Pandoras Box (1929 film)

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Pandora's Box
Pandora's Box (film).png
Theatrical poster
Starring Louise Brooks
Francis Lederer
Carl Goetz
Alice Roberts
Directed by Georg Wilhelm Pabst
Produced by Seymour Nebenzal
Written by G.W. Pabst and Frank Wedekind
Studio Nero-Film A.G.
Cinematography Günther Krampf
Distributed by Süd-Film
Released Jan 30, 1929 in {{{4}}}
Runtime 133 minutes [Note 1]
Country Germany
language Silent film with German intertitles

Pandora's Box (German: Die Büchse der Pandora) is a 1929 German silent drama film directed by Georg Wilhelm Pabst, and starring Louise Brooks, Fritz Kortner, and Francis Lederer. The film follows Lulu, a seductive young woman whose uninhibited nature brings ruin to herself and those who love her. It is based on Frank Wedekind's plays Erdgeist ("Earth Spirit", 1895) and Die Büchse der Pandora ("Pandora's Box", 1904).

Dismissed by critics on its initial release, Pandora's Box was later rediscovered by film scholars as a classic of Weimar German cinema.

Plot

Lulu is the mistress of a respected, middle-aged newspaper publisher, Dr. Ludwig Schön. One day, she is thrilled when an old man, her "first patron," Schigolch, appears at the door of her highly modern apartment. However, when Schön also arrives, she hides Schigolch on the balcony. Schön then tells Lulu that he plans to marry Charlotte von Zarnikow, the daughter of the Minister of the Interior. Lulu tries to persuade him to change his mind, but when he sees the disreputable-looking Schigolch, he leaves. Schigolch then introduces Lulu to strongman Rodrigo Quast, who wants her to join his new variety act.

The next day, Lulu visits her best friend Alwa, who happens to be Schön's son. Schön is very displeased to see her but suddenly comes up with the idea of having her star in his son's musical to get her out of his life. However, Schön makes the mistake of bringing Charlotte to see the revue. When Lulu refuses to perform in front of her rival, Schön takes her into a storage room to try to convince her otherwise, but she ends up seducing him instead. Charlotte finds them embracing.

A defeated Schön resigns himself to marrying Lulu. During the wedding reception, he's revolted to discover Lulu playfully cavorting with Schigolch and Quast in the bedchamber. He retrieves his pistol and threatens to shoot the intruders, but Lulu shouts not to, saying Schigolch is her father. Schigolch and Quast thus escape. Meanwhile, Alwa confesses his love to Lulu. Schön returns and orders his son to leave. Once alone, Schön insists his new wife take the gun and shoot herself. When Lulu refuses, the gun goes off during the struggle, and Schön is killed.

At her murder trial, Lulu is sentenced to five years for manslaughter. However, Schigolch and Quast trigger a fire alarm and spirit her away in the confusion. When Alwa finds her back in the Schön home, he is initially angry, but stops Lulu when she tries calling the authorities to turn herself in. They decide to flee the country. Countess Augusta Geschwitz, herself infatuated with Lulu, lets the fugitive use her passport. On the train, Lulu is recognized by another passenger, Marquis Casti-Piani. He offers to keep silent in return for money. He also suggests a hiding place, a ship used as an illegal gambling den.

Casti-Piani sells Lulu to an Egyptian for his brothel. Lulu, Geschwitz, Alwa, Schigolch, and Quast are now passengers on a gambling ship. Quast blackmails Lulu for funding for his new act. Desperate to pay the Egyptian, Alwa cheats at cards and gets caught. Turning to Geschwitz for help, Lulu now asks Schigolch. He convinces a reluctant Geschwitz to lure Quast to a stateroom, where she kills him. Lulu, Schigolch, and Alwa escape in a rowboat as the police swarm the ship.

They end up in squalor, living in a drafty London garret. On Christmas Eve, driven to prostitution, Lulu has the misfortune of encountering a remorseful Jack the Ripper. Although he protests he has no money, she likes him and invites him to her lodging anyway. Her kindness touches Jack and he secretly discards his knife. Schigolch pulls Alwa away before they are seen. Although he genuinely cares for her, Jack notices a knife on a table as they embrace and cannot resist his urge to kill. Unaware of Lulu's fate, Schigolch celebrates with a group of revelers and finally fulfills his lifelong wish to eat Christmas pudding while a broken Alwa (who sees Jack leave) follows a passing Salvation Army parade.

Notes

  1. While various truncated cuts of the film were shown in the United States and other countries, the director's cut of the film, which appears on the 2006 Criterion Collection DVD, runs 133 minutes; this cut was passed by the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) as "uncut" in 2002.

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External links

More information is available at [ Wikipedia:Pandoras_Box_(1929_film) ]
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