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poster of Secrets of a Soul
Rating: 6.2/10 by 28 users

Secrets of a Soul (1926)

Werner Krauss, who had played the deranged Dr. Caligari six years earlier, stars as a scientist who is tormented by an irrational fear of knives and the irresistible compulsion to murder his wife. Driven to the brink of madness by fantastic nightmares (designed by Ernö Metzner and photographed by Guido Seeber in a brilliant mix of expressionism and surrealism), he encounters a psychoanalyst who offers to treat the perplexing malady.

Directing:
  • G.W. Pabst
  • Marc Sorkin
Writing:
  • Karl Abraham
  • Hans Neumann
  • Colin Ross
  • Hanns Sachs
Stars:
Release Date: Wed, Mar 24, 1926

Rating: 6.2/10 by 28 users

Alternative Title:
Misterios de un alma - ES
Les Mystères d'une âme - FR

Country:
Germany
Language:
No Language
Runtime: 01 hour 15 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: trauma, dream interpretation, mental illness, german expressionism

Werner Krauß
Martin Fellman
Ruth Weyher
Seine frau
Lili Damita
(uncredited)
Pavel Pavlov
Dr. Orth (as Pawel Pawloff)
Hertha von Walther
Fellmans Assistentin
Colin Ross
Kriminalkommissar

CinemaSerf

Werner Krauss made quite a few titles with GW Pabst, and I consider this to be one of their better silent efforts together. He is the happily married "Fellman" who suddenly, and inexplicably, finds him self desirous of killing his wife (Ruth Weyher) with a knife. Now it has to be said that she could certainly be doing with an haircut, but anything else might be a tad too severe... Terrified by his new obsession, and by the impending arrival of his best friend (her cousin "Erich" - Jack Trevor) he flees their home to live with his mother (Ilka Grüning) who is reduced to cutting his food as he, by now, cannot bear to even handle a knife. Desperate, he seeks the help of "Dr. Orth" (Polycarpe Pavloff) who suggests that perhaps psychoanalysis might offer some explanation - and to the couch he goes. I suspect modern day psychiatrists would squirm at the very simplistic "it's all from an obscure or profound event from your childhood" - approach taken here, but it's almost 100 years old and the efforts and innovations being exemplified by "Orth" are quite intriguing to watch. The first cinematographic identification of the "id" that later played such a huge part in films like "The Forbidden Planet" (made thirty years later) is quite compellingly broken down for us in a perfectly plausible, if at times overly dramatic fashion. The dream sequence combines efficient special effects with his own personal allegory really quite effectively, and the score did much to add to the emotional angst of "Fellman" - who didn't actually want to murder his wife. You'll either love or hate the ending - I don't think there is much middle ground on that, but the whole thing is certainly worth catching up with.


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