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M on DVD (1931)

M cover art
Average rating: (76%)
111226920712
4.0
 
Starring: Peter Lorre | Otto Wernicke
Director: Fritz Lang
Studio: EUREKA ENTERTAINMENT
Run time: 105 mins
Certificate: PG
User collections: 50 Best Directors Ever | 10 World Cinema Greats | Classic first appearances | Our Favourite Films of All Time | New List | Superb Films of the 1930's | paranoia, sometimes there right!! | For no other reason than I can. | 50 auteurs, 50 great films | The Sublime on Celluloid
Genres: Drama | World Cinema
Languages: German
Subtitles: English
Released: 06/10/2003

Brief synopsis of M

In Fritz Lang's startling and exquisite film M, fear stalks the streets of Berlin in the form of a serial child murderer whose grisly accomplishments are so heinous even the criminal minds of the underworld want him dead. Filmed in post-Weimar Germany during the infancy of the Nazi state, this tale of moral depravity serves not just as an allegory for the need of justice for all, but as an ominous foreshadowing of the sort of societal hysteria that leads to cultural witch hunts. Originally titled "Morder Unter Uns" ("Murder Among Us"), M was one of Peter Lorre's (CASABLANCA) first major film roles. Lang's expressionistic eye plunges into the dark cityscape of Berlin, as he follows the killer whistling down the street, seducing small children with toys and candy, and eventually fleeing for his life. A city paralysed by fear, and a vast criminal underground network of blind beggars, thieves and murderers, as well as an unforgettable climax notable for its startling statement about the murderous nature which resides within human beings, are all rendered in Lang's painterly cinematography of sharp angles, dark corners and breakneck pacing.

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Rated - 5 starsFantastic

AlexPhillips AlexPhillips from Aberystwyth [Highly rated reviewer] , 16/01/2007

This is truly a fantastic film.

The plot meanders along giving you the sense of a spectre haunting sets as the story slowly unravels itself.

The acting is very strong making particular note to the opposing parts of the police chief and mob boss who through there own ways are both after similar goals.

the only complaints i have are with the production of the DVD its self:

1. the print is in clear need of restoration with it even braking up in parts and the contrast has be hugely lost. It amazes me that a film of such significance has been left to reach such a condition.

2. Who the hell thought it was a good idea to put white subtitles over the screen on a black and white film, it renders about half the script unreadable making the viewer more or less having to guess the ends of sentences.

3. What is with the menu screen being full of female vampires and bare breasts??? not right for a PG DVD or anything to do with the plot.

  30 out of 46 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsM for Masterly-in no way dated

QPR Olly from Shepherds Bush,England [Highly rated reviewer] , 01/03/2007

If you are in no way interested in history and you like your thrills cheap and visceral, please avoid this cracking film. The fearful, doomed atmosphere of Weimar Germany is vividly brought to life.The vengeful hateful mob seem even worse than the perpetrator of abhorrent crimes-pretty damn prescient with the Nazis three years away.Creepy sad-eyed Lorre is superb,no wonder he went on to such a successful career in Hollywood.Admittedly it would be better if the subtitles were in black rather than white but the painstaking print restoration has preserved a masterpiece.(less dated, in theme, than the better-known Metropolis.)

  21 out of 26 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 5 starsCreepy Stuff ...

Noel Clay from Bromsgrove, England , 02/04/2004

Honestly, I'm still kind of surprised that a film like this actually existed back in 1931. Because of the extremely dark subject matter, even today the project would have plenty of difficulty getting off the ground. But the important thing is that it DOES exist, and even back then it's clear that at least somebody out there knew how innovative and brilliant cinema can be, which leaves no excuse for all those bloody awful films the studios churned out at the time.

Fritz Lang as usual allows things to unfold at a leisurely pace, which is fine although he does linger too long on some aspects particularly in the middle section of the film, which means that it very nearly suffers from that age-old disease whereby a film has a great opening and a great ending, but is ruined by the fact that it lags heavily in the middle. But there are enough to great scenes and original ideas in there to ensure that this is among the greatest films of all the time.

I'm sure today's directors must envy Fritz Lang in that back then he had pretty much a blank slate, and so was free to experiment without fear of borrowing from other places, so ultimately you have to admit that this is not a film about other films -- it's a film about life, inspired by real life and shot in a way that truly tries to memorably capture everyday life.

The highlight of the film as far as the acting is concerned is of course Peter Lorre's haunting, creepy little performance as the child murderer himself. There is one point in the film where the killer is standing in front of a shop window, and his reflection in the glass is dark and murky except for his eyes when he looks over at a little girl, which glow like those of a demon -- almost certainly an accident, but a great-looking accident nonetheless.

  14 out of 18 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 5 starsThe missing link between Expressionism and Film Noir

Lionel Laurent from London , 20/07/2004

Fritz Lang's 'M' is one of the most powerful yet frightening films ever made. The plot, focusing around a community's attempts to capture a child murderer, is a strong metaphor which allows Lang to indulge in morbid social satire. All the while he creates dark scenes steeped in realism, which go hand in hand with the unsettling sounds of a divided society.

The sinister whistling of the murderer, as well as his ever-present shadow, follows a society unable to work together. The civilians, for a start, become possessed by paranoia and suspicion. The police are also useless, and the criminal underworld only want to get their hands on the killer to protect their own interests. The only man able to identify 'M' is ironically the least powerful: he is an elderly, blind balloon seller.

The final set-piece, which was cut from the original version, is a masterful trial in which a courtroom of criminals is confronted with a disturbing insight into the mind of a social outcast. Brimming with beautiful photography which led the jagged madness of German expressionism into the shady world of crime cinema, 'M' is a cinematic masterpiece.

  6 out of 6 people found this review helpful
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