Hotels, Resorts, Villas
Hotels, Resorts, Villas
Hotels, Resorts, Villas
Hotels, Resorts, Villas


Robert Wiene edit
extracted from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia (using Wikipedia Reflection Script)


 

Robert Wiene - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Robert Wiene

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Robert Wiene
Born 24 April 1873
Breslau, Silesia
Germany
Died 17 July 1938 (aged 65)
Paris
France
Occupation Screenwriter, director
Years active 1913 - 1938

Robert Wiene (27 April 1873 – 16 June 1938) was an important film director of the German silent cinema.

Contents

Early life

Robert Wiene was born in Breslau,1 as the elder son of the successful theatre actor Carl Wiene. His younger brother Conrad also became an actor, but Robert Wiene at first studied law at the University of Berlin. In 1908 he also started to act, at first in small parts on stage. His first involvement with film was in 1912, writing and directing Die Waffen der Jugend.

Peak success

His most memorable feature films are the 1920 horror film The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and Raskolnikow (1923), an adaptation of Dostoyevsky's Crime and Punishment, both of which had a deep influence on the German cinema of that time.

Exile

After Hitler took power in Germany, Wiene left Berlin, and went first to Budapest, where he directed One Night in Venice (1934), later to London, and finally to Paris where together with Jean Cocteau he tried to produce a sound remake of The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari.2

Wiene died in Paris ten days before the end of production of a spy film, Ultimatum, after having suffered from cancer. The film was finished by Wiene's friend Robert Siodmak.

Selected filmography

Director

Writer

Notes

  1. ^ then in German Silesia, now Wroclaw in Poland
  2. ^ Robinson, David. Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari. British Film Institute, 2004, p. 58.

Bibliography

  • Jung, Uli & Schatzberg, Walter. Beyond Caligari: The Films of Robert Wiene. Berghahn Books, 1999.

External links




Copyright Wikipedia.com.