Die Insel der Seligen (1913) Poster

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2/10
If anyone reads this
Cineanalyst13 June 2005
I feel rather odd writing comments, which probably no one will read (other than perhaps the staff approving them), on films that hardly anyone has seen, of whom fewer might visit its entry at this website. This film, "The Islands of Bliss" (Die Insel der Seligen), hasn't even received five votes yet. The only thing going for it, other than still existing and having been released on video, holding out the possibility of more persons viewing it is that Max Reinhardt was involved in making it. Reinhardt was a great theatre director whose influence figures prominently in the cinema of Weimar Germany, including the oeuvre of Ernst Lubitsch and F.W. Murnau. You won't see this greatness in "The Islands of Bliss" (a.k.a. "Isles of the Blessed"), though. He, like many of other arts, took interest in the new art form, however. His 1935 American film, "A Midsummer Night's Dream" remains the only work directly his own that many can see today.

Anyhow, this film by Reinhardt and Arthur Kahane (some sources say he directed) probably isn't worth much effort to find. It's clearly an adaptation of a play, and since I know nothing about the play from which it's based, the film often left me guessing. It's easy to get the gist of what's going on, but not the meaning or significance of it. It's fantasy, with something to say about love, involving Greek and Roman mythology. The god Amor (Cupid) plays matchmaker with the assortment of characters. It reminds me of Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream," which Reinhardt directed several productions of, including the film. In any case, it seems that the good stuff is lost in the adaptation. It also seems that the filmmakers assumed their audience to have knowledge of the play, and so cheated in the film. Additionally, the static camera and poor placement of it doesn't help, nor does the poor quality of the print I saw. Perhaps, missing intertitles or poorly translated ones are to blame, as well.
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7/10
Only fully possible to understand in German
schweinekatz13 November 2022
I came across this silent movie by pure coincidence, and seeing that The great theatre director Max Reinhardt was involved, I gave it a try. Of course it's fantasy, and it dates from the very beginning of movie creation. To me as Austrian it was bliss, the texts very funny to read, as they used language that is no longer used, and some of its pictures are quite daring for the the time, the goddesses showing a a lot of skin. The title is a direct citation of the Austrians considered themselves during the reign of the late Habsburgs, especially the last emperor Franz Joseph. Very Austrian and therefore only to understand by limited public!
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