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Last Laugh (Full Screen)
 
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Last Laugh (Full Screen)

Avec : Mary Delschaft, Kurt Hiller Réalisateur : F.W. Murnau
4.9étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (9 évaluations de client)

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From Amazon.com

One of the most influential silent films of all time, F.W. Murnau's street-drama tragedy (of an aging hotel porter who loses his job to a younger, more dashing man and suffers the humiliation of being demoted to washroom attendant) is a compendium of silent film techniques handled with a new sophistication. When the hearty, rather pompous Emil Jannings loses the dignified uniform of his station, he transforms into a scared little man scurrying through the shadows to hide his demotion from friends and family. Murnau captures the humiliation and calamitous fallout from the demotion (he loses not just his self-respect, but the esteem of his neighbors and even his apartment) in haunting, expressionistic images that magnify the petty events into tragic melodrama. The story seems a little extreme even for the genre but it's never less than a harrowing, subjective experience, even with the rather fanciful happy ending tacked on the end of it. Most famously, Murnau throws the camera into motion--one of his most famous shots takes the viewers up an elevator, through the grand hotel lobby, and out the revolving glass door in a single smooth shot--and it hasn't stopped moving since.

Kino's DVD features a wonderful score by Timothy Brock and the Olympia Chamber Orchestra as well as the credits montage sequence from the German release. Production stills are also included among the supplements. --Sean Axmaker



Review

Hailed at the time of its release as the finest film ever made, Der Letzte Mann wowed domestic and international audiences with its stunning technical and stylistic innovation. Concerning the downward spiral of a proud hotel doorman who becomes a lowly bathroom attendant, the film captures the shame and humiliation felt by the German people in the aftermath of their World War I defeat, artfully fusing gritty social realism with the sort of expressionistic visual style found in The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1919). When the doorman is stripped of his military-like uniform, this once proud and erect figure seems slumped and broken. Brought to life by Emil Jannings's once-in-a-lifetime performance, the defrocked Doorman clings to the walls as if the weight of his disgrace threatens to crush him. His almost fetishistic attachment to his uniform both mirrored Germany's longing for order after its forced, post-WWI disarmament and eerily presaged its slide into Nazism. Yet what proved to be the most influential aspect of this film was director F. W. Murnau's striking visual style. What cinematographer Karl Freund dubbed the "unchained camera" was strikingly mobile for its time, starting with the opening shot, in which the camera descends to a hotel lobby in an elevator and is then propelled through the room towards a revolving door and the protagonist. Murnau's and Freund's inventive camerawork broadened cinema's emotional palette. Never before had a film so penetrated the individual psyche of an individual character in the context of a more or less straightforward narrative. At one point in the film, after the Doorman steals the uniform, he perceives that the hotel is about to fall on top of him; in another, a montage of distorted and grotesque imagery brilliantly evokes the Doorman's drunken, dispirited point-of-view. Despite its absurdly tacked-on happy ending, reportedly forced by the studio, Der Letzte Mann remains a towering cinematic achievement that still moves and dazzles. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide

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L'avis des consommateurs

9 évaluations
5 étoiles:
 (8)
4 étoiles:
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3 étoiles:    (0)
2 étoiles:    (0)
1 étoiles:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
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4.9étoiles sur 5 (9 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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5.0étoiles sur 5 A True Classic, Juil 10 2004
Par D. Hutchins (Stanhope, NJ United States) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
Sometime in the early '70s, I watched a weekly UHF series, which showcased cinematic masterpieces. It was hosted by Charles Champlain. After he introduced the particular film for that week, he proceeded to play the film itself. Afterward, there was some discussipon about the film that was just shown.

Some were titles I was familiar with; others were unknown to me. But every one of them were cinematic works of art. I remember seeing "The Cabinet Of Doctor Caliagri", Eisenstein's "Battleship Potemkin" and "Ivan The Terrible, Part I", Cocteau's "Beauty And The Beast", as well as Kurosawa's "Seven Samurai". I remember the level of film-making quality, and thinking I never saw anything prior to what I saw in these films, to compare to what these films offered. They were not just thought-provoking, but they, very often, had a human or a dramatic, aspect to them which most commercial films never captured. I was enjoying the beginning of an education in the history of cinema.

Another treat in that film series was Murnau's "The Last Laugh". It wasn't just the story of a working man, and what happened to him when the source of his pride and satisfation was gone, which gripped me. It was also about how the film depicted the "neighbors" and "friends", who took delight in the doorman'ss humiliation, and how other employees, except for one, were more concerned about their own loyalty to the hotel, rather than expressing personal sympathy. It's a very human story, told in a very simple, but occasionally expressionistic, way.

Other reviewers have remarked about the fluid camera work, and the fact of Murnau's using just one title card. I agree that both of those elements contribute to making "The Last Laugh" a memorable film. I'd also add that Emil Jannings should get credit for his stunning, tragic performance. Don't miss this film!

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5.0étoiles sur 5 The Pinnacle of Silent Cinema, Mars 19 2004
Par Ben Parker "Cheshire" (Church Point, NSW Australia) - Voir tous mes commentaires
F. W Murnau works are rare things - he made very few compared to other directors of his day, and many of those he did make have been lost. The reason he made so few can perhaps be understood by watching The Last Laugh. Like Chaplin, Kubrick and Leone, the effort that went into a single picture was the same effort another director might spread across ten. Nosferatu, his famous Dracula story, is great, and i hear his Faust and Sunrise are also things to behold - but many regard "The Last Laugh" as his masterwork, and also one of the greatest movies of all time. Lillian Gish once said that she never approved of the talkies - she felt that silents were starting to create a whole new art form. She was right, but the proof of this can not be seen in the work of Griffith, who was her frequent collaborator, and who she probably was thinking about when she made this statement - but in the work of German director F. W Murnau.

D. W Griffith is usually shunned for his stance on racial issues and praised for his abilities as an influential film artist. I believe he doesn't deserve this praise - and this movie is why. Not only was Griffith about as subtle as a migraine, but watching a Griffith silent, you get more words than images. There's a title card telling you what is about to happen in every image before it does. The images themselves are almost unnecessary - his style is more literary than cinematic. The difference between watching Griffith's Intolerance and watching F. W Murnau's The Last Laugh is like the difference between watching a silent comedy by Hal Roach and one by Charlie Chaplin. The latter of each pair (Murnau and Chaplin) were visualists and artists, using few words, constructing beauty and high emotion through seemingly simple situations (a tramp who discovers a lost child, or a hotel doorman who loses his job, which is the basis of The Last Laugh).

Silent directors strove to and were praised for their ability to tell stories through images alone, as much as possible, and this is one of the reasons silent cinema reached its pinnacle in F. W Murnau's The Last Laugh - which tells the story of a proud hotel doorman (Emil Jennings), who, after many years of service, is demoted from his position to a mens' bathroom attendant. Murnau tells an incredibly sensitive and human tale, showing how much the job meant to him by having him go to work instead of going to his daughter's wedding. He shows how the position made him respected in his neighbourhood, and how he could not face the neighbourhood without his doorman's uniform. And he tells the story almost entirely through images.

There are no title cards telling us what the images are - they are allowed to speak for themselves. The few words used are worked in through letters and signs. Many silent directors cheated and used title cards to explain the images, but only in this movie did the art form of silent movies, which Lillian Gish refers to, take shape.

I was amazed at the level of depth and emotional complexity that Murnau was capable of conveying without resorting to title cards (or their equivalent in talkies, the voiceover). This movie is also noteable for its brilliant use of expressionism, and the first brilliant use of a tracking shot. In Murnau's The Last Laugh, silent movies metaphorically were given movement, and learned to run.

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5.0étoiles sur 5 Masterpiece, Fév 8 2004
Par Levi Villarreal (Sterling , IL) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
A wonderful integration of poignant musical composition, visual expressionism, and an O. Henry like plot twist into a cinematic masterpiece.
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Commentaires client les plus récents

5.0étoiles sur 5 one of the greatest silent movies
F. W. Murnau showed the world with this movie, that silent cinema is able to express everything - even the tiniest, almost unnoticeable emotions. Read more
Publié le Déc 7 2003 par balaazs

5.0étoiles sur 5 Life and Tragedy
1924's "The Last Laugh" is a short, simple, direct tale of an elderly hotel doorman. Becoming complacent, he is smugly replaced by a younger man, and assigned to work in... Read more
Publié le Déc 4 2003 par Brad Baker

5.0étoiles sur 5 Thought provoking
This is a good silent film with a universal message that provokes thought.

The reviewers have pretty much given you the story here, but there are some interesting scenes that... Read more

Publié le Déc 1 2003 par Andre M.

4.0étoiles sur 5 Murnau's "Little" Masterpiece
What struck this viewer: No title cards, except for the one announcing the "happy" ending; the camera told the story. The amazing city scenes. Read more
Publié le Nov. 12 2003

5.0étoiles sur 5 Brilliant!
This film is a masterpeice. There are no title cards (just one); nevertheless, the way this film was directed, leaves very little need for them. Read more
Publié le Juil 3 2003 par Andi

5.0étoiles sur 5 Not very funny.
F.W. Murnau's *The Last Laugh* may make you wonder if film technique has really advanced appreciably during the 80 or so years since its release. Read more
Publié le Avril 10 2002

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