlich was a Germany actor. He landed secondary roles in a number of films and plays before landing his breakthrough role of Freder Fredersen in Fritz Lang's 1927 in film Metropolis ....
     as Freder, Joh Fredersen's son
  • Rudolf Klein-Rogge
    Rudolf Klein-Rogge

    Rudolf Klein-Rogge was a Germany stage and film actor of the 1920s and 30s. He is best known for his roles as the mad scientist Rotwang in Fritz Lang's film Metropolis , and as the title character in Lang's Doctor Mabuse series....
     as C. A. Rotwang
  • Fritz Rasp
    Fritz Rasp

    Fritz Heinrich Rasp was a Germany film actor who appeared in 104 films between 1916 in film and 1976 in film. His most notable role was "Der Schmale" in Fritz Lang's 1927 in film Metropolis ; many of the scenes in which he appears are part of the film's footage long believed lost until their recovery in 2008....
     as the Thin Man
  • Theodor Loos
    Theodor Loos

    Theodor August Konrad Loos was a German actor.The son of a watchmaker and instruments manufacturer left secondary school prematurely and worked for three years at an export firm for music instruments in Leipzig, and after that for his uncle, an art dealer in Berlin....
     as Josaphat
  • Erwin Biswanger as Worker 11811 / Georgi
  • Heinrich George
    Heinrich George

    Heinrich George was a German stage and film actor.He had one of his first roles in the Fritz Lang directed film Metropolis and the first film version of Berlin Alexanderplatz ....
     as Grot, Foreman of the Heart Machine
  • Brigitte Helm
    Brigitte Helm

    Brigitte Eva Gisela Schittenhelm was a German actor, best remembered for her role as the dual role Maria and her double the Maschinenmensch in Fritz Lang's 1927 silent film, Metropolis ....
     as Maria/robot
  • Georg John
    Georg John

    Georg John was a Germany stage and film actor....
     as a worker


Architecture and visual effects

Brueghel Tower of Babel
Metropolis features special effect
Special effect

The illusions used in the film, television, theater, or entertainment industries to simulate the imagined events in a story are traditionally called special effects ....
s and set designs that still impress modern audiences with their visual impact – the film contains cinematic and thematic links to German Expressionism, though the architecture as portrayed in the film appears based on contemporary Modernism
Modern architecture

Modern architecture is a set of building styles with similar characteristics, primarily the simplification of form and the elimination of Ornament ....
 and Art Deco
Art Deco

Art Deco was a popular international design movement from 1925 until 1939, affecting the decorative arts such as architecture, interior design, and industrial design, as well as the visual arts such as fashion, painting, the graphic arts and film....
. The latter, a brand-new style in Europe
Europe

Europe is, conventionally, one of the world's seven continents. Comprising the westernmost peninsula of Eurasia, Europe is generally divided from Asia to its east by the water divide of the Ural Mountains, the Ural , the Caspian Sea, and by the Caucasus Mountains to the southeast....
 at the time, had not reached mass production yet and was considered an emblem of the bourgeois class, and similarly associated with the ruling class in the film.

Rotwang's Art Deco laboratory with its lights and industrial machinery is a forerunner of the Streamline Moderne
Streamline Moderne

Streamline Moderne, sometimes referred to by either name alone, was a late branch of the Art Deco design style. Its architectural style emphasized curving forms, long horizontal lines, and sometimes nautical elements ....
 style, highly influential on the look of Frankenstein
Frankenstein

Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus, generally known as Frankenstein, is a novel written by the British author Mary Shelley. Shelley started writing Frankenstein when she was 18 and finished when she was 19....
-style laboratories of "mad scientists" in pop culture. When applied to science fiction, this style is sometimes called Raygun Gothic
Raygun Gothic

Raygun Gothic is a catchall term for a visual style that incorporates various aspects of the Googie architecture, Streamline Moderne and Art Deco architectural styles when applied to Retro-futurism science fiction environments....
.

The effects expert, Eugen Schüfftan
Eugen Schüfftan

Eugen Sch?fftan was an Academy Award-winning cinematographer.He invented the Sch?fftan process, a special effects technique that employed mirrors to insert actors into miniature sets....
, created innovative visual displays widely acclaimed in following years. Among the effects used are miniatures
Miniature effect

In the field of special effects a miniature effect is a special effect generated by the use of scale models. Scale models are often combined with high speed photography to make gravitational and other effects scale properly....
 of the city, a camera on a swing, and most notably, the so-called Schüfftan process
Schüfftan process

The Sch?fftan process is a movie special effect named after its inventor, Eugen Sch?fftan . It was widely used in the first half of the 20th century before being almost completely replaced by the matte and bluescreen effects....
, in which mirrors are used to "place" actors inside miniature sets. This new technique was seen again just two years later in Alfred Hitchcock
Alfred Hitchcock

Sir Alfred Joseph Hitchcock, Order of the British Empire was a British filmmaker and film producer who pioneered many techniques in the suspense and psychological thriller genres....
's film Blackmail
Blackmail (1929 film)

Blackmail is a Thriller /drama film directed by Alfred Hitchcock, starring Anny Ondra, John Longden, and Cyril Ritchard, and featuring Donald Calthrop, Sara Allgood and Charles Paton....
 .

The Maschinenmensch
Maschinenmensch

The Maschinenmensch from Metropolis , played by German actress Brigitte Helm in both her robotic and human incarnations, is one of cinema's most famous icons....
, the robot character played by Brigitte Helm
Brigitte Helm

Brigitte Eva Gisela Schittenhelm was a German actor, best remembered for her role as the dual role Maria and her double the Maschinenmensch in Fritz Lang's 1927 silent film, Metropolis ....
, was created by Walter Schultze-Mittendorf. A chance discovery of a sample of "plastic wood" (a pliable substance designed as wood-filler) allowed him to sculpt the costume like a suit of armour over a plaster cast of the actress. Spraypainted a mix of silver and bronze, it helped create some of the most memorable moments on film. Helm suffered greatly during the filming of these scenes wearing this rigid and uncomfortable costume, which cut and bruised her, but Fritz Lang
Fritz Lang

Friedrich Christian Anton "Fritz" Lang was an Austrian-Germany-United States filmmaker, screenwriter and occasional film producer. One of the best known ?migr?s from Germany's school of German Expressionism, he was dubbed the "Master of Darkness" by the British Film Institute....
 insisted on her playing the part, even if nobody would know it was her. Walter Schulze-Mittendorf (Mittendorff), the sculptor, is still the owner of the copyrights for the Maschinenmensch – Robotdesign.

