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The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari
(1920, Ger.)
In Robert Wiene's classic and influential silent film:
- the expressionist cinematography and the distorted,
jagged, angular sets
- the tale (the film's entire story) told in flashback,
by Francis (Friedrich Feher) - a tale of the strange sufferings and
horrible events that he had experienced
- the promotion of mad and sinister Dr. Caligari's (Werner
Krauss) "spectacle" attraction at the fair with a life-sized
poster - a sleeping somnambulist named Cesare (Conrad Veidt), who
was revealed and awakened in a box-shaped cabinet or coffin, and
prophetically told fortunes to audience members
- the stabbing death of Francis' friend Alan (Hans Heinrich
von Twardowski) by a shadowy figure
- the abduction of Francis' 'fiancee' Jane Olsen (Lil
Dagover) by Cesare, and the chase by a mob across rooftops and down
alleyways
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Abduction Sequence
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- the shocking discovery by Francis that Dr. Caligari
was the insane director of a mental institution, and that he was
obsessed with imitating a 18th century mystic (of the same name)
who sent out his somnambulist Cesare to commit murder
- the twist ending -- the entire film (a framed story
with a flashback) was made up from the mad ramblings and delusions
of Francis, the mentally-ill narrator/story-teller of the film while
he was seated in the asylum courtyard; Francis' doctor was the benevolent
and respected Dr. Caligari!
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Dr. Caligari
With Cesare
Twist Ending
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