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The Blue Angel on DVD (1930)

The Blue Angel cover art
Average rating: 68%
122510121520410
3.5
from 289 members
 
Starring: Emil Jannings, Marlene Dietrich, Kurt Gerron, Hans Albers
Director: Josef Von Sternberg
Studio: EUREKA ENTERTAINMENT
Run time: 200 mins
Certificate: PG
User collections: Superb Films of the 1930's, one film per year, Exceptional Films
Genres: Drama
Languages: English, German
Subtitles: English
Released: 23/09/2002

Brief synopsis of The Blue Angel

This Josef Von Sternberg film, based on Heinrich Mann's novel PROFESSOR UNRAT, made Marlene Dietrich a celebrity and began a tumultuous relationship between star and director that spanned Sternberg's most creative period. The film features Emil Jannings as Dr. Immanuel Rath, a provincial prep school teacher who becomes incensed when he learns his boys have become infatuated with Lola Lola (Dietrich), a cabaret singer. Heading to the Blue Angel, a nightclub, to catch his pupils, Rath instead becomes bewitched by the sensuous Lola himself, beginning an obsession that drives him to the depths of despair. Visionary, haunting, and emotionally unrelenting, THE BLUE ANGEL stands as Sternberg's crowning achievement. Filmed in both German and English simultaneously, the German version is generally considered superior to its English language counterpart.

All DVDs in this series

Blue Angel, The - Disc 1 - German Language
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Blue Angel, The - Disc 2 - English Language
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Related

Critics Reviews

Rating of 1 stars out of 5 Radio Times

A seriously misguided attempt by 20th Century-Fox to remake Josef von Sternberg's 1930 German classic, about a cabaret singer who destroys the middle-aged professor obsessionally in love with her. Placed in a modern setting and filmed in CinemaScope, this truly awful piece somehow loses all the atmosphere, resonance and credibility of the original. Curt Jurgens and May Britt are the unfortunate substitutes for Emil Jannings and Marlene Dietrich. Edward Dmytryk directs.

Rating of 4 
	  stars out of 4 Halliwell's Film Guide

A masterwork of late twenties German grotesquerie, and after a slowish beginning an emotional powerhouse, set in a dark nightmare world which could be created only in the studio. Shot also in English, it was highly popular and influential in Britain and A

Time Out

Lola, star at the sleaziest nightclub in screen history, meets, seduces and ultimately destroys the upright bourgeois... Read more on www.timeout.com

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Members Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 4 starsZe Drunken Angel

William Johnson from leamington , 19/09/2004

This is an historic film that launched the career of Marlene Dietrich. It became her trademark and her performance in this movie has been imitated by Liza Minelli in ?Cabaret?, Madeleine Kahn in ?Blazing Saddles? and a host of lesser knowns particularly female impersonators.

The story concerns a teacher of English (played extremely ponderously by Emil Jannings) who has great difficulty in making his curiously mature students say 'the' instead of 'ze'. From one of them he confiscates a postcard of a night club performer, Lola Lola, and so invades the club in order to try and capture his mischievous students. Here he meets and falls in love with Lola Lola (Dietrich). She is a rather sexually ambiguous woman, gorgeous face and body but seemingly unattracted to the men who fall under her spell. Because of her he gets sacked from his job but still he marries her and starts travelling with the show. After 5 years he has become a drunk, an oafish, humiliated stooge to a fat magician whilst Dietrich quite openly dallies with other men. His downfall is complete when the show returns to his old town.

Today it seems a rather clunky affair. It was made right at the beginning of the sound era when the difficulties of recording simultaneous sound and motion fixed cameras to the floor, no tracking shots, pans, zooms, hardly any of the free flowing cinematography to which we are accustomed today. In addition the crude sound makes Dietrich?s voice very harsh especially when singing, more like a band saw than a femme fatale. All this means that you have to use a lot of imagination to compensate when watching this film.

