Olga Tschechowa – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st Wed, 06 May 2026 13:15:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/cropped-Vintage-Movie-Camera-Icon-32x32.png Olga Tschechowa – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st 32 32 Alfred Hitchcock – Mary (1931) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2018/12/alfred-hitchcock-mary-1931/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2018/12/alfred-hitchcock-mary-1931/#comments Fri, 14 Dec 2018 04:03:03 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=10473 A juror in a murder trial, after voting to convict, has second thoughts and begins to investigate on his own before the execution. German version of “Murder. (ımbd) 1.09GB | 1h 18mn | 640×480 | avi https://nitro.download/view/F6CFA8264854C0E/Mary_(1931).avi Language:GermanSubtitles:English

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A juror in a murder trial, after voting to convict, has second thoughts and begins to investigate on his own before the execution. German version of “Murder. (ımbd)

1.09GB | 1h 18mn | 640×480 | avi

https://nitro.download/view/F6CFA8264854C0E/Mary_(1931).avi

Language:German
Subtitles:English

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Hans H. Zerlett – Zwei Frauen (1938) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2018/11/hans-h-zerlett-zwei-frauen-1938/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2018/11/hans-h-zerlett-zwei-frauen-1938/#comments Fri, 23 Nov 2018 07:31:42 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=80436 Here’s a film so rare and forgotten, it isn’t even listed the German Lexikon des Internationalen Films, so it’s unlikely that it ran anywhere after the war. The overly bright but quite good copy of unknown provenience has Dutch and French subtitles burned in. The story is about a theater star (Olga Tschechowa) who finds …

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Here’s a film so rare and forgotten, it isn’t even listed the German Lexikon des Internationalen Films, so it’s unlikely that it ran anywhere after the war. The overly bright but quite good copy of unknown provenience has Dutch and French subtitles burned in.
The story is about a theater star (Olga Tschechowa) who finds herself suddenly a mother again after her daughter (Irene von Meyendorff) who lived with her father for 16 years got thrown out by him because she wants also to become an actress. Naturally the mother isn’t too pleased because she fears to be recognized as a mother losing some star appeal, so they present themselves as aunt and niece. However the young girl soon proves to be a competitor in love and career …


1.03GB | 1:17:54 | 496×368 | avi
https://nitro.download/view/C162435D62FD73E/Zwei_Frauen.avi

Language(s):German
Subtitles:French and Dutch hardsubs

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Ewald André Dupont – Moulin Rouge (1928) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2018/04/ewald-andre-dupont-moulin-rouge-1928/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2018/04/ewald-andre-dupont-moulin-rouge-1928/#comments Wed, 04 Apr 2018 09:45:07 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=67591 No relation to the 1952 Toulouse Lautrec biopic of the same name, Moulin Rouge was produced, directed and written by German-filmmaker E. A. Dupont. Olga Tschechowa plays the star dancer of Paris’ famed Moulin Rouge nightspot. Her daughter Eve Gray is in love with impressionable Jean Bradin. Alas, Jean adores another – Eve’s own mother. …

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No relation to the 1952 Toulouse Lautrec biopic of the same name, Moulin Rouge was produced, directed and written by German-filmmaker E. A. Dupont. Olga Tschechowa plays the star dancer of Paris’ famed Moulin Rouge nightspot. Her daughter Eve Gray is in love with impressionable Jean Bradin. Alas, Jean adores another – Eve’s own mother. A blessed relief from the usual turgid, slapped-together British films of the period, Moulin Rouge has visual moments that approach the brilliance of Dupont’s previous backstage melodrama, the German Variety. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Moulin Rouge ranks among the best British-made films of the silent era, though it’s essentially a German film produced in England. German film-critic-turned-director E. A. Dupont and German set designer Alfred Junge provide the film with its outstanding visual flair. The star is the Armenian-born Olga Tschechova; French actors Georges Tréville and Marcel Vibert have key supporting roles, as does German-born actress Ellen Pollock. The resulting film supplied London studios with an influx of talent. Junge, in particular, became a mainstay in the films of Michael Powell. As with much of Dupont’s best work, the story is a sexually charged backstage melodrama, the kind which would all but vanish in the 1930s with the advent of the movie musical and increasingly restrictive censorship codes. ~ Richard Gilliam, All Movie Guide








https://nitro.download/view/D1449D0DDD0389E/Moulin.Rouge.1928.BDRip.x264-KG.mkv

Language(s):silent with english intertitles
Subtitles:none

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Robert Wiene – Panik in Chicago (1931) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2012/04/robert-wiene-panik-in-chicago-1931/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2012/04/robert-wiene-panik-in-chicago-1931/#respond Sat, 28 Apr 2012 10:27:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=1303 Beyond Caligari: The Films of Robert Wiene (Uli Jung, Walter Schatzberg), pp 166 ff. link Panik in Chicago was an enormous success in all major cities in Germany, as reported in the press. “The D.L.S. branches in Düsseldorf and Frankfurt a.M. had such record bookings for the film Panik in Chicago during the following two …

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Beyond Caligari: The Films of Robert Wiene (Uli Jung, Walter Schatzberg), pp 166 ff.
link

Panik in Chicago was an enormous success in all major cities in Germany, as reported in the press. “The D.L.S. branches in Düsseldorf and Frankfurt a.M. had such record bookings for the film Panik in Chicago during the following two weeks that several new copies had to be distributed in these districts because the available subsidiary copies could not fulfill the demand for screenings. Other reports refer to the unusual popular acclaim the film enjoyed in Leipzig, Halle, Munich, and Stuttgart.