Release

On January 10, 1927, a 153 minute version of the film premiered in Berlin
Berlin

Berlin is the Capital of Germany city and one of sixteen States of Germany of Germany. With a population of 3.4 million within its city limits, Berlin is the country's largest city....
 with moderate success. The film was cut and re-edited to change many key elements before screening. After sound films came in in late 1927, theatre managers saw to it that the film was shown using a sound film projector at the standard sound film
Sound film

A sound film is a film with synchronization, or sound technologically coupled to image, as opposed to a silent film. The first known public exhibition of projected sound films took place in Paris in 1900, but decades would pass before reliable synchronization was made commercially practical....
 speed of up to 26 frames per second (as at its Berlin premiere). This affected the rhythm and pace of the original film, which had been made to be shown at the standard silent film
Silent film

A silent film is a film with no synchronized recorded sound, especially spoken dialogue. The idea of combining motion pictures with recorded sound is nearly as old as film itself, but because of the technical challenges involved, synchronized dialogue was only made possible in the late 1920s with the introduction of the Vitaphone system....
 speed of 16 frames per second. The butchered, sped-up version which was presented to European and American audiences in 1928 was disjointed and illogical in parts.

American and foreign theatre managers were generally unwilling to allow more than ninety minutes to a feature in their program, during a period when film attendance figures were high. Metropolis suffered as the original version was thought to be too long. Few people outside of Berlin saw Metropolis as Fritz Lang originally intended. In the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
, the movie was shown in a version edited by the American playwright Channing Pollock
Channing Pollock (writer)

Channing Pollock was an United States playwright, critic and writer of film scenarios.When the American distribution rights were secured for the German silent film Metropolis , Pollock was hired to write new English-language intertitles for the film....
, who almost completely obscured the original plot, considered too controversial by the American distributors, and is considerably shortened. In Germany, a version similar to Pollock's was shown on August 5.

As a result of the edited versions, the original premiere cut eventually disappeared and a quarter of the original film was long believed to be lost forever. In 2001, a new 75th anniversasry restoration, commissioned by the Friedrich-Wilhelm-Murnau-Stiftung, was screened at the Berlin International Film Festival. This version, with a running time of 124 minutes, restored the original story line using stills and intertitles to bridge missing footage. It also added a soundtrack using the orchestral score originally composed by Gottfried Huppertz to go with the film. This restoration received the National Society of Film Critics Heritage Award for Restoration 2002.(ref: Koerber, Martin. Liner notes Kino Restored Authorized Edition, 2002) In June 2008, twenty to twenty-five minutes of lost footage were discovered in an archive of the Museum of Cinema in Buenos Aires
Buenos Aires

Buenos Aires is the Capital and largest city of Argentina. It is located on the southern shore of the R?o de la Plata, on the southeastern coast of the South American continent....
, Argentina
Argentina

Argentina, officially the Argentine Republic , is a country in South America, constituted as a federation of 23 provinces and an autonomous city....
. It was believed this was a copy made of a print owned by a private collector, who brought the original cut to the country in 1928.

Despite the film's later reputation, some contemporary critics panned it. The New York Times critic Mourdant Hall called it a "technical marvel with feet of clay". The Times went on the next month to publish a lengthy review by H. G. Wells
H. G. Wells

Herbert George Wells , known by his pen name H. G. Wells, was an England author, best known for his work in the science fiction genre. Wells and Jules Verne are each sometimes referred to as "The Father of Science Fiction"....
 who accused it of "foolishness, cliché, platitude, and muddlement about mechanical progress and progress in general." He faulted Metropolis for its premise that automation created drudgery rather than relieving it, wondered who was buying the machines' output if not the workers, and found parts of the story derivative of Shelley's Frankenstein
Frankenstein

Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus, generally known as Frankenstein, is a novel written by the British author Mary Shelley. Shelley started writing Frankenstein when she was 18 and finished when she was 19....
, Karel Capek
Karel Capek

Dr. 'Karel Capek' was one of the most influential Czech language writers of the 20th century. He introduced and made popular the frequently used international word robot, which first appeared in his play R.U.R....
's robot stories, and his own The Sleeper Awakes
The Sleeper Awakes

The Sleeper Awakes is a dystopian novel by H. G. Wells about a man who sleeps for two hundred and three years, waking up in a completely transformed London, where, because of compound interest on his deposit account, he has become the richest man in the world....
.

Joseph Goebbels
Joseph Goebbels

Paul Joseph Goebbels was a German people politician and Reich Minister of Propaganda in Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1945. He was one of German dictator Adolf Hitler's closest associates and most devout followers....
 was impressed however and clearly took the film's message to heart. In a speech of 1928 he noted: "The political bourgeoisie is about to leave the stage of history. In its place advance the oppressed producers of the head and hand, the forces of Labour, to begin their historical mission".

Fritz Lang himself expressed dissatisfaction with the film. In an interview with Peter Bogdanovich
Peter Bogdanovich

Peter Bogdanovich is an American film historian, director, writer, actor, producer, and critic. He was part of the wave of "New Hollywood" directors, which included William Friedkin, Brian DePalma, George Lucas, Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, Michael Cimino, and Francis Ford Coppola....
 (available in Who The Devil Made It...), he expressed his reservations.
The main thesis was Mrs. Von Harbou's, but I am at least 50 percent responsible because I did it. I was not so politically minded in those days as I am now. You cannot make a social-conscious picture in which you say that the intermediary between the hand and the brain is the heart. I mean, that's a fairy tale -- definitely. But I was very interested in machines. Anyway, I didn't like the picture -- thought it was silly and stupid -- then, when I saw the astronauts: what else are they but part of a machine? It's very hard to talk about pictures--should I say now that I like Metropolis because something I have seen in my imagination comes true, when I detested it after it was finished?
In his profile for Lang featured in the same book, which prefaces the interview, Bogdanovich suggested that Lang's distaste for his own film also stemmed from the Nazi party's fascination with the film. Von Harbou became a passionate member of the Nazi Party in 1933, and she and Lang divorced in 1934.

Restorations and re-releases

Metropolisnew
Several restored versions (all of them missing varying amounts of footage) were released in the 1980s and 1990s, running for 90 minutes.

