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6 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
ALRAUNE (1918- Germany), 2 March 2006
Author:
jsalsberg from United States
The first German film to bear the title ALRAUNE, this movie is a rather
conventional ghost story about a woman whose life bears an amazing
similarity to that of her ancestor, who was burned as a witch. The
ALRAUNE of the title comes from a reference to the mandrake root, which
the heroine employs to save her dying child. Aside from that, there is
nothing at all to connect this film with the famous Hanns Heinz Ewers
novel, upon which historians have mistakenly claimed this film was
based. The film was released in the U.S. under the title SACRIFICE, and
a print can be found at George Eastman House. The novel was filmed
more-or-less straight in 1928 (the classic version, with Paul Wegener
and Brigitte Helm), in 1930 (a talky, slow-moving remake, again with
Helm), and in 1952 (with Von Stroheim). The other 1918 version, shot in
Hungary, is believed to be lost, and may or may not be closer to the
Ewers novel than this German film.
Jay Salsberg
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