SUNRISE: A SONG OF TWO HUMANS

We are pleased to present the eagerly anticipated restoration of Murnau's American masterpiece Sunrise. Written while the director was still in Germany, Sunrise is set in a weatherworn hamlet that is not America, perhaps Middle Europe, more like Middle Earth; and a city a world away, just across the lake. A trite situation-happy marriage of peasant couple invaded by big-city seductress-is immediately stripped of melodrama, ultimately to become film poetry. The director's famously “invisible” tracking shots and the fluidity with which he moves through double exposures create an extraordinary moving palette from which we can project story, psychology, and a horrifyingly genuine involvement with the characters. Here is America's sweetheart couple, George O'Brien and Janet Gaynor, in medias infidelity: O'Brien, distracted, almost gothically depressed by his affair as he plots a Dreiser-like boat accident for Gaynor, his sweet wife. The very thought hovers and dances like moonlight over the rest of the film, which gaily tries to dodge it.

This page may by only partially complete.