In 1984, a new restoration and edit of the film was compiled by Giorgio Moroder
Giorgio Moroder

Giorgio Moroder is an Italy record producer, songwriter and performer, whose groundbreaking work with synthesizers during the 1970s and 1980s was a significant influence on new wave music, house music, techno music and electronic music in general....
, a music producer who specialized in pop-rock soundtrack
Soundtrack

The term soundtrack refers to three related concepts: recorded music accompanying and synchronized to the images of a motion picture, television program or video game; a commercially released soundtrack album of music as featured in the soundtrack of a film or TV show; and the physical area of a film that contains the synchronized recorded so...
s for motion pictures. Moroder’s version of the film introduced a new modern rock-and-roll soundtrack for the film. Although it restored a number of previously missing scenes and plot details from the original release, his version of the film runs to only 80 minutes in length, although this is mainly due to the original intertitle
Intertitle

In motion pictures, an intertitle is a piece of filmed, printed text edited into the midst of the photographed action, at various points, generally to convey character dialogue, or descriptive narrative material related to, but not necessarily covered by, the material photographed....
s being replaced with subtitles, and being run at 24fps. The “Moroder version” of Metropolis sparked heated debate among film buffs and fans, with outspoken critics and supporters of the film falling into equal camps. There have even been petitions to get the Moroder cut alongside the uncut version for future releases on DVD and Bluray.

Enno Patalas
Enno Patalas

Enno Patalas is a German film historian, collector, and restorer famous for setting the basis for the authorised restoration of silent films like Metropolis , M and Die Nibelungen, all directed by Fritz Lang....
 made an exhaustive attempt to restore the movie in 1986. This restoration was the most accurate for its time, thanks to the script and the musical score that had been discovered. The basis of Patalas' work was a copy in the Museum of Modern Art
Museum of Modern Art

The Museum of Modern Art is an art museum located in Midtown Manhattan in New York City, USA, on 53rd Street, between Fifth and Sixth Avenues....
's collection.

The film fell into the United States public domain
Public domain

File:PD-icon.svgThe public domain is a range of abstract materials?commonly referred to as intellectual property?which are not owned or controlled by anyone....
, but its copyright
Copyright

Copyright is a form of intellectual property which gives the creator of an original work exclusive rights for a certain time period in relation to that work, including its publication, distribution and adaptation; after which time the work is said to enter the public domain....
 was restored in 1998. The lawsuit Golan v. Gonzales unsuccessfully attempted to block Metropolis' copyright restoration.

The F.W. Murnau Foundation (which now owns the film's copyright) and Kino International
Kino International

Kino International is a film and video distributor, founded in 1977. Kino, based in New York City, specializes in art film films, such as low-budget current films, classic films from earlier periods in the history of cinema, and world cinema....
 (now the film's American distributor) released a 124-minute, digitally restored version in 2002, supervised by Martin Koerber. It included the original music score and title cards describing the action in the missing sequences. Lost clips were gleaned from museums and archives around the world, and computers were used to digitally clean each frame and repair minor defects. The original score was re-recorded with an orchestral ensemble. Many scenes had still not been recovered at that point and were considered lost
Lost film

A lost film is a feature film or short film that is no longer known to exist in either studio archives or private collections. The phrase "lost film" is also used in a literal sense for instances where footage of deleted scenes, unedited and alternate versions of feature films, and recordings of early television programming are known to have...
. Among the missing scenes are the adventures of 11811, a worker who trades places with Freder; the Thin Man spying on Josephat; Maria's incarceration; Rotwang's gloating and her subsequent escape; and scenes which establish the longstanding rivalry between Joh Fredersen and Rotwang.

Most silent films were shot at speeds of between 16 and 20 frames per second, but the digitally restored version with soundtrack plays at the speed of 25 frames per second, which is the standard speed of PAL
PAL

PAL, short for Phase Alternating Line, is a color-encoding system used in broadcast television systems in large parts of the world. Other common analog television systems are SECAM and NTSC....
 video (the US DVD is a conversion
Television standards conversion

Television standards conversion is the process of changing one type of TV system to another. The most common is from NTSC to PAL or the other way around....
 from PAL to NTSC
NTSC

NTSC is the analog television system used in most of the Americas, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, the Philippines, Burma, and some Pacific island nations and territories ....
). This speed often makes the action look unnaturally fast. A documentary on the Kino DVD edition states that Metropolis may have been filmed at 25 frames per second, but this is disputed. There have been reports stating that the world premiere of Metropolis was shown at 24 frame/s, but these, too, are unconfirmed. In the 1970s, the BBC prepared a version with electronic sound that ran at 18 frames per second and consequently had much more realistic-looking movement. Since there is no concrete evidence of Fritz Lang's wishes on this subject, it continues to be hotly debated within the silent film community.

Rediscovery

On July 1, 2008, Berlin film experts announced that a 16mm reduction negative of the original cut of the film, which runs over 210 minutes in length, had been discovered in the archives of the film museum Museo del Cine in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The find has been authenticated by film experts working for ZEITmagazin. The print is badly scratched and will require considerable restoration before it is viewable. On July 3, 2008 the film with many lost scenes restored was shown to journalists in Argentina.

Passed from film distributor, to private collector, to an Art Foundation since 1928, The Museo del Cine received the copy of Metropolis in 1992, where it stayed 'undiscovered' in their archives. After hearing an anecdote by the cinema club manager, who years before had been surprised by how long a screening of this film had taken, the curator of the Museo del Cine and the director of the film department of the Museum of Latin American Art reviewed the film and discovered the missing scenes.

Online sources have reported that this footage will appear on a new DVD
DVD

DVD, also known as "Digital Versatile Disc" or "Digital Video Disc,"is a popular optical disc data storage device media format. Its main uses are video and data storage....
 and Blu-ray to be released in .

A possible original copy of the movie was found in 2005 in the film archive of Universidad de Chile. The copy has been sent to Germany
Germany

Germany , officially the Federal Republic of Germany , is a country in Central Europe. It is bordered to the north by the North Sea, Denmark, and the Baltic Sea; to the east by Poland and the Czech Republic; to the south by Austria and Switzerland; and to the west by France, Luxembourg, Belgium, and the Netherlands....
 for verification.

