Fritz Lang Interviewed by William Friedkin (1975) Poster

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9/10
Almost Like Passing a Torch...
gavin69426 May 2014
William Friedkin had just gotten huge with "The French Connection" and was ready to make "The Exorcist"... so what to do with a few free hours? Apparently, sit down for a lengthy (140-minute) chat with one of the all-time greatest directors...

Lang looks amazing here, old and distinguished, with an eye patch that only adds to his mystique. While not the most controversial figure, his history is a bit questionable at times, and getting him on record like this is priceless. And in black and white, it looks much sharper than it would in color.

Friedkin wonders if "Metropolis" could be construed as Marxist. Lang answers that he does not know, which strongly suggests no such message was intended. He does add that his wife, Thea von Harbou, was responsible for the message that workers are the "heart" of society. He further says he would not have added sound even if he could, which is a great aesthetic choice...

The conversation goes on for some time, and covers all the hits... this is just such a great piece of film history...
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9/10
nothing short of fascinating
Quinoa198410 December 2014
The only downside I could put to William Friedkin when it comes to this documentary/interview he conducted in 1974 with Fritz Lang - director of such films as M, Metropolis and The Big Heat - is that he starts off his film with asking a question that would bring the best/most dramatic story. This, of course, was Lang's encounter with Joseph Goebbles in 1933, right at the dawn of the Third Reich, and how he was approached and offered a post as the head of propaganda filmmaking (the Nazis were impressed by M and to an extent The Testament of Dr. Mabuse, despite, as Lang points out, a direct criticism of Nazi ideology in the film - later the film was suppressed). Lang, not wanting to hide anything at this point, mentioned there was some Jewish blood in his background, though he was not full-on Jewish. As Goebbles said to him, "We decide who is and who isn't Aryan." And at that, he decided to flee the country, which was not too easy to accomplish.

This is the first tale that Lang tells, and it's a riveting one, even with some of his pauses and deliberate way of taking his time speaking (he's not a Scorsese, to be sure). From here Friedkin goes into more of the standard-type of questions, like 'how did you decide to become a filmmaker?' 'What were the 1920's like and did they influence your work?' Things like that which takes Lang into telling more about how he came about to film - we learn, for example, he didn't see his first motion picture until 1917, not too soon before he began making films, almost by luck - and how he approached doing films in his way, in a 'sleepwalking state' of confidence.

There's so much good stuff here to discover and Friedkin is a decent interviewer. I hesitate to say great - he sometimes asks the kind of questions that reminded me of Bogdanovich in 'Directed by John Ford', sometimes questions that should be a little obvious, though Lang is a better/easier sit than Ford was to be sure. But he keeps it moving along and we discover about process and history, and even if Lang doesn't always acknowledge it that there was a link in those early, tremendous silent epics he made. One other downside - though it can't be helped due when it was filmed - is that because of just the nature of filming at the time (this was on *film* mind you, not video- tape), the reels have to change every ten minutes. We see just a little of the friction in-between shots as the director tries to calm down the set and keep things going along. Thankfully, that's not really the focus here.

For fans of Lang it's really worth something; you don't really get anything out of Friedkin, though that's not the idea (it's not a Hitchcock/Truffaut situation either). It's long, in-depth, and worth the while for any hardcore cineaste.
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8/10
Great minds think (and talk) alike
kosmasp24 October 2022
No pun intended and please hold your horses. I do hope and believe that we can agree that Friedkin is a great director too. I am not comparing the two - I am not saying they are on the same level or that you should think that. You may hold more regard for one over the other. I am not here to tell you either way - or anything else. What I do want to achieve with my summary headline: that both directors are good in what they do. And I think that much we can agree with - I also need a pun or two for every review I do .. It's a personal thing and all that.

Like those two trying to make and do great stories. And Lang really is a in a good mood - which is a testament to Friedkin who is able to make conversation with him. And all that not long before he passed away ... so really a good thing they were able to capture this meeting and give us an insight into the mind of Lang. His views, his expertise and how he chose ... not just what he did but how he did what he did in movies. If you are interested in more than just watching movies ... this is for you.
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7/10
This documentary explains where the Third Reich went wrong . . .
oscaralbert29 December 2017
Warning: Spoilers
. . . as 1920s and early 1930s German (or perhaps Austrian) film director Fritz Lang relates his story of how Hitler's Minister of Propaganda--Josef Goebbels--tapped him as the initial lead man for the Nazi's TRIUMPH OF THE WILL film project (despite Lang's disclosure to Goebbels that Lang's maternal grandmother was Jewish, to which Goebbels replied "WE decide who's Aryan, and who's not!!). Certainly, when Lang decided to escape to Paris (and eventually America) the night of his interview with Goebbels, forcing the Nazi's to turn to a less experienced woman director, Leni Riefenstahl, to head up their Nuremburg Rallies Project, it changed the course of World History. Ms. Riefenstahl's so-called documentary turned out to be an exercise in Tunnel Vision, as her one-sided editing focused almost entirely upon Hitler's rantings, ravings, and Anti-Semite tirades. TRIUMPH OF THE WILL makes no mention of what's at stake if the Third Reich FAILS to endure the promised 1,000 years. Had Mr. Lang been allowed to inject his cultural sensitivities into the TRIUMPH OF THE WILL Project, the resulting film surely would have been more Fair and Balanced, weighing the Pros and Cons of World War, the Holocaust, and the resulting German Apocalypse. Therefore, EVERYONE should watch this CONVERSATION WITH FRITZ LANG.
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