Release CalendarTop 250 MoviesMost Popular MoviesBrowse Movies by GenreTop Box OfficeShowtimes & TicketsMovie NewsIndia Movie Spotlight
    What's on TV & StreamingTop 250 TV ShowsMost Popular TV ShowsBrowse TV Shows by GenreTV NewsIndia TV Spotlight
    What to WatchLatest TrailersIMDb OriginalsIMDb PicksIMDb Podcasts
    OscarsBest Picture WinnersBest Picture WinnersEmmysSTARmeter AwardsSan Diego Comic-ConNew York Comic-ConSundance Film FestivalToronto Int'l Film FestivalAwards CentralFestival CentralAll Events
    Born TodayMost Popular CelebsMost Popular CelebsCelebrity News
    Help CenterContributor ZonePolls
For Industry Professionals
  • All
  • Titles
  • TV Episodes
  • Celebs
  • Companies
  • Keywords
  • Advanced Search
Watchlist
Sign In
  • Fully supported
  • English (United States)
    Partially supported
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
  • Cast & crew
  • User reviews
IMDbPro

Moral

  • 19281928
  • 1h 22m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
21
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
267,196
18,463
Moral (1928)
Comedy
Several times re-made story of the entertainer who humiliates the Emilsberg morality committee who condemn her show, by filming them when they call on her in private.Several times re-made story of the entertainer who humiliates the Emilsberg morality committee who condemn her show, by filming them when they call on her in private.Several times re-made story of the entertainer who humiliates the Emilsberg morality committee who condemn her show, by filming them when they call on her in private.
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
21
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
267,196
18,463
  • See more at IMDbPro
    • Director
      • Willi Wolff
    • Writers
      • Robert Liebmann
      • Bobby E. Lüthge
      • Ludwig Thoma(play)
    • Stars
      • Ellen Richter
      • Ralph Arthur Roberts
      • Jakob Tiedtke
    Top credits
    • Director
      • Willi Wolff
    • Writers
      • Robert Liebmann
      • Bobby E. Lüthge
      • Ludwig Thoma(play)
    • Stars
      • Ellen Richter
      • Ralph Arthur Roberts
      • Jakob Tiedtke
  • See production, box office & company info
    • 1User review
  • See production, box office & company info
  • Photos

    Add photo

    Top cast

    Edit
    Ellen Richter
    Ellen Richter
    • Ninon de Hauteville
    Ralph Arthur Roberts
    Ralph Arthur Roberts
    • Prof. Wasner
    Jakob Tiedtke
    Jakob Tiedtke
    • Rentier Beermann
    Fritz Greiner
    • Justizrat Hauser
    Julius Falkenstein
    Julius Falkenstein
    • Fürst Emil von Gerolstein
    Harry Halm
    Harry Halm
    • Erbprinz
    Ferdinand von Alten
    Ferdinand von Alten
    • Kammerherr von Schmettau
    Paul Graetz
    Paul Graetz
    • Polizeischreiber Reisacher
    Albert Paulig
    Albert Paulig
    • Assessor Ströbel
    Hilde Jennings
    • Elfie Beermann
    Ernst Hofmann
    Ernst Hofmann
    • Dobler
    Paul Morgan
    Paul Morgan
    • Mitglied des Sittlichkeitsvereins
    Fritz Beckmann
    • Mitglied des Sittlichkeitsvereins
    Hugo Döblin
    • Mitglied des Sittlichkeitsvereins
    Robert Garrison
    Heinrich Gotho
    Karl Harbacher
    • Mitglied des Sittlichkeitsvereins
    Julius E. Herrmann
    • Mitglied des Sittlichkeitsvereins
    • Director
      • Willi Wolff
    • Writers
      • Robert Liebmann
      • Bobby E. Lüthge
      • Ludwig Thoma(play)
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    More like this

    Phil-for-Short
    7.1
    Phil-for-Short
    Fool's Paradise
    6.9
    Fool's Paradise
    7.6
    La mosca e il ragno
    The Man from Kangaroo
    6.0
    The Man from Kangaroo
    A Public Prosecutor and a Teacher
    6.0
    A Public Prosecutor and a Teacher
    The Sign of the Black Lily
    6.4
    The Sign of the Black Lily
    An Old Fashioned Boy
    6.0
    An Old Fashioned Boy
    Four Around the Woman
    5.9
    Four Around the Woman
    Maciste in Hell
    6.7
    Maciste in Hell
    Male and Female
    7.0
    Male and Female
    5.7
    Air Bubbles
    Les vampires
    7.3
    Les vampires

    Storyline

    Edit

    User reviews1

    Review
    Review
    Top review
    9/10
    Take That Film Censors!
    I wonder what film censors made of seeing this late silent film, "Moral," which is all about exposing--and cinematically so--the hypocrisy of moralists railing against the same materials and performances that they enjoy themselves. Even they must've grasped that the joke was at their expense. There's something inherently paradoxical in proscribing art as objectionable for others to experience in that the censors themselves must first consider its objectionable qualities. The irony being that if one wants to partake in a lot of risqué, filthy stuff, they can't do much better than attaining a position as a guardian of morality. At what point is something such as the MPAA just a gaggle of voyeurs. Heck, the restoration of "Moral" was even aided by contemporary censorship records held at the Czech Archives. And, there's a quip in the film where one of the members of the Morality Society brags about his extensive collection of smut--y'know, ostensibly to guard it from the eyes of others.