Music


The original score

Like many big budget films of the time, the original release of Metropolis had an original musical score meant to be performed by large orchestras accompanying the film in major theatres. The music was composed by Gottfried Huppertz, who had composed the original scores for Lang's Die Nibelungen
Die Nibelungen

Die Nibelungen is a duology of silent film fantasy films created by Austrian director Fritz Lang in 1924 in film: Die Nibelungen: Siegfried and Die Nibelungen: Kriemhild's Revenge....
 films in 1924. For Metropolis Huppertz composed a leitmotific orchestral score which included many elements from the music of Richard Wagner
Richard Wagner

Wilhelm Richard Wagner was a German composer, Conducting, theatre director and essayist, primarily known for his operas . Unlike most other great opera composers, Wagner wrote both the scenario and libretto for his works....
 and Richard Strauss
Richard Strauss

Richard Georg Strauss was a German composer of the late Romantic music and early modern eras, particularly of operas, Lieder and tone poems. Strauss was also a prominent Conducting....
, plus some mild modernisms for the city of the workers and the use of the popular Dies Irae
Dies Irae

Dies Irae is a famous thirteenth century Latin hymn thought to be written by Tommaso da Celano. It is a medieval Latin poem, differing from classical Latin by its accentual stress and its rhymed lines....
 for some apocalyptic imagery. His music played a prominent role during the shooting of the film, since during principal photography many scenes were accompanied by him playing the piano to get a certain effect from the actors.

The score was rerecorded for the most recent DVD release of the film with Berndt Heller conducting the Rundfunksinfonieorchester Saarbrücken. It was the first release of the reasonably reconstructed movie accompanied by the music that was originally intended for it. In 2007 the original film score was also played live by the VCS Radio Symphony which accompanied the restored version of the film at Brenden Theatres in Vacaville, CA on August 1 & 2.

Other soundtracks

There have been many other soundtracks created for Metropolis by many different artists, including, but not limited to:

  • 1975 - The BBC version of Metropolis features an electronic score, composed by William Fitzwater and Hugh Davies
    Hugh Davies

    Hugh Seymour Davies was a musicology, composer, and inventor of musical instruments.Davies was born in Exmouth, Devon, England. After attending Westminster School, he studied music at Worcester College, University of Oxford from 1961 to 1964....
    .
  • 1984 - Video Yesteryear, VHS release - The original score is performed by Rosa Rio at the Hammond organ.
  • 1984 – Giorgio Moroder
    Giorgio Moroder

    Giorgio Moroder is an Italy record producer, songwriter and performer, whose groundbreaking work with synthesizers during the 1970s and 1980s was a significant influence on new wave music, house music, techno music and electronic music in general....
     restored and produced the 80-minute re-release, which had a pop soundtrack written by Moroder and performed by Moroder, Pat Benatar
    Pat Benatar

    Pat Benatar is a four-time Grammy Award-winning United States singer best known for hit songs like "Love Is a Battlefield" and "Hit Me with Your Best Shot"....
    , Bonnie Tyler
    Bonnie Tyler

    Bonnie Tyler is a Welsh people Rock music singer. Born Gaynor Hopkins, she is recognisable by her highly distinctive, husky voice....
    , Jon Anderson
    Jon Anderson

    Jon Anderson, born John Roy Anderson on 25 October 1944, is an England musician, best known as the lead singer of the progressive rock musical band Yes ....
    , Adam Ant
    Adam Ant

    Adam Ant is an English musician, who gained popularity as the lead singer of 1980s New Wave music/post-punk group Adam and the Ants and later as a solo artist....
    , Cycle V, Loverboy
    Loverboy

    Loverboy is a Canadian rock music group formed in 1980 in Calgary, Alberta. Throughout the 1980s, the band accumulated numerous hit songs in Canada and the United States, making four multi-platinum albums and selling millions of records....
    , Billy Squier
    Billy Squier

    William Haislip "Billy" Squier is an American Rock music musician. Squier had a string of arena rock hits in the 1980s. He is probably best known for the song "The Stroke" on his 1981 album release Don't Say No....
    , and Freddie Mercury
    Freddie Mercury

    Freddie Mercury , was a United Kingdom singer-songwriter, pianist, guitarist and co-founder of the Rock music Musical ensemble Queen . As a performer, he was known for his vocal prowess and flamboyant performances....
    . This resulted in considerable controversy, with film purists objecting to the use of contemporary pop music. The Moroder soundtrack is available on CD, but his version of the film itself is not available on DVD, only on out-of print laserdiscs and videotapes.
  • 1991 – Club Foot Orchestra. Performed live to accompany the 80-minute Moroder version. Soundtrack available on CD.
  • 1991 – The Alloy Orchestra formed to create a new original score to Moroder's version of Metropolis.
  • 1994 – Rambo Amadeus
    Rambo Amadeus

    Rambo Amadeus is the stage name of the Belgrade-based Montenegrins singer-songwriter Antonije Pu?ic, popular all over the former Yugoslavia....
    , Serbia
    Serbia

    Serbia , officially the Republic of Serbia , is a country in Central Europe and Balkans Europe, covering the southern part of the Pannonian Plain and the central part of the Balkans....
    -based Montenegrin
    Montenegro

    Montenegro , Montenegrin language/Serbian language: ???? ????, Crna Gora , ) is a country located in Balkans. It has a coast on the Adriatic Sea to the south and is bordered by Croatia to the west, Bosnia and Herzegovina to the northwest, Serbia to the north, Kosovo to the east and Albania to the south....
     composer. At a movie screening at Sava Center, Rambo's music was played by Belgrade Philharmonic. The material was recorded in 1998 by Rambo himself along with Miroslav Savic and Heavily Manipulated Orchestra, and released as Metropolis B (Tour de Force).
  • 1994 – Galeshka Moravioff. Score used in one of the variants of Filmmuseum Munich restoration.
  • 1995 – Martin Matalon. Score used in another variant of Filmmuseum Munich restoration.
  • 1996 – DJ Dado
    DJ Dado

    DJ Dado is an Italy disc jockey and record producer with Croats roots, who is mostly known for his remix of Mark Snow's theme for X-Files, and for covering Giorgio Moroder's "The Legend Of Babel"....
     records techno version of the "Tower of Babel" section of Moroder's score. The German CD release contains several mixes.
  • 1998 – Peter Osborne. Synth orchestral / electronic. For JEF/Eureka 139-minute B&W DVD version, released only in UK. Not available on CD.
  • 1999 – Angel Tech. 3-piece group from Bristol, UK. Performed live to various versions in 1999/2000. Availability unknown.
  • 2000 – After Quartet. Jazz group. Score by Brian McWhorter. Accompanies the 80-minute Moroder cut. Soundtrack available on CD.
  • 2000 – Dan Schaaf. Performed live for festivals in 2000/2001. Available on CD.
  • 2001 – Mute Life Dept. Portuguese group. Accompanied Filmmuseum Munich version, for live performance at Porto 2001. Available on CD.
  • 2001 – Jeff Mills
    Jeff Mills

