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8 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
It's like a Lost Dream That Memory..., 13 January 2006
Author:
vis-a-visconti from United States
I saw this on the Cabinet of Dr. Caligari DVD. It was really good. It had a dreamy quality. As if it was otherworldly or something. I was mesmerized. It wasn't spectacular or amazing like Caligari, but I was nonetheless impressed. Also it had a different quality than Calgari. So you can't really compare the two. But if you like silent films, or the Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, than I'd recommend this movie. Plus, the imagery was wonderful, it almost felt like the same kind of atmosphere as when you are drifting off to sleep. Though this is not a film for those with a short attention span. Another plus is that this movie was directed by Robert Wiene, an amazing director.
5 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
GENUINE: THE TALE OF A VAMPIRE {Condensed Version} (Robert Wiene, 1920) **, 4 October 2008
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
I’ve been wanting to give this a whirl ever since acquiring it six
years ago – as part of the Kino edition of the same director’s THE
CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI (1920). However, the result (without taking
into account its obvious narrative gaps, being incomplete in this
version) is nowhere near as groundbreaking or even compelling as that
earlier classic – despite the comparable Expressionist look (including
a clock standing in for the face of a skeleton[!] and which is still
its best quality).
The plot revolves around a femme fatale called Genuine – hence, the
vampire of the title is not of the blood-sucking variety – who had
actually been the high priestess of some cult. Due to a clash between
factions, she ends up in a slave market (featuring surprising but
discreet nudity) and is eventually bought by an eccentric old man
(among other things, he likes to doze off while being shaved daily!),
who keeps the girl in the cellar of his ‘notorious’ mansion so as to
shelter her from the vices of modern life; incidentally, one is never
quite sure in which era this is all supposed to be taking place – since
the dapper but doddering old man has an Arab, with painted bare chest,
for a servant! The irony, then, is that the girl’s own nature – she has
a feral countenance and wears a skimpy striped outfit! – is infinitely
more dangerous to the young men she enslaves (one of whom sports a
highly anachronistic Duran Duran hairdo!). These, in fact, are somehow
driven mad (as it stands, the details aren’t very clear – particularly
with respect to the old man’s nephew); when the son of his exclusive
barber is similarly afflicted, the latter rouses the populace against
her and – in a scene which basically replicates Cesare the
somnambulist’s fate from the aforementioned THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI
– she dies in the ensuing pursuit.
In conclusion, the treatment afforded the film isn’t sufficiently
gripping to rate it higher than a mere curio at this juncture; besides,
it’s all the more disappointing coming from Wiene (who, besides
CALIGARI also made the equally influential THE HANDS OF ORLAC [1924]).
By the way, another interesting effort of his – the Dostoyevsky
adaptation RASKOLNIKOV (1923) – will soon be released on DVD by the
budget label Alpha (under the alternate title of CRIME AND PUNISHMENT)…
5 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Caligari's Footsteps, 5 July 2006
Author:
Cineanalyst
The same director, cinematographer and writer of "The Cabinet of Dr.
Caligari" made this subsequent picture, "Genuine". Likewise, it is also
an Expressionist film (one of the few made during Weimar Germany,
contrary to what Lotte Eisner and the use by some of "expressionism" as
an umbrella term for almost all German cinema of the period might
suggest). Additionally, similar to "Caligari", the main body of
"Genuine" is framed as a dream. Yet, I wasn't engulfed into the
universe of "Genuine", as I was with "Caligari".
The story, although just as peculiar, isn't as involving, which is
unfortunately probably, in part, because the Kino release is only a
condensed version. The framing of scenes is just as prosaic and
theatrical as that in "Caligari"--if not more so. As well, the stylized
acting seems more overdone and obtrusive this time. But, more
importantly, the problem is the sets, which I can't see the entire
version improving much upon. The Expressionist set designs are equally
strange, with odd angels and geometric shapes. The production, however,
leaves too much space open and unfilled, which is the largest reason
that "Genuine" isn't as involving, or captivating, as "Caligari".
