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The marriage circle / an Ernst Lubitsch production ; directed by Ernst Lubitsch ; produced for video by David Shepard.
- Format:
- Video
- Series:
- Academic Video Online
- Language:
- English
- No linguistic content
- Subjects (All):
- Schmidt, Lothar, 1862-1931--Film adaptations.
- Schmidt, Lothar.
- Marriage--Drama.
- Marriage.
- Triangles (Interpersonal relations)--Drama.
- Triangles (Interpersonal relations).
- Genre:
- Silent films.
- Feature films.
- Fiction films.
- Film adaptations.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (85 minutes)
- Other Title:
- Only a dream
- Place of Publication:
- Los Angeles, CA : Flicker Alley, 2000.
- Language Note:
- Silent; intertitles in English and musical accompaniment.
- System Details:
- data file
- Summary:
- The tone is set from the opening scene as legendary director Ernst Lubitsch effortlessly sets up the duality of one perfectly happy marriage contrasted with another couple in a perpetual state of grimly endured misalliance. The Marriage Circle is full of scenes with a sense of unspoken formality, of a mutually antagonistic marital standoff that has been going on for years. The move/countermove rhythm slightly anticipates the slow, tit-for-tat rhythms of Laurel and Hardy, but instead of escalating toward physical destruction, Lubitsch freezes the emotional temperature at a quiet, indicative irony. Unlike real people, these characters never lose their control, which is the essence of their absurdity, the soul of their wit. Before this film, the audience could only see Lubitsch characters move; with The Marriage Circle, we begin to see them think. Before, there were large sets and hundreds of extras. Now, Lubitsch strips everything down to the essentials: a few actors, a car, a garden, a dining room, a staircase. Lubitsch's German films, even the fine ones, tend to be brass bands - compelling, funny, but unavoidably loud. With The Marriage Circle, Lubitsch became the composer of the cinema's finest, most elegant chamber music. To see it in this glistening print derived from the original negative, with an appropriately lilting score by the Mont Alto Orchestra, is to fall in love with the movies - and Ernst Lubitsch - all over again. Excerpts from essay by Scott Eyman, author of Ernst Lubitsch: Laughter in Paradise (Johns Hopkins Press) and Print the Legend: The Life and Time of John Ford (Simon and Schuster).
- Participant:
- Starring Florence Vidor, Monte Blue, Marie Prevost, Creighton Hale, Adolphe Menjou.
- Notes:
- Title from resource description page (viewed December 11, 2017).
- Based on the play "Nur ein Traum" by Lothar Schmidt.
- OCLC:
- 1022745668
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