    Jeff Mills is an influential Techno music DJ and music producer from Detroit....
    . Electronic artist. Available on CD.
  • 2001 – Bernd Schultheis and Sofia's Radio Orchestra. Accompaniment for film festivals in 2001. Availability unknown.
  • 2002 – The original Gottfried Huppertz score was rerecorded in this entirety for the DVD release by Kino International
    Kino International

    Kino International is a film and video distributor, founded in 1977. Kino, based in New York City, specializes in art film films, such as low-budget current films, classic films from earlier periods in the history of cinema, and world cinema....
    .
  • 2002 - Art Zoyd
    Art Zoyd

    Art Zoyd is a France band formed in 1968, mixing free jazz, progressive rock and avant-garde electronica.Like other members of the Rock in Opposition movement, Art Zoyd fuses progressive rock and jazz with contemporary classical music....
     - . French avant-garde/electronic band. Available on CD.
  • 2004 – - (requires Flash
    Adobe Flash

    Adobe Flash is a multimedia Platform created by Macromedia and currently developed and distributed by Adobe Systems. Since its introduction in 1996, Flash has become a popular method for adding animation and interactivity to web pages; Flash is commonly used to create animation, advertisements, and various web page components, to integrate...
    ).
  • 2005 – South Australian group "" (Benjamin Speed
    Benjamin Speed

    Benjamin Peter Speed is an Australian musician who composes Film score composer, television and theatre. He performs and records as Mister Speed and was vocalist and songwriter in the Australian Alternative rock, electronica and Hip hop music band The New Pollutants....
     and Tyson Hopprich) released Metropolis Rescore
    Metropolis Rescore

    Metropolis Rescore is a soundtrack by The New Pollutants for the silent film Metropolis . The soundtrack is for the 118-minute, digitally restored version which was released in 2002 by the F.W....
    . It was performed live for festivals 2005/2006.


Themes


Clocks From Metropolis
The film contains a scene where Maria retells a variation of the story of the Tower of Babel
Tower of Babel

The Tower of Babel according to chapter 11 of the Book of Genesis, was an enormous tower built at the city of Babel, the Hebrew name for Babylon ....
 from the Biblical
Bible

The Bible is the central religious text of Judaism and Christianity. The exact Books of the Bible is dependent on the religious traditions of specific denominations....
 book of Genesis
Genesis

Genesis or Breishit is the first book of the Bible used by Judaism and Christianity, and the first of five books of the Pentateuch or Torah....
, but in a way that connects it to the situation she and her fellow workers face. The scene changes from Maria to creative men of antiquity deciding to build a monument to the greatness of humanity and the creator of the world, high enough to reach the stars. Since they cannot build their monument by themselves, they contract workers to build it for them for wages. The camera focuses on armies of workers led to the construction site of the monument. They work hard but cannot understand the dreams of the Tower's designers, and the designers don't concern themselves with the mind of their workers. As the film explains, "The dreams of a few had turned to the curses of many". It then ironically inverts the original story's conclusion, noting that the planners and the workers spoke the same language but didn't understand each other. The workers revolt and in their fury destroy the monument. As the scene ends and the camera returns to Maria, only ruins remain of the Tower of Babel. This retelling is notable in keeping the theme of the lack of communication from the original story but placing it in the context of relations between social class
Social class

Social class refers to the hierarchy distinctions between individuals or groups in societies or cultures. Usually most societies have some notion of social class , but concretely defined social classes are not found in every known type of human societies....
es.

The entire film is dominated by technology, with Lang using a mixture of both 1920s and futuristic devices. Much of the technology portrayed in the film is unexplained and appears bizarre—such as the enormous "M-Machine" and the "Heart Machine." The Heart Machine is implied to be the electrical power station of the city and appears to be a massive electric generator, but the purpose of the M-Machine or the other vast machinery around it is never revealed. The dial machine at which Freder works also has no explanation in the film, although the novel reveals that it runs the massive system of Paternoster
Paternoster

A paternoster or paternoster lift is a passenger elevator which consists of a chain of open compartments that move slowly in a wiktionary:loop up and down inside a building without stopping....
-lifts in the New Tower of Babel. Technology is also visible in Fredersen's office: he has a television
Television

Television is a widely used telecommunication mass-media for transmitting and receiving moving , either monochrome or color, usually accompanied by sound....
-like device which allows him to contact the foreman in the factories, and built into his desk is an electronic console which allows him to remotely open doors. The office features two unfamiliar clocks: a 24-hour clock and a ten-hour clock, ten hours being the length of the workers' shifts. In the city itself, we see a mixture of futuristic monorail
Monorail

A monorail is a rail-based transportation system based on a single rail, which acts as its sole support and its guideway. The term is also used variously to describe the beam of the system, or the vehicles traveling on such a beam or track....
s and airship
Airship

An airship or dirigible is a aerostat that can be steered and propelled through the air using rudders and propellers or other thrust. Unlike other aerodynamics aircraft such as fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters, which produce lift by moving a wing, or airfoil, through the air, aerostatic aircraft, such as airships and Balloon , stay...
s combined with 1920s-style cars
Automobile

An automobile or motor car is a wheeled motor vehicle for transportation passengers, which also carries its own car engine or motor. Most definitions of the term specify that automobiles are designed to run primarily on roads, to have seating for one to eight people, to typically have four wheels, and to be constructed principally f...
 and aircraft
Aircraft

An aircraft is a vehicle which is able to flight by being supported by the air, or in general, the atmosphere, of a planet. Examples include balloons, airplanes and helicopters....
.

Dualism
Dualism

Dualism denotes a state of two parts. The word's origin is the Latin duo, "two" . The term 'dualism' was originally coined to denote co-eternal binary opposition, a meaning that is preserved in metaphysical and philosophical duality discourse but has been diluted in general usage....
 is a running theme amongst many of the characters, who demonstrate that they cannot be confined to the rigid class system of the city. The workers are dehumanised, existing either as part of a mob or as work-units, almost part of the machines themselves (the shots of them working do not let the viewer see their faces, and they work and move as rhythmically as the machines they operate), and yet they are also human beings who are being exploited. Rotwang is an intelligent philosopher, in many ways far more prescient than Joh Frederson, but also an obsessive and selfish man who uses his skills for his own purposes, and by the end of the film has deteriorated almost into machine-like monomania. Joh Frederson cannot reconcile his role as ruler of the city and as a father, which leads him to make rash and damaging decisions. Meanwhile, Maria expresses this theme most literally of all by being physically replicated as a robot.

