The Golem

  • USA The Golem: How He Came Into the World (more)

Plots(1)

In 16th-century Prague, a Jewish rabbi creates a giant creature from clay, called the Golem, and using sorcery, brings the creature to life in order to protect the Jews of Prague from persecution. Unfortunately, his evil assistant manages to take control of the Golem, and uses it to commit crimes to enrich him, and finally has it kidnap the rabbi's beautiful daughter. However, the Golem--which had been given human emotions by the rabbi--finally rebels against the assistant's misuse of him. (official distributor synopsis)

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Reviews (1)

Marigold 

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English An old Jewish legend in the timeless robe of German Expressionism. The Wegener-Galeen directorial duo performed a stimulating shape synthesis of Gothic arching and fraying with an expressionist-distorted perspective, resulting in a special visual world on the border between reality and dream, history and myth. The classic story of Rabi Löw and his monstrous creation is a gushing spring of dark atmosphere that culminates in the scene of Astaroth's evoking (timelessly portrayed and extraordinarily suggestive), as well as the sensual prefigurations of stories about "misunderstood" monsters. Wegener himself portrayed the Golem as a source of uncontrollable power, but at the same time as a being slowly abandoning his original destiny and awakening into his humanity. Which clearly foreshadowed a whole branch of major horror films. In the restored version, I especially appreciate the color filter system, which sensitively copies the atmosphere of the plot and then the excellent soundtrack, which perfectly corresponds to the spirit of the film. The Golem is an epic historical piece (of course on the scale of its time), a film with an atmosphere of mysticism and a story that predetermined monsters in cinema once and for all. It's somewhere on the border of the heavily stylized The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and the reality of the poetizing Nosferatu. Embodied pleasure for lovers of black and white dreams with the IFA seal! ()