WARNING. To broaden the film?s international appeal it was made in two languages, German and English. Many of the lesser actors could not speak English and their parts are still in German. Jannings and Dietrich were fluent but some of the other actors? accents are so thick it is really hard to understand them. So unless you are pathologically averse to reading whilst viewing make sure you get the German version.

  9 out of 9 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsFantastic

Edward Rogers from Bangor, Wales , 14/05/2005

This is a really excellent film. The photography is superb, giving the film a really dark, claustrophobic atmosphere. I loves the short sequences when the Professor is walking about the streets. This must have been one of the first talkies, and it's interesting to note that the acting styles of some of the actors still resemble the styles that the silent films in which they were accustomed to starring in demanded. Well worth a watch, and, as a previous reviewer suggested, rent the German version - not the English version.

  3 out of 3 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 1 starsBoring

A customer from london , 09/06/2006

I know alot of people love this movie - but i hated it.

itwasboring and took forever to get to the point. eventually had to turn off.

  2 out of 2 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 5 starsMarlene Dietrich black-and-white classic

A customer from Colchester UK , 28/12/2005

Set in Germany of the turn of the 20th Century: Marlene Dietrich stars as the 'femme fatale' of a touring cabaret company performing at the local music hall, the 'Blue Angel'. The film portrays the downfall of a respected schoolteacher who in forbidding his sixth-formers from viewing [Dietrich] falls under her destructive spell. Marlene sings. The plot unfolds with attractive humour turning to dark pathos.

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful
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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 4 starsZe Drunken Angel

William Johnson from leamington , 19/09/2004

This is an historic film that launched the career of Marlene Dietrich. It became her trademark and her performance in this movie has been imitated by Liza Minelli in ?Cabaret?, Madeleine Kahn in ?Blazing Saddles? and a host of lesser knowns particularly female impersonators.

The story concerns a teacher of English (played extremely ponderously by Emil Jannings) who has great difficulty in making his curiously mature students say 'the' instead of 'ze'. From one of them he confiscates a postcard of a night club performer, Lola Lola, and so invades the club in order to try and capture his mischievous students. Here he meets and falls in love with Lola Lola (Dietrich). She is a rather sexually ambiguous woman, gorgeous face and body but seemingly unattracted to the men who fall under her spell. Because of her he gets sacked from his job but still he marries her and starts travelling with the show. After 5 years he has become a drunk, an oafish, humiliated stooge to a fat magician whilst Dietrich quite openly dallies with other men. His downfall is complete when the show returns to his old town.

Today it seems a rather clunky affair. It was made right at the beginning of the sound era when the difficulties of recording simultaneous sound and motion fixed cameras to the floor, no tracking shots, pans, zooms, hardly any of the free flowing cinematography to which we are accustomed today. In addition the crude sound makes Dietrich?s voice very harsh especially when singing, more like a band saw than a femme fatale. All this means that you have to use a lot of imagination to compensate when watching this film.

WARNING. To broaden the film?s international appeal it was made in two languages, German and English. Many of the lesser actors could not speak English and their parts are still in German. Jannings and Dietrich were fluent but some of the other actors? accents are so thick it is really hard to understand them. So unless you are pathologically averse to reading whilst viewing make sure you get the German version.

  9 out of 9 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsTouching tragedy

A customer from Hackney , 19/04/2007

I watched this film not really knowing what it was going to be about so I was totally caught up in the way it began as humour and slowly got darker and darker. The strict but bumbling and likable professor is well captured at the start and it is his decency that endears him to Dietrich's showgirl (even if it is his anger that first leads him to the Blue Angel).

He becomes infatuated with Lola Lola an infatuation that leads rather quickly to his downfall and his inevitable final humiliation. The ending is heart-breaking and makes you realise how far we've come since the first scenes of the professor having his breakfast.

The acting is great and the scenes in the club and the dark streets of the Professor's home town are atmospherically potrayed and overall it ends up being a moving and sad story. I can't say I liked Lola's singing much though.

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