The ultimate expression of technology in the entire film is the female robot
Robot

A robot is a virtual or mechanical artificial agent. In practice, it is usually an Electromechanics which, by its appearance or movements, conveys a sense that it has Intention or Agency of its own....
 built by Rotwang, referred to as the Maschinenmensch
Maschinenmensch

The Maschinenmensch from Metropolis , played by German actress Brigitte Helm in both her robotic and human incarnations, is one of cinema's most famous icons....
 ("Machine Human" or "Machine Man"). In the original German version Rotwang's creation is a reconstruction of his dead lover, a woman called Hel (a reference to the Norse goddess Hel). Both Rotwang and Joh Fredersen were in love with her. She chose Fredersen and became Freder's mother, though she died in childbirth. Rotwang, insanely jealous and angry about her death, creates the Maschinenmensch Hel. In other versions, The Machine Man is merely a fully functioning automaton
Automaton

An automaton is a self-operating machine. The word is sometimes used to describe a robot, more specifically an autonomous robot....
 designed to replace human workers, whilst its appearance can be synthesised to resemble any human being - little or no connection is made between Hel and the robot, or Rotwang's motives in creating it.

In the U.S. version, the Machine Man is sentient, and eventually Rotwang loses control of it. It performs the required task of fomenting revolution, but then becomes an exotic dancer, turning the young men of Metropolis against one another for its own entertainment. This echoes themes from Karel Capek
Karel Capek

Dr. 'Karel Capek' was one of the most influential Czech language writers of the 20th century. He introduced and made popular the frequently used international word robot, which first appeared in his play R.U.R....
's 1921 play Rossum's Universal Robots and anticipates the themes of many late-twentieth century films, in which seemingly unsentient machines gain consciousness and turn against the intentions of their creators. In the original version, the robot is apparently following Rotwang's instructions throughout, implying that the ruination of Metropolis and its master is actually the inventor's goal, not one chosen by the machine itself.

Part of Fritz Lang
Fritz Lang

Friedrich Christian Anton "Fritz" Lang was an Austrian-Germany-United States filmmaker, screenwriter and occasional film producer. One of the best known ?migr?s from Germany's school of German Expressionism, he was dubbed the "Master of Darkness" by the British Film Institute....
's visual inspiration for the movie came during a trip to Manhattan
Manhattan

Manhattan is one of the five borough of New York City, located primarily on Manhattan Island at the mouth of the Hudson River.With a United States Census of 1,620,867 living in a land area of 22.96 square miles , Manhattan, coextensive with New York County, is the most population density county in the United States, w...
, New York. He is quoted on the DVD
DVD

DVD, also known as "Digital Versatile Disc" or "Digital Video Disc,"is a popular optical disc data storage device media format. Its main uses are video and data storage....
 of the Murnau Foundation version as saying "I saw the buildings like a vertical curtain, opalescent, and very light. Filling the back of the stage, hanging from a sinister sky, in order to dazzle, to diffuse, to hypnotize." Lang, in his later years did claim his visit to New York inspired Metropolis, but a mention of the script for Metropolis being recently finished is made in the Licht-Bild-Bühne journal of June 1924, Lang traveled to New York in October of the same year.

Rotwang's home is decorated with a pentagram
Pentagram

A pentagram is the shape of a five-pointed star drawn with five straight strokes. The word pentagram comes from the Greek language word pe?t???a???? , a noun form of pe?t???a???? or pe?t???a???? , a word meaning roughly "five-lined" or "five lines"....
 which may be seen as being a symbol of Pythagoreanism
Pythagoreanism

Pythagoreanism is a term used for the esoteric and metaphysics beliefs held by Pythagoras and his followers, the Pythagoreans, who were much influenced by mathematics and probably a very inspirational source for Plato and Platonism....
 (an ancient Greek philosophy), magic/occultism (the pentagram is inverted in Rotwang's laboratory), Freemasonry
Freemasonry

Freemasonry is a fraternal and service organizations that arose from obscure origins in the late 16th to early 17th century. Freemasonry now exists in various forms all over the world, with a membership estimated at around 5 million ....
, or Judaism
Judaism

Judaism is a set of beliefs and practices originating in the Hebrew Bible , as later further explored and explained in the Talmud and other texts....
.

Adaptations

Several adaptations have been made of the original Metropolis, including at least two musical theater adaptations (see Metropolis
Metropolis (musical)

Metropolis is a musical based on the Metropolis of the same name that was staged at the Piccadilly Theatre in London in 1989. The music was written by Joseph Brooks who also collaborated with Dusty Hughes to write the lyrics....
). The 2001 animated film Metropolis
Metropolis (anime)

is an anime movie released in Japan in 2001 and loosely based on the Metropolis manga created by the late Osamu Tezuka. The movie had an all star production team including renowned anime director Rintaro, Akira creator Katsuhiro Otomo as script writer, and animation by Madhouse with conceptual support from Tezuka Productions....
, is based on an original manga
Manga

, , are comics and print cartoons , in the Japanese language and conforming to the style developed in Japan in the late 20th century. In their modern form, manga date from shortly after World War II, but they have a long, complex pre-history in earlier Japanese art....
 by Osamu Tezuka
Osamu Tezuka

was a Japanese people Mangaka, animator, movie producer and medical doctor, although he never practiced medicine. Born in Osaka Prefecture, he is best known as the creator of Astro Boy and Kimba the White Lion....
 (see Metropolis
Metropolis (manga)

, also known as Osamu Tezuka's Metropolis or Robotic Angel is a Japanese manga by Osamu Tezuka published in 1949. It has been adapted into a feature length Metropolis , released in 2001....
); Tezuka's manga was in fact inspired by a poster for the film, and he never saw the film itself. The anime's story is much closer to the original film than Tezuka's manga, although all three feature similar themes.

In December 2007, producer Thomas Schuehly (Alexander
Alexander (film)

Alexander is a 2004 in film epic film, based on the life of Alexander the Great . It was directed by Oliver Stone.The film is based mostly on the book Alexander the Great, written in the 1970s in literature by historian Robin Lane Fox, who gave up his screen credit in return for being allowed to take part in the epic cavalry charge...
, The Adventures of Baron Munchausen
The Adventures of Baron Munchausen

The Adventures of Baron Munchausen is a 1988 in film film directed by Terry Gilliam, starring John Neville , Sarah Polley, Eric Idle, Jonathan Pryce, Oliver Reed, Uma Thurman, and Robin Williams....
) gained the remake rights to Metropolis.

