The Burning Earth

Alternate title(s):
Foreign Title: Der brennende Acker
Date: January 01, 1922 to December 31, 1922
Dates Note: 1922
Country of Origin: Germany
Place of Origin: Germany
Languages: Silent
Color: B&W
Silent: Yes
Based On:
Additional Info:


Curator Notes

Film Series/Exhibition Title: 
F. W. Murnau: Voyages into the Imaginary
Description: 

For years The Burning Earth was counted as the most significant of the lost Murnaus; reconstructed, it reveals the filmmaker’s richly detailed treatment, which drew comparisons with the films of his Swedish contemporaries Victor Sjöström and Mauritz Stiller. The story concerns a peasant, Johannes, whose values and relationships are distorted by the prospect of wealth from the oil-rich land into which he has married. Lotte H. Eisner wrote in Murnau (1964) of this then-lost film: “German and foreign critics alike pronounced this film perfect. Everyone talked about the poetic charm of the snowy landscapes and the marvelous lighting that reached its peak in the fire at the oil-well at night, surrounded by snow. . . . But above everything else was the authenticity of all the complex psychological incident—what a French review called a sincerity ‘faithful to life and reality.’”

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