    All of this requires highly reflexive filmmaking. So, we have the Morality Society as the sanctimonious coots and self-appointed morality police who, to their own detriment, engage in the matter the actual police, who otherwise are depicted spending their time creeping up on couples kissing in parks. Then, there's the star of the show, the theatrical performer turned piano teacher (although she does very little actual piano teaching), Ninon d'Hauteville, as alluringly and stylishly played by Ellen Richter. Tellingly, in the play from which the film is adapted, it's reported that the character was a prostitute. One of the members of the Morality Society and a married man, to boot, attempts to sexually take advantage of her on a train--including showing her his "Uhu"--and not knowing she's the same d'Hauteville whose theatrical revue performance his group is to disrupt in protest later.

    See, she plays the Courtesan in "The Prince and the Courtesan," wherein the scene the Prince comes out from beneath her grotesquely-enormous hoop skirt. It is at this point that the Morality Society make a bunch of noise and even toss an egg in the actor's eye to shut down the play and which they follow up by threatening to boycott the theatre if such performances continue. Interestingly, they have no quarrel--one of them even suggests such dancing would make for good gymnastics for boys--with the unison dancing of the Tiller Girls, which was in real life a popular dance troupe at the time and predating the Ziegfeld Follies theatrical revues or the geometric expressions of Busby Berkeley movie musicals. It rather goes to a point in cultural and film critic Siegfried Kracauer's essay "The Mass Ornament," that the Tiller Girls weren't erotic as their bodies in motion and high-kicking bare legs might otherwise suggest. Eliding Kracauer's practically unreadable critique on capitalism in the same essay, his observation of the unison dance routines resembling abstractions of mechanical patterns instead of people, which is in turn reflected in the audience arranged in patterns of theatre stands to watch, is keen. The added abstraction here being that we're watching a film, via the mechanical cinematographic apparatus, of an audience watching this play-within-the-play.

    In addition to this, there's a film-within-the-film, the camera serving as surveillance for Ninon to record members of the Morality Society in the compromising positions of them individually coming to her for so-called "piano lessons." This is a brilliant sequence that seems uniquely modern--anticipating the prevalent use of cameras as surveillance nowadays, including hidden ones, as here. That the camera shoots through the masking of a hole in a door not only mirrors the action of one of the moralists looking through another door's keyhole to peep on Ninon dressing, but underscores the voyeuristic nature of visual art and us movie-goer voyeurs peeking at it. That Richter, with knowing looks and smiles, turns the tables such on the voyeur also unsettles any power imbalance of the dynamic of the so-called male gaze (so called by Laura Mulvey's essay "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema") by Ninon being in control of the female to-be-looked-at-ness. It's all the more intriguing, too, because "Moral" was directed by her husband, and this was his real name, Willi Wolff.

    And, on top of all that, there's a fantastic scene of film censorship by the one member of the Morality Society able to get control of the film-within-the-film, as he tears it bit by bit from its reels and flushes it down a toilet. Indeed, he is censoring himself from the film. That the other moralists ultimately receive their comeuppance is appropriate enough, but the one fault I would nit-pick about "Moral" is how its resolution relies on fairy-tale notions of a noble nobility, the prince being her only client to not be so hypocritical about it (albeit the subplot involves some of the film's humorous editing transitions). This contradicts, too, the semblance of a critique on classism that began the picture on a train, where the moralist solely occupied a first-class cabin with plenty of sitting room as the poors stood in the aisles. It's also rather against the spirit of the Weimar Republic where such productions could flourish--something that would soon not be the case under the worst of dehumanizing censorship regimes, the Nazis. Fortunately, as Jay Weissberg reported in the presentation of the film for the online edition of the 40th Pordenone Silent Film Festival, it was Ernst Lubitsch, one of the first German filmmakers to emigrate to Hollywood, who was able to vouch for Richter and Wolff (Richter, at least, also being Jewish) to flee Nazi Germany, although their film careers were effectively over.

    Rarely if never is censorship actually as fun as depicted in "Moral." Too bad we can no longer see its follow-up, either, with the tantalizing title "Unmoral" (1928), as it's now a lost film. This one, too, is missing some footage, including one scene that's reconstructed with the use of a publicity still and title cards. Nevertheless, what a commendable restoration job for an underappreciated gem of late silent and Weimar cinema.
    helpful•1
    0
    • Cineanalyst
    • Oct 9, 2021

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 20, 1928 (Germany)
    • Country of origin
      • Germany
    • Language
      • None
    • Also known as
      • El diario de Ninón
    • Production company
      • Ellen Richter Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Technical specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 22 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Silent
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

    Related news

    Contribute to this page

    Suggest an edit or add missing content
    Moral (1928)
    Top Gap
    By what name was Moral (1928) officially released in Canada in English?
    Answer
    • See more gaps
    • Learn more about contributing
    Edit page

    More to explore

    View image
    Photos
    These Stars Are on the Rise
    See the gallery
    View list
    List
    Fall TV Guide: The Best Shows Coming This Year
    See the full list
    View image
    Photos
    Double Take: Celebrity Twins
    See the full list
    Back to top

    Recently viewed

    Please enable browser cookies to use this feature. Learn more.
    Get the IMDb App
    Sign in for more access
    Sign in for more access
    • Get the IMDb App
    • Help
    • Site Index
    • IMDbPro
    • Box Office Mojo
    • IMDb Developer
    • Press Room
    • Advertising
    • Jobs
    • Conditions of Use
    • Privacy Policy
    • Interest-Based Ads
    IMDb, an Amazon company

    © 1990-2022 by IMDb.com, Inc.