Cultural influences


  • Just Imagine, a film released in 1930 and set in 1980, features towering skyscrapers connected by highways and suspension bridges, similar to Metropolis. In Just Imagine, a man and a lady are in love (like Metropolis) and fly to Mars. In the novel Metropolis, Freder and Maria were supposed to fly away from earth in a spaceship, to the moon, not to Mars. In fact, the whole idea of Just Imagine could be considered Metropolis made into a vulgar broadway musical.


  • In a Flash Gordon serial from 1936, the eponymous hero visits Vultan's city, where a sweatshop appears featuring a machine where the operator has to move huge dials to different parts of the machine while standing up. In Metropolis (novel) the machine is called the Paternoster-Machine, and it controls the series of elevators in the New Tower of Babel. In Metropolis (film), it has no purpose---it merely serves to show Freder in a crucifiction scene.


  • Jerry Siegel
    Jerry Siegel

    Jerome "Jerry" Siegel , who also used pseudonyms including Joe Carter, Jerry Ess, and Herbert S. Fine, was the American co-creator of Superman , the first of the great comic book superheroes and one of the most recognizable fictional characters of the 20th century....
     and Joe Shuster
    Joe Shuster

    Joseph "Joe" Shuster was a Canada-born American comic book artist best known for co-creating the DC Comics fictional character Superman, with writer Jerry Siegel, first published in Action Comics #1 ....
     decided to name Superman
    Superman

    Superman is a Character , a comic book superhero widely considered to be an American cultural icon. Created by American writer Jerry Siegel and Canadian-born artist Joe Shuster in 1932 while both were living in Cleveland, Ohio, Ohio, and sold to DC Comics in 1938, the character first appeared in Action Comics Action Comics 1 and subseque...
    's base of operations
    Metropolis (comics)

    Metropolis is a fictional city that appears in comic books published by DC Comics, and is the home of Superman. Metropolis first appeared by name in Action Comics #16, in 1939....
     after the Metropolis of the film.


  • The title character of Dr. Strangelove resembles Rotwang
    Rotwang

    C. A. Rotwang is a fictional character in Fritz Lang's 1927 science fiction film Metropolis . Rotwang was played by Rudolf Klein-Rogge....
     in many ways. He is a former Nazi scientist whose hand, encased in a black leather glove, threatens to strangle its owner and occasionally pops up in a Nazi salute.


  • Franz Pokler, character in Thomas Pynchon
    Thomas Pynchon

    Thomas Ruggles Pynchon, Jr. is an American literature based in New York City, noted for his dense and complex works of fiction. Hailing from Long Island, Pynchon spent two years in the United States Navy and earned an English studies degree from Cornell University....
    's novel Gravity's Rainbow
    Gravity's Rainbow

    Gravity's Rainbow is an epic Postmodern literature novel written by Thomas Pynchon and first published on February 28 1973.The narrative is set primarily in Europe at the end of World War II and centers on the design, production and dispatch of V-2 rockets by the German military, and, in particular, the quest undertaken by several chara...
     cites Metropolis as an inspiration.


  • In the DC comic
    DC Comics

    DC Comics is one of the largest and most popular American comic book and related media companies, along with Marvel Comics. A subsidiary of Warner Bros....
     All-Star Squadron
    All-Star Squadron

    The All-Star Squadron is a DC Comics fictional superhero team that debuted in Justice League #193 . Created by Roy Thomas, Rich Buckler and Jerry Ordway....
    , first published in 1981
    1981 in comics

    Events...
     there was a robotic villain named Mekanique
    Mekanique

    Mekanique is a fictional supervillain in the fictional DC Universe. She first appeared in All-Star Squadron #58 ....
     who had traveled from the future to ensure that her creator — Rotwang — would rule his era, and prevent a woman named Maria from starting a workers' revolution. The robot's back-story, and the images shown in the comic, are taken directly from Metropolis.


  • The visual design for Ridley Scott
    Ridley Scott

    Sir Ridley Scott is a United Kingdom Academy Award nominated and Golden Globe Award, Emmy Award and British Academy of Film and Television Arts winning film director and film producer known for his stylish visuals and an obsession for detail....
    's Blade Runner
    Blade Runner

    Blade Runner is a 1982 in film Cinema of the United States science fiction film, directed by Ridley Scott and starring Harrison Ford, Rutger Hauer, and Sean Young....
      was influenced by Metropolis. These include a built up urban environment, in which the wealthy literally live above the workers, dominated by a huge building — the New Tower of Babel in Metropolis and the Tyrell Building in Blade Runner. "There is an awful lot of Metropolis in Blade Runner," says special effects supervisor David Dryer, who used stills from Metropolis when lining up Blade Runners miniature building shots.


  • Shots from the film are extensively featured in the video for Queen
    Queen (band)

    Queen were an England rock music band formed in 1970 in London by guitarist Brian May, lead vocalist Freddie Mercury and drummer Roger Meddows-Taylor, with bassist John Deacon completing the lineup the following year....
    's song "Radio Ga Ga
    Radio Ga Ga

    "Radio Ga Ga" is a song performed and recorded by Queen , written by their drummer Roger Meddows-Taylor.It was released as a single with "I Go Crazy" by Brian May in the Original B-side and was included on the album The Works without "I Go Crazy", that would only be included in the 1991 edition....
    ". The video also featured the members of the band in situations taken from the movie, inside a white adaptation of the film's set. The band's Freddie Mercury
    Freddie Mercury

    Freddie Mercury , was a United Kingdom singer-songwriter, pianist, guitarist and co-founder of the Rock music Musical ensemble Queen . As a performer, he was known for his vocal prowess and flamboyant performances....
     participated in Giorgio Moroder's soundtrack of the film.


  • Much of the design for Gotham City in Tim Burton's Batman
    Batman (1989 film)

    Batman is a 1989 superhero film based on the DC Comics character Batman. Tim Burton directed the film, which stars Michael Keaton as Batman, with Jack Nicholson as the Joker, Kim Basinger as Vicki Vale and Robert Wuhl as Alexander Knox....
    was influenced by Metropolis. Additionally, Burton pays homage to Metropolis in Batman
    s climactic cathedral scene, which parallels almost exactly the cathedral scene from Metropolis.


  • The music video for Madonna's
    Madonna (entertainer)

    Madonna is an American recording artist, actress and entrepreneur. Born in Bay City, Michigan and raised in Rochester Hills, Michigan, Madonna moved to New York City in 1977, for a career in modern dance....
      song "Express Yourself" was based on the story and visuals of Metropolis.


