The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (Restored Authorized Edition)
Willy Hameister: Cinematographer
Erich Pommer: Producer
Rudolf Meinert: Producer
Carl Mayer: Writer
Hans Janowitz: Writer
Kino Video
| List Price: |
$19.95 |
| Amazon Price: |
$14.99 |
| Lowest New Price: |
$10.59 |
| Lowest Used Price: |
$12.80 |
| Total New: |
32 |
| Total Used: |
8 |
DVD Details:
- Starring: Werner Krauss, Conrad Veidt, Friedrich Feher, Lil Dagover, Hans Heinrich von Twardowski
- Director: Robert Wiene
- Format: Black White, DVD-Video, NTSC
- Rated: Unrated
- Studio: Kino Video
- Theatrical Release Date: Mar 19, 1921
- DVD Release Date: Sep 24, 2002
- Run Time: 67 minutes
- ASIN: B00006JMQG
- UPC: 738329025427
- Sales Rank: 5092
Amazon Customer Reviews:
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21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
    Image or Kino?, 2008-02-29
I'd like to add my two cent's worth here. Not going in to the film itself, I just want to discuss the 2 main versions out there, the Image "Special Collector's Edition" disc from about 10 years ago and the new Kino "Restored Authorized Edition". I watched both side to side (2 TVs 2 DVD players)
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br /Despite some raves about the Kino version (which I can't really understand), the Image version wins hands down. Kino, which normally puts out a superior product whatever movie they are releasing, I believe really dropped the ball with this one. For one, they went totally overboard with tinting...most scenes now appear to be a deep, dark blue, and the black areas have a weird, mottled, speckley, "wavy" look, like TV reception that isn't quite coming in. Granted, this is mostly only really bad during the first reel, in the opening garden scene, improving slightly as the film goes on, but it's still annoying.
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br /The Image disc, by comparision, is brightly lit, scenes being either a "regular" grey like you see on the usual b/w silent film, or an amberish tint that still shows up fine. The entire Kino version just seems too dark murky. The intertitles of both are in that funky, abstract font, but each has slightly different wording for the same scenes (and I don't know which is actually more accurate to the original, but both convey basically the same information). For example, one may say "Listen while I tell you a story" while the other says "I will now tell you a story" (I made both those up, but it was to get the idea across!). However, the intertitles on the Kino version are, again, much darker than the Image disc. Also, the Image print in general just seems much sharper clearer than the Kino, and the musical score is much better more fitting. Kino gives you a choice of 2 musical scorings both are atrocious and do not seem to fit the "mood" of the story.
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br /On the other hand, Kino does have more extras, particularly a much longer segment of GENUINE: THE TALE OF A VAMPIRE (43 minutes) while Image gives you about a 3-minute snippet. Also, and most important, that annoying horizontal line that cuts across the top of certain scenes on nearly every version out there (including the one shown on TCM) has been removed on the Kino disc. Long considered to be a flaw in the original film, it's most likely a goof in the converting process somewhere, and this shows that we DO have the technology to remove it, which we did not have back when the Image disc was made. Quite frankly, this was the ONLY main advantage I could find in the Kino print, and it does not make up for a blue, murky, dark movie. I'd much rather have a clean, crisp, clear, brightly lit film deal with the line (it's not in every scene in the movie, just certain ones anyway).
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br /I guess the best of both worlds would be if Image put out a new version, using it's same print but removing the line as Kino did. THAT would really be the "Ultimate Edition" in my opinion.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
    Distorted Reality, 2008-02-03
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari is famous for being a prime example of German Expressionism, a strange artistic movement in the 1920s that emphasized mood more than story. This film is filled with strange angular sets, heavy reliance on shadow, and a psychological theme. It is a film enthusiast's delight, especially if said enthusiast believes in the artistic content of silent films.
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br /Dr. Caligari (Werner Krauss) is a spider-like man who creeps around on his cane peddling his great find. Cesare (Conrad Veidt) is a Somnambulist, a man in a hypnotic state who tells the future. He also has murderous tendencies, or so we learn when several people in the town are killed late at night. Everything is not as it seems, however, and the twist ending will leave you breathless.
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br /The default music on the Kino DVD might put off traditional silent film fans. It relies heavily on guitar, which makes the suspenseful scenes even moreso and adds to the strangeness of the film, but it might be unfavorably jarring. Thankfully there is an alternative score.
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