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Friday, Oct 4, 1985
9:30PM
Die Nibelungen: Part II: Kriemhild's Revenge (Kriemhilds Rache)
Fritz Lang's two-part superproduction of the great Nordic mythological saga is a triumph of studio-created artifice in the silent era. Sets, lighting, costumes, camerawork and special effects all contribute to the monumental recreation of a world at the dawn of time, when dragons roamed the earth and the Nibelungen, a race of dwarfs, bestow magical powers onto the warrior Siegfried. Part I, Siegfried, takes the story through Siegfried's marriage to the beautiful Kriemhild and his death at the hands of Hagen. In Part II, Kriemhild's Revenge, the despondent Kriemhild tracks down Hagen through an alliance with Attila the Hun and massacres his forces in a violent siege. The style of Siegfried is highly decorative: amidst the rainbow mountain, colossal rock formations in the forest glades, the vast architectural structures, and the shimmering pool where Siegfried drinks, the characters themselves are almost decorative motifs. In Kriemhild's Revenge, however, the style modulates to a kaleidoscope of movement and the film becomes a terrifying study of barbarism.
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