  • The same company that produced Final Fantasy VII (see below) produced a video game called Chrono Trigger, which also is similar to Metropolis. In the 12,000 BC era, a group of humans known as the Enlightened Ones live on a peaceful, plentiful, and stable Island of Zeal (which, incidentally, floats in the air) and the Earthbound Ones toil underground just to survive. The character Schala of Zeal is very much like Maria of Metropolis, as she promotes and tries to assist the Eathbound Ones as much as possible, just as Maria helps the workers of Metropolis. Finally, just as the workers of Metropolis had important work tending to the M-Machine, so was the Mammon-Machine an important part of daily life on the Island of Zeal.


  • The City of Midgar displayed in Final Fantasy VII bears an array of similarities to Metropolis. In both cities, the rich citizens live spoiled and bossy lives at the expense of the working class, who live in spatially lower segments of the city. In each city, there is a proletarian insurgence, helped by a young woman of kind and intelligent character, Maria in Metropolis and Aeris in Midgar. Finally, similarities exist between the father-son relationship between Freder and Joh Fredersen, and the president of the massive Shinra corporation and his son, Rufus Shinra.


  • The Stargate SG-1
    Stargate SG-1

    Stargate SG-1 is an United States-Canadian science fiction television series, part of the Stargate. Its story begins one year after the events of the 1994 science fiction film Stargate ....
     episode "Beneath the Surface" has many elements of Metropolis, which is intentional, according to the the DVD's commentary track, right down to the similar cityscape shown fleetingly in the background of one scene.


  • In Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith
    Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith

    Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith is a 2005 science fiction film written and directed by George Lucas. It was the sixth film released in the Star Wars wiktionary:saga and the third in terms of the series' Dates in Star Wars....
     , Anakin bears a resemblance to the mad scientist Rotwang
    Rotwang

    C. A. Rotwang is a fictional character in Fritz Lang's 1927 science fiction film Metropolis . Rotwang was played by Rudolf Klein-Rogge....
    . Both Anakin and Rotwang wear a menacing leather glove on one hand and are obsessed with saving – or resurrecting – a lost loved one. Also, Rotwang builds the Maschinenmensch
    Maschinenmensch

    The Maschinenmensch from Metropolis , played by German actress Brigitte Helm in both her robotic and human incarnations, is one of cinema's most famous icons....
     android
    Android

    An android is a robot designed to look and act human. The word derives from a?d???, the genitive of the Greek language a??? aner, meaning "man", and the suffix -eides, used to mean "of the species; alike" ....
    , whose appearance heavily influenced the image of Lucas' C-3PO
    C-3PO

    C-3PO is a fictional character from the Star Wars fictional universe, who appears in both the Star Wars original trilogy and the Star Wars prequel trilogy....
    , who was built by Anakin prior to The Phantom Menace
    Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace

    Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace is a 1999 in film space opera film written and directed by George Lucas. It was the fourth film to be released in the Star Wars saga and the first in terms of Dates in Star Wars....
    .


  • In Alan Moore
    Alan Moore

    Alan Moore is an English writer most famous for his influential work in comics, including the acclaimed graphic novels Watchmen, V for Vendetta and From Hell....
    's The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Black Dossier
    The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Black Dossier

    The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Black Dossier is an original graphic novel in the comic book series The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, written by Alan Moore and illustrated by Kevin O'Neill ....
     (in which various fictional characters exist side by side), Rotwang and Maria secretly served Kaiser Wilhelm II in the "Berlin Metropolis" before the First World War.


  • The video for Nine Inch Nails
    Nine Inch Nails

    Nine Inch Nails is an American industrial rock music group, founded in 1988 by Trent Reznor in Cleveland, Ohio, Ohio. As its main Producer , singer, songwriter, and instrumentalist, Reznor is the only official member of Nine Inch Nails and remains solely responsible for its direction....
    ' "We're in This Together
    We're in This Together

    "We're in This Together" is a 3-disc single by Nine Inch Nails for the song of the same name released in 1999. It is the fifteenth official Nine Inch Nails release and is a single for the album The Fragile....
    " was a homage to the film.


  • Australian pop star Kylie Minogue's
    Kylie Minogue

    Kylie Ann Minogue, Order of the British Empire, , is an Australian pop singer-songwriter and occasional actress. She rose to prominence in the late 1980s through her role in the Australian television soap opera Neighbours, before commencing her career as a recording artist in 1987....
     X2008 Tour
    KylieX2008

    KylieX2008 is the tenth concert tour by Australian pop music singer Kylie Minogue OBE which is in support of her 2007 album X . Originally announced as a just European tour, rumors of Minogue taking the tour to Australia, Asia, and America had surfaced in the international media....
     features imagery inspired by the film. Also in 2002 Kylie also appeared on stage as a cyborg queen which heavily resembled Rotwang's Maschinenmensch
    Maschinenmensch

    The Maschinenmensch from Metropolis , played by German actress Brigitte Helm in both her robotic and human incarnations, is one of cinema's most famous icons....
     android
    Android

    An android is a robot designed to look and act human. The word derives from a?d???, the genitive of the Greek language a??? aner, meaning "man", and the suffix -eides, used to mean "of the species; alike" ....
    .


  • In Doctor Who
    Doctor Who

    Doctor Who is a British Science fiction on television programme produced by the BBC. The programme depicts the adventures of a mysterious alien Time travel known as "Doctor " who travels in his space and time-ship, the TARDIS, which normally appears from the exterior to be a blue 1950s police box....
     the Cybermen resemble Rotwang's robotic creation.


See also

  • List of German films 1919-1933
  • List of dystopian films
    List of dystopian films

    This is a list of films commonly regarded as dystopian.A dystopia is the vision of a society that is the opposite of utopia. A dystopian society is one in which the conditions of life are suffering, characterized by human misery, poverty, oppression, violence, disease, and/or pollution....
  • List of most expensive non-English language films
    List of most expensive non-English language films

    This is a non-definitive list of most expensive non-English language films. Only movies with a budget of $5 million U.S. dollars or more are listed here....


External links

  • at MetaCritic
    Metacritic

    Metacritic is a website that collates reviews of music albums, console game, film, television program, DVDs, and books. For each product, a numerical score from each review is obtained and the total is averaged....
  • at the UNESCO
    UNESCO

    United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization is a specialized agency of the United Nations established on 16 November 1945....
     Memory of the World
    Memory of the World Programme

    UNESCO's Memory of the World Programme is an international initiative launched in 1992 in order to guard against collective amnesia calling upon the preservation of the valuable archive holdings and library collections all over the world ensuring their wide dissemination....
     register