6 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
An example of going to the well one too many times..., 20 June 2004
Author:
kingdaevid from Phoenix, Arizona, USA
...yes, it's from the same director, Robert Wiene, whose landmark THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI was released earlier the very same year, 1920; and, yes, much of the same cinematic technique created for CALIGARI was used here as well. The main differences between the two utterly defeat any chance that GENUINE, at least in the 43-minute "condensation" that appears on the 2002 Kino DVD release, would ever be a tenth as watchable as CALIGARI (or, for that matter, THE HEARTS OF AGE, Orson Welles' self-described "amusement" that spoofed all the surrealist silent European cinema concocted by Wiene, F.W. Murnau, Salvador Dali and the like). First, the sets and makeup of the players are not as flamboyantly odd this time around. Second, the pacing is far too slow for the story. Third, the story is itself far too bizarre and convoluted for a casual viewer to find any interest in; CALIGARI's is relatively straightforward in comparison. If you want a pre-NOSFERATU take on vampires, track down the DVD of LES VAMPIRES instead...
2 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
not as bad as the reviews make it out to be..., 8 February 2009
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Author:
flamingyouth76 from Kentucky--United States
First off, I am reviewing the "43 minute condensed version" that is
found on KINO's "Cabinet of Dr. Caligari," so this is the longest
version currently available on video.
It's hard to talk plot line since I have no idea how the somewhat
tenuous plot of this version compares to the apparently complete
version locked up in Germany, but I can say that the subtitle "A Tale
of a Vampire" is erroneous as there is no vampire in this film. The
original subtitle is "Tragedy of a Strange House," which is much more
accurate to the film in the version I own.
While there is very little to go on story-wise, the set design and
imagery is fantastic! While of course, the sets look like painted
cardboard (because they are), one must ignore that fact and look at the
pure artistry put into the set design. There are some truly disturbing
images, such as a skeleton with a clock for a head. And while actual
camera movement is absent, this is an early example of a film that
allows some action to occur at the fringes of the lens instead of dead
center (like you are watching a play). This allows for some interesting
and startling entrances from Genuine herself.
Speaking of startling, there is a scene in a slave market that features
two women in a gauze-like material. You can see their breasts clearly,
one of the earliest examples of nudity in a mainstream film. The nudity
isn't highlighted and isn't used for eroticism, but I was surprised to
see nipples so clearly in a movie from 1920.
I also must mention the brilliant score. While it is repetitive, it
isn't annoying. It seems a perfect fit for such a strange little film.
I found the score to be quite complementary to the imagery, and very
beautiful as well.
This may not be "Caligari," but it shouldn't be dismissed as it seems
to have been by others on this forum. And in its full form--if we ever
get to see it--it may just be another "Caligari." Short on plot, but a
hallucinogenic, dreamlike, and fascinating trip into a strange world.
Try it!
3 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Caligari follow-up displays similar story "frame", 22 February 2003
Author:
james pierson (jpierson@navpoint.com) from Media, Pennsylvania USA
I've just viewed the Image DVD of CALIGARI, with commentary by Mike Budd. This DVD also includes excerpts from GENUINE. While the snippets included are pretty strange and disconnected, they show a major similarity between the two films -- that is, the "frame" structure of the story. CALIGARI's frame is that it is a story told by a madman. In GENUINE, it appears that the story is a "dream" experienced by a young man who has fallen asleep reading his favorite novel. What I saw of GENUINE makes it seem the young man's favorite author was Sacher-Masoch. See also how Genuine messes up the young man's hair in a rush of passion -- shades of John Barrymore's transition scenes from DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE?
4 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
A curiosity, for Expressionism completists only, 8 February 1999
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Author:
Levana Taylor from Chicago
Robert Wiene repeats the techniques he used in "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari" with far less success in "Genuine". His looming architectures and broad swaths of darkness are glaringly at odds with the utterly ridiculous story of the seductress-priestess-wild girl brought to unsuspecting Europe. There are some striking visual effects, such as the jungle of branches where Genuine climbs up and up to escape from her prison, but they don't add up to anything. (I should note that only fragments, adding up to about a half hour, survive of this movie; but I suspect that the parts I didn't see wouldn't have added any deeper meaning.)
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