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The Street

Original title: Die Straße
  • 1923
  • 1h 14m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
532
YOUR RATING
The Street (1923)
CrimeDrama

Presents two distinct plot lines until the two eventually merge: the first is that of the bored middle-aged man seeking a departure from monotony in his life; the second is that of the blind... Read allPresents two distinct plot lines until the two eventually merge: the first is that of the bored middle-aged man seeking a departure from monotony in his life; the second is that of the blind man and the little boy, his grandson, who are interdependent. None of the characters have... Read allPresents two distinct plot lines until the two eventually merge: the first is that of the bored middle-aged man seeking a departure from monotony in his life; the second is that of the blind man and the little boy, his grandson, who are interdependent. None of the characters have been given names and are therefore referred to only by description. The city is an expres... Read all

  • Director
    • Karl Grune
  • Writers
    • Karl Grune
    • Carl Mayer
    • Julius Urgiss
  • Stars
    • Anton Edthofer
    • Aud Egede-Nissen
    • Leonhard Haskel
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    532
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Karl Grune
    • Writers
      • Karl Grune
      • Carl Mayer
      • Julius Urgiss
    • Stars
      • Anton Edthofer
      • Aud Egede-Nissen
      • Leonhard Haskel
    • 7User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos8

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    Top cast6

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    Anton Edthofer
    Anton Edthofer
    • Zuhälter
    Aud Egede-Nissen
    Aud Egede-Nissen
    • Dirne
    Leonhard Haskel
    • Herr aus der Provinz
    Lucie Höflich
    • Frau
    Eugen Klöpfer
    Eugen Klöpfer
    • Mann
    Max Schreck
    Max Schreck
    • Blinder
    • Director
      • Karl Grune
    • Writers
      • Karl Grune
      • Carl Mayer
      • Julius Urgiss
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews7

    6.8532
    1
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    Featured reviews

    10hhole

    a great film

    This highly influential movie was the first of the German "Street" films. It tells the story of one night in which a middle aged man is lured away from his happy home into the thrills and dangers of the city streets. The city is an expressionistic nightmare, a dangerous and chaotic place. The unfortunate man encounters thieves, prostitutes, and other predators. But the real threat to security and order is the street itself. In one extraordinary scene the bumbling man passes an optometrist's shop on a crooked, deserted street. The moment his back is turned, an enormous neon sign, a pair of eyeglasses, blinks on. The street itself is alive and watching.
    8brogmiller

    The blindness of Fate.

    This excellent piece by Karl Grune, yet another of Max Reinhardt's gifted pupils, is arguably this director's most important contribution to Weimer cinema. Forms and genres in Germany during this period were often intermingled and although very much a template for 'Street' films it shows the influence of Carl Mayer's 'Chamber' films and it is in fact Mayer who has provided the original idea.

    The studio sets are magnificent and depict the milieu that defines the characters' lives, the crowd scenes are well choreographed and Grune's brilliant cinematographer Karl Hasselmann provides the expressionist lights and shadows that represent what the poet Shelley called 'the twin destinies of Hope and Fear'. The visual element and storytelling are such that few intertitles are required.

    None of the protagonists is named but the characterisations are superb, notably Eugen Kloepfer as 'middle-aged man', Aud Egede-Nissen as 'the prostitute' and Max Schreck of 'Nosferatu' fame as 'the blindman'.

    We are happily spared the 'specially composed score' that blights so many silent films and great use has been made of Dvorak's Eighth Symphony, at least in the version I saw.

    All-in-all, another gem from what is indisputably the Golden Age of German cinema.
    7arndt-pawelczik

    A Freudian allegory

    A petty bourgeois (Eugen Klöpfer) waits in the parlour while his wife (Lucie Höflich) prepares dinner in the kitchen. Lying on the sofa, he watches the shadows cast on the ceiling by the events outside his window. He can't resist the allure for long. He is drawn outside, into the street, into a completely unbourgeois adventure. He doesn't go with the first streetwalker straight away, but soon after he meets a young lady (Aud Egede Nissen) in a dance hall, whose protector (Anton Edthofer) tempts him into gambling. After several entanglements, our bourgeois returns to his cosy home, dishevelled and happy to embrace his wife and finally eat the dinner that has been kept warm for him.

