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The Medieval Remake

Saturday, February 16, 2008
6:30 p.m. Faust
F. W. Murnau (Germany, 1926)

Judith Rosenberg on Piano


(Faust: Eine Deutsche Volkssage). Black-and-white cinematography was redefined in Murnau’s Faust: this is a film shot in darkness and light. Lotte Eisner’s elegiac description sets the mood for Murnau’s version of the legend, starring Emil Jannings as the subtly mischievous Mephistopheles, and Swedish actor Gosta Ekman as a subtly homoerotic Faust: “This film starts with the most remarkable and poignant images the German chiaroscuro ever created. The chaotic density of the opening shots, the light dawning in the mists, the rays beaming through the opaque air, are breathtaking. . . . No other director, not even Lang, ever succeeded in conjuring up the supernatural as masterfully as this. The entire town seems to be covered by the vast folds of a demon’s cloak (or is it a gigantic, lowering cloud?) as the demoniac forces of darkness prepare to devour the powers of light.”

• Written by Hans Kyser, based on Goethe, Marlowe, and German folk sagas. Photographed by Carl Hoffmann. With Emil Jannings, Gosta Ekman, Camilla Horn, Yvette Guilbert. (103 mins, Silent with English intertitles, B&W, 35mm, From Kino International)