The Wildcat (1921) Poster

(1921)

User Reviews

Review this title
17 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Negri starts to move Lubitsch toward character-driven comedy
mgmax22 December 2006
One thing that strikes you as you watch the early Lubitsch comedies recently released on DVD in the US by Kino is-- how did Lubitsch come to have such an extravagant visual style, only to give it up a few years later? The later Lubitsch movies are certainly handsome, coming as they mostly do from Paramount and MGM, the chicest of the Hollywood studios. But for all the exotic places depicted in his films, it never occurs to him in later years to depict them with wild curlicues of plaster, fortresses that look like birthday cakes, staircases that descend a quarter-mile amid running water, as he does the European fantasy-land in The Wildcat.

The Wildcat is a sort of burlesque on a genre of military romances buried so deeply in the mists of memory that they still seem familiar even when it's hard to think of an actual example of what's being parodied (The Desert Song?). There's a fortress on the edge of mountainous wilds, and there's a handsome young officer who's been exiled there because of his love life. And then there's a tribe of wild mountain people including a tempestuous daughter, played by Pola Negri, with whom the officer will fall in love.

As with the mistaken identity plot in The Oyster Princess, you can imagine the 30s comedy this would be the setup for, but it's nothing like this-- which mainly consists of running around and clowning broadly. Only a few bits here and there-- a hilariously exaggerated depiction of the results of the officer's Casanova-like behavior, a delightful bit of comedy on the quarter-mile staircase that plays out with the purity and visual grace of Buster Keaton's single-take descent down six flights of stairs in The Cameraman-- are actually especially funny. (There's also a quite racy "Lubitsch Touch" moment involving his photo, a pair of pants, and where she happens to kiss.)

You wish in vain for Negri and her inamorato to sit down and actually share a scene, heat up the chemistry set, show us some real one-on-one Lubitsch Touch worthy of Billy Wilder's line that "Lubitsch could do more with a closed door than most directors could do with an open fly." But at least in Negri you have a recognizable comic human being, full of life and randiness-- and the ending, though still half-cartoon, has an emotional effect well beyond anything in The Oyster Princess just three years earlier.
19 out of 22 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Lubitsch's Most Extravagant Farce
Cineanalyst8 May 2010
"The Wildcat" is an amusing romantic comedy made by Ernst Lubitsch, although more farcical than his later American work, but which was common of his German comedies. It wouldn't be long before the director emigrated to the US, and his increased stature in the business by this time is evidenced by the expensiveness of the sets and the more polished filmmaking in this film compared to his earlier comedies. The castle fortress set and its art deco décor look very nice, as does the outdoor scenery of the Bavarian mountains. The long staircase featured during an impromptu chase scene is especially impressive. One criticism of the film, however, could be that the settings sometimes dwarf the actions of the characters and narrative. Additionally, as Kristen Thompson ("Herr Lubitsch Goes to Hollywood") could point out, the standard, flat V-pattern lighting of German film-making back then doesn't do well to distinguish, or spotlight, the characters from the settings. Reportedly, this was one of Lubitsch's least successful films, which probably encouraged him to discontinue this brand of comedy that he had heretofore found so fruitful.

There are very many masked framings of shots (circular, rectangular, ovals, irises, masks shaping the image inside of what look like fangs and snowballs, etc.). Another reviewer suggested Lubitsch was poking fun at D.W. Griffith and his cinematographer Billy Bitzer, who, indeed, employed iris shots and various masking effects frequently, but, otherwise, I don't see much function for their use in "The Wildcat". The masks for point-of-view looks through keyholes and binoculars, of course, have an obvious function, and the rest, I suppose, works to establish the spectator's point-of-view, but, overall, the framings here seem too distracting and gimmicky.

Nevertheless, the picture features plenty of pleasant nonsense amusement, with some funny moments scattered about, even if the humor is often broad. Scenes such as the crowd of women gushing over the departing Casanova-like Lieutenant, including goodbyes from his many children, or the stream of tears gag are especially comical. What little there is of a story and plot take a back seat. And, I think Pola Negri is more appealing here as an uninhibited mountain bandit than she is in some of her more melodramatic roles.
9 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Classic Lubitsch
gavin694217 June 2013
A military fort is waiting for the arrival of their new lieutenant, but he is captured on his way by a gang of outlaws. To make matters worse for everyone involved, the outlaw leader's daughter has taken a shine to the man.

The Kino DVD calls this film a "playfully subversive satire of military life" and claims that it not only foreshadows the later Lubitsch films (which is obvious), but could be called an "ancestor" to Monty Python and Woody Allen. That may or may not be a fair assessment. This is, in my estimation, not the best Lubitsch comedy, even amongst his early work. I much preferred "The Oyster Princess".

Either way, 1920s silent comedy is usually seen as dominated by Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin, with Harold Lloyd sometimes getting an honorable