    Karl Grune's film 'Die Straße' is often counted among the canon of 'expressionist' films of the Weimar Republic and there are good reasons for this, as Grune works with many of the genre's set pieces. The face of a prostitute is transformed into a skull through a dissolve. The elements of metropolitan life rotate before our eyes in a kaleidoscopic multiple exposure. The scenery alternates between realism and stylization. The sign above the door of the police station is adorned with meaningless symbols and an optician has placed an oversized pair of glasses in front of his shop, the eyes of which appear to be critically observing what is happening in the street.

    However, this accumulation of stylistic elements contrasts with a rather banal and unoriginal story. From the moment the petty bourgeois leaves his flat, it is easy to guess that the street of the title does not only have positive experiences in store for him. Basically, the protagonist follows a programme familiar from plays, novels and other films: he plunges into a world unknown to him, is humiliated and gets into danger. The outcome of the whole thing is unknown at times, but it is almost disappointingly inconsequential for the petty bourgeois, because not even the soup has got cold.

    'The Street' is a rather simple allegory. The characters and situations are all clichéd and the film doesn't offer enough expressionistic elements to be convincing on this level. What lifts it is the performance by Eugen Klöpfer, who at times adds tension to the plot and at least gives his character his own flavour. As a philistine in a three-piece suit with a stiff collar, he always carries an umbrella with him, and the way he carries it could - if one were inclined towards Freudian theory - be seen as an expression of an unrealised petty bourgeois lust, which would logically be identified as the driving force behind the entire plot. In 1983, Volker Schlöndorf spoke about the film in an article for Deutschlandfunk about the 'eternally pubescent, who briefly rebel and then submit'. This describes the protagonist of 'Street' exactly.
    8richardchatten

    Sin City

    The plot is broadly similar to Murnau's more upbeat 'Sunrise' a few years later, which also centred upon a stylised city teeming with prostitutes and spivs elaborately recreated from scratch. Although superficially a 'realistic' subject, Karl Grune's fanciful direction emphasises what would now be called the 'noirish', and on the strength of this one would have expected him to have ended his days in Hollywood rather than Bournemouth.

    (Since German films were popular with sophisticated American audiences at the time, it's quite possible that F. Scott Fitzgerald saw the film - or at least stills from it - hence the reappearance of the enormous spectacles that famously dominate one scene in the book he was working upon at the time, 'The Great Gatsby'; while the deathshead makeup worn by a lady of the night early on also anticipates the yuppie aliens in John Carpenter's 'They Live'.)
    8springfieldrental

    Expressionism and Impressionism all rolled into one

    Karl Grune's direction offered a heavy dose of German Expressionism in November 1923's "The Street." What's unique in the Austrian director's co-written script is how two seemingly separate stories merge in the finale while large anonymous city streets take on as a character unto itself. The street is one big expressionistic nightmare, serving as a catalyst for danger and chaos to the movie's protagonist (Eugen Klopfer).

    In an unique dual aesthetic rare in cinema, "The Street" was filmed showing both expressionistic visuals of a city's bustling activity while at the same delving deeply into our protaganist's feelings and thought by capturing symbolic impressionistic images. The focal point of "The Street" is on a restless married man whose drawn outside to the excitement of the metropolitan avenues by looking from the inside of his mundane domestic quarters with his one-dimensional wife. We see his point-of-view looking out the window through dreamy, kaleidoscopic-layered split screens. Also, once on the street, he sees a streetwalker, whose head turns into a skull, foretelling the potential fatal adventures that's awaiting him.

    While Klopfer walks the streets, an old blind man, (Max Schreck, the actor who was the vampire in 1922's 'Nosferatu') is guided by his young grandson. "The Street" oozes with symbols: a neon sign boldly leads Klopfer to a cabaret where he gets snared by a hooker, while a sign in front of an optometrist office with gigantic eyes, pointing out the street sees everything. Klopfer is eventually brought to the blind man and his grandson's apartment. A murder takes place, with Klopfer, who started out in the movie just looking for a little fun in the streets, being accused of the killing.

    "The Street" served as a template for future German 'street films' where the main or pivotal explanatory action takes place on city venues. "The Street" became Jewish director Grune's pinnacle achievement. When the Nazi's came into power, he left Germany in 1933 , immigrating to England, where he directed three films. He later turned to producing movies, remaining in England until his death in 1962.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Lucile Höflich who played the young girl (uncredited) would never act again. She died tragically 20 years later in 1943 at the age of 25.
    • Connections
      Featured in Fejezetek a film történetéböl: A német film 1933-ig (1989)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 5, 1927 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • Germany
    • Languages
      • None
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Ulica
    • Production company
      • Stern-Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 14 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Silent
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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