In the reviews some criticism was leveled against the quality of several of the dialogues and the relative weakness of the female roles. The film as a whole, however was given a most positive evaluation in Die LichtBildBühne.

Robert Wiene made a tremendous effort to extract from the story whatever it would give. So he did succeed in creating scenes that will be remembered for a long time. Eerie and ghostlike, everything connected with the lonely house. The dim stairs, the rushing people, or the fabulous night shots of a big city. The glass reflections of a dance scene. Simply masterful! On the whole, the imagery in this film achieves great triumphs. Willi Goldberger, the camera artist, and Robert Neppach, the refined architect, were Wiene’s invaluable collaborators. [text continues below]

Spoiler-

It is interesting that the journalist emphasizes the pictorial in Panik in Chicago. After all, it is with this film that Robert Wiene’s visual style begins to change, as the first scene demonstrates. The very first shot shows a gigantic vault being opened by bank attendants. A split second later, bank robbers burst in with shouts of “hands up.” In the next hundred seconds, thirty shots show a gang taking over a major bank in downtown Chicago with a thoroughly professional routine. This rapid sequencing represents a general tendency in Wiene’s visual style in Panik in Chicago. Consistent with this is a more active use of the mobile camera, which along with frequent travelings, pans, and tilts of the camera creates a spatial dynamic – a fairly new feature in Wiene’s directorial technique. In addition to this, he constructs complex framing with a variegated organization of levels within the deep focus. Together with unusual fast cutting at certain dramatic moments, Wiene effectively adopts the visual styles of action films.

In the film’s early sequences the four main characters – Taglioni, Percy Boot, Florence Dingly, and Inspector Renard – are introduced, as well as information about the double lives of the first two. Thus, from the very beginning the spectator knows more than the active participants and the police, who are investigating the criminal activity of the two major gangs. Throughout the film Wiene continues this strategy of keeping the spectators more informed than the participants of the film. He reverses this strategy only toward the end by introducing surprises for the audience. Just as the audience begins to identify Susy Owen as the prime suspect for the murder of Percy Boot, through careful criminal investigation, the police discover the true identity of Fay Davis and thereby the real murderer; secondly, Inspector Reynard, working behind the scenes, finds a witness who, because of a personal grudge against Taglioni, is willing to identify him as A1 Patou.

Structurally, Panik in Chicago revolves around three subplots, in each of which Taglioni is one of the two adversaries. There is an early encounter between Taglioni and his arch enemy Percy Booth, who is murdered soon thereafter. This murder precipitates the conflict between Taglioni and Florence Dingly, who “inherits” the gang of her friend Morand Billy (Percy Boot). At the same time the murder and the bank holdup bring police inspector Renard into the picture as Taglioni’s (A1 Patou) main antagonist who doggedly pursues him throughout the film.

The duel between Taglioni and Renard is fought on a subtle, intellectual level. Both play a game, the rules of which they know very well, and both are “modern” in that they use modem technology to further their ends. Taglioni, for example, signals messages to his gang by means of an electric piano with which he can manipulate the letters of a large neon sign on the rooftop of his house. Renard, in turn, has access to a high-tech transmitter with which he receives radioed photographs from the New York police. The struggle between Taglioni and Renard takes place in the most sophisticated accommodations. Renard, who suspects Taglioni but has no proof, pursues him relentlessly but always with good manners, dressed as the occasion requires. Taglioni, fully aware of his pursuer’s intention, is cool and collected in his tuxedo, with his urbane demeanor, to the very end.

Taglioni’s struggle with Florence Dingly is not nearly as clear cut. After Morand Billy’s death, she becomes Taglioni’s adversary and exhorts the gang to attack his cocaine transport as an act of revenge against the man she suspects of having committed the murder. Indeed, she succeeds in bringing him down primarily because he has underestimated her. During a dramatic poker scene, he intimidates her whole gang with his cool ruthlessness, but by refusing to accept her challenge purely out of vanity (“I don’t play against women”), he brings about his own downfall.

Although the structure of the film emerges quite clearly through these three subplots and the duels between the major characters, a deficiency in the characterization of the women in the film – specifically in the all-important case of Florence Dingly – mars an otherwise well-balanced film. Florence’s sudden transformation from high-society lady to the leader of a mob is not at all convincing, nor is her readiness to give up her revenge on Taglioni and even help him in his escape well motivated.

In Panik in Chicago Wiene concentrates on the conflict between the two main protagonists rather than on an authentic depiction of the criminal milieu as he had in Der Andere. The gangs appear, thus, for the most part as anonymous and faceless. Taglioni’s men are seen only in the bank holdup and the shootout at the end. Morand Billy’s gang emerges a bit more clearly, but even in the poker scene, they remain fairly colorless and are given only a minimum of individual characterization. It may have been the Chicago setting that prevented Wiene from using devices such as slang or dialects (all characters speak standard German). Hence, he did not achieve an authenticity the likes of which made the criminal milieu in Der Andere so lively. Nevertheless, with all its flaws, Panik in Chicago is an unusual example for the early German sound film, which is still overlooked without good reason. In its mixture of crime drama and gangster film it is, according to Herbert Holba, a rarity among German films of the period.

-Spoiler



http://www.nitroflare.com/view/7C287D174E5E06E/Panik_in_Chicago.1931.h.1.02-1.mkv
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/DB61C7348A6EEB7/Panik.in.Chicago_1931.ENG.05.srt

Language:German
Subtitles:French (hard subs),Eng srt.

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