Review: Fritz Lang’s Die Nibelungen on Kino Lorber Blu-ray

Die Nibelungen ranks among the greatest and strangest of all silents.

Die NibelungenAccording to consensus, Metropolis is the undisputed heavyweight champ not only of Fritz Lang’s filmography, but also of German silent cinema. Given how few of us are pressing for a general reappraisal of the silent canon, that’s unlikely to change, though a case can and should be made for Die Nibelungen. Such a case would, necessarily, wage an uphill battle against implications of infamy: Adapted from the epic poem Nibelungenlied, Lang’s two-part movie has a largeness that exceeds its own dimensions. It appeared at a time when the wounded pride of Germany was well on its way to becoming insular nationalism. Hitler, who would (through Goebbels) attempt to become one of Lang’s patrons, was said to have broken down and wept during Die Nibelungen. (A bowdlerized Siegfried was rereleased in 1933.) Thus, an epic which opens with the title card “Dedicated to the German people” alights on the timeline that connects Teutonic legend with the Shoah, beholden to the former and not unequivocally blameless for the latter. Lang, of course, was horrified by Hitler, taking flight to France when Goebbels offered him a chance to take charge of film production during the Third Reich. The same horror, compounded with the shape and sensation of a noose tightening around one’s neck, informed almost everything he made thereafter, until the end of his career.

But the legacy of Die Nibelungen as a Nazi touchstone is decidedly more circumstantial than instrumental. A more ill-fitting emblem of the Reich is inconceivable, if for no other reason than the second half (Kriemhild’s Revenge) spoils and razes the triumphant construction of Siegfried, inscribing a trajectory that voids any hypothesis for the eternal superiority of Aryan might (of which there’s scarcely any in Siegfried, in spite of Paul Richter’s macho poses), precognitively rendering the Nazi prophecy, the reign of a thousand years, in smoldering ashes. At the time, the public and the press tried to ignore Kriemhild’s Revenge, and treated Siegfried as a standalone masterpiece. Time and advanced viewership may allow us to better regard the two pieces as an even greater, and more terrible, work of art than Goebbels dreamt of in his philosophy.

The all-consuming fire returns, time and again, in the form of chemical plant conflagrations (The Testament of Dr. Mabuse) or pots of hot coffee (The Big Heat). Earth-shaking explosions are used again and again, with too many examples to name. Most significantly, Lang would return, on countless occasions, to the device of predestination—the frequently lethal compound structure of choices, inner nature, and the inexorable progress of events.

Advertisement

Everywhere in Lang is a picture-box image of crosshatched lines, meshed teeth, or foregrounds imposing and imprisoning backgrounds—or vice versa. In Die Nibelungen, the frames are filled with UFA’s most lavish set construction and wardrobe design, to a degree of splendor that rivals Eisenstein’s Ivan the Terrible series. As the budgets for Lang’s B movies were depleted over his final working decade, emptiness and despair needed no longer to be sublimated by theme, but were fully expressed by cadaverous, blank backgrounds and the final erasure of heroism as a substantive force.

Image/Sound

Already one of the crown jewels of Kino’s DVD lineup, Die Nibelungen nevertheless benefits enormously from their color-tinted, 1080p upgrade, courtesy a restoration by the great Friedrich-Wilhelm-Murnau-Stiftung. Gottfried Huppertz’s strong, compelling score is presented in 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio and 2.0 stereo.

Extras

Since the Friedrich-Wilhelm-Murnau-Stiftung high-definition restoration is the real show here, one might forgive the anticlimactic supplements. “The Legacy of Die Nibelungen” is a 68-minute documentary feature—flat, uninsightful, and mostly a shapeless hodgepodge of anecdotes and public information. Worthwhile for narrating the degradation and subsequent restoration of Lang’s epic, at least. The only other supplement is some newsreel footage of Lang on the movie’s set.

Advertisement

Overall

In a period of film history that didn’t want for extravagant epics, Die Nibelungen ranks among the greatest and strangest of all silents. Kino presents Lang’s 1924 masterpiece in a stunning, 1080p upgrade.

Score: 
 Cast: Gertrud Arnold, Margarete Schön, Hanna Ralph, Paul Richter, Theodor Loos, Hans Carl Mueller, Erwin Biswanger, Bernhard Goetzke, Hans Adalbert Schlettow, Hardy von Francois, Georg John, Frida Richard, Yuri Yurovsky, Iris Roberts  Director: Fritz Lang  Screenwriter: Fritz Lang, Thea von Harbou  Distributor: Kino Lorber  Running Time: 269 min  Rating: NR  Year: 1924  Release Date: November 6, 2012  Buy: Video

Jaime N. Christley

Jaime N. Christley's writing has also appeared in the Village Voice.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Previous Story

Blu-ray Review: Christ Lilley’s Angry Boys on HBO Home Video

Next Story

Blu-ray Review: Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight Rises on Warner Home Video