Fritz Lang's 10
Essential Movies
1. Dr. Mabuse, the Gambler (1922)
2. Die Nibelungen: Siegfried (1924)
3. Metropolis (1927)
4. M (1931)
5. The Testament of Dr. Mabuse (1933)
6. Fury (1936)
7. You Only Live Once (1937)
8. The Woman in the Window (1944)
9. Scarlet Street (1945)
10. The Big Heat (1953)
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"While many
associate him, because of Metropolis, with German expressionism, Lang’s visual
style became more pared down in his American films, but he remained a strong
believer in the power of visual material (especially mise-en-scène). Among his
recurrent themes were notions of people being entrapped and of the unforeseen
consequences of chance encounters. These can be detected in such films as The
Woman in the Window (1944), Scarlet Street (1945), and Beyond a Reasonable
Doubt (1956). He also explored the subtleties and ramifications of revenge in
his fine police thriller The Big Heat (1953), among other movies."
― Brian McDonnell (Encyclopedia of Film Noir, 2007)
― Brian McDonnell (Encyclopedia of Film Noir, 2007)
"Fritz Lang's cinema is the cinema of the nightmare, the fable, and the philosophical dissertation. Lang's apparent weaknesses are the consequences of his virtues... His characters never develop with any psychological precision, and his world lacks the details of verisimilitude that are so important to realistic critics. However, Lang's vision of the world is profoundly expressed by his visual forms."
― Andrew Sarris (The American Cinema, 1968)
"Few directors can have created so many images of entrapment as did Lang during his long, distinguished career. Repeatedly, his protagonists are imprisoned not only by an uncaring society or by their own flawed nature, but by Destiny itself: Lang's stories, which regularly return to the theme of crime and punishment, have the rigorous logic of a philosophical theorem."
― Geoff Andrew (The Director's Vision, 1999)
"Lang's continuing obsession with the psychology of human weakness made him the ideal thriller and film noir director, with masterpieces such as The Big Heat (1953), Clash by Night (1953), and While the City Sleeps (1956) to his credit."
― Mario Reading (The Movie Companion, 2006)
"Looking upon the world with grim detachment and a strong moral sense, Fritz Lang worked through two careers: in Germany (1919 to 1932) and Hollywood (1936 to 1956)."
― Ronald Bergan (Film - Eyewitness Companions, 2006)
"Fascinated by violence, cruelty and the criminal mind, he produced memorable silent epics; after fleeing Nazi germany, he settled in California to direct westerns, thrillers and social dramas with equal distinction."
― Chambers Film Factfinder, 2006
"A world of paranoia, fear and evil fills the work of Fritz Lang. His early German films (Dr. Mabuse, 22; Metropolis, 26; M, 31) are subtle, yet striking illustrations of those preoccupations, while later American works (Man Hunt, 41; The Big Heat, 53) are more explosive."
― William R. Meyer (The Film Buff's Catalog, 1978)
“Fritz Lang brought to the screen a vision of a world largely populated by criminals, psychopaths, prostitutes, and maladjusted personalities, ruled by the inevitability of fate. It was the fascinating visual means with which he chose to express that made him one of the creative giants in the history of both the German and American cinema.”
― The Virgin International Encyclopedia of Film, 1992