Robert Wiene
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Robert Wiene (*April 27, 1873, Breslau – June 16, 1938, Paris) was an important film director of the German silent cinema.
Robert Wiene was born in Breslau, (then in German Silesia, today: Wroclaw, Poland) as a son of a successful theater actor Carl Wiene. His younger brother Conrad became also an actor, but Robert Wiene at first studied law at the University of Berlin. Since 1908 Robert Wiene also started to act, at first in small parts on stage. His first foray into film was in 1912 with his screenplay for Die Waffen der Jugend.
His most memorable feature films are the 1920 horror film The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and an adaptation of Dostoyevsky´s Crime and Punishment - Raskolnikow (1923), both movies had a deep influence on the German cinema of that time.
After Hitler took power in Germany, Robert Wiene left Berlin, first for Budapest where he directed One Night in Venice (1934), later London, and finally to Paris where tried to produce together with Jean Cocteau, a sound remake of The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari.
Wiene died in Paris ten days before the end of production of a spy film, Ultimatum, after having suffered from cancer. The film was finished by Wiene's friend Robert Siodmak.
[edit] Films
a selection:
- 1919 (released in 1920) The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari
- 1920 Genuine
- 1923 Raskolnikow
- 1923 I.N.R.I.
- 1924 Orlacs Hände
- 1926 Der Rosenkavalier
- 1931 Der Liebesexpress
- 1934 One Night in Venice
- 1938 Ultimatum