Region 1


In German with English subtitles


M The Criterion Collection A Film By Fritz Lang.

From Mr Movies Bill Collins Movie Library 


 

Please note the photograph of Bill Collins does not come with this purchase and is used for authenticating purposes only


Fritz Lang's 1931 M is one of those cinematic landmarks that should be watched again and again by all who consider themselves film buffs, and fortunately for DVD fans, Criterion's second DVD edition is the best home-video release of this German classic to date. The plot is simple, but with a few twists. A sinister child-killer (Peter Lorre) drives a city of millions into a panic when a number of young girls turn up dead. With little evidence to pursue, the police fall back on standard man-hunting tactics — dig through case files of recently released prisoners; establish a search perimeter and gradually widen it; and turn over every flophouse and gambling den in the city, looking for information. The police can't find the killer, but they unwittingly mobilize the criminal underworld, who don't like the new strong-arm police tactics and have no love for child-killers anyway. Using a network of beggars who live on the street and see everything, the city's most powerful gangsters manage to flush out "M," noted as such because one of the beggars manages to imprint a chalk mark of the letter (meaning "murderer") on the back of his coat. With bums, crooks, and cops on his tail, the predator becomes the prey, chased like an animal through the streets. The most pioneering elements of Lang's style can be found in M, including early innovations with the new sound format (this was the director's first sound film, an innovation he originally resisted), the use of shadow to create both tension and depth, and those wonderfully delayed establishing shots that initially limit the audience's point-of-view for maxium effect. An early effort from Peter Lorre before he transitioned to the American film industry (and indelibly so, with scene-stealing turns in both The Maltese Falcon and Casablanca), the heavyset star is effective as half-wild, hunted prey by the film's end, but he's also darkly playful, as when Lang juxtaposes a reading of the police's psychological profile of the killer with Lorre making childish "monster" faces in a bathroom mirror. And Lang hardly leaves the silent cinema by the wayside — he eliminates the audio altogether just before a raid on a gambling den as police officers fill the streets, ready to strike — the lack of sound simply builds the tension, frame by frame, until it's pierced by a policeman's alarm whistle (a subtle tactic few Hollywood directors would risk with today's moviegoing public ). Like Alfred Hitchcock's equally dark Psycho, Lang's early masterpiece isn't just a hypnotic picture to enjoy on its own merits. It's also a made-to-order textbook for film schools on fundamental cinematic vocabulary, and a copy belongs in every film buff's personal collection.



From Mr Movies Bill Collins Music Library 


 


Please note the photograph of Bill Collins does not come with this purchase and is used for authenticating purposes only


 


Payment Terms:






 


Postage of Items:





 


Returns:





 


Feedback:






 



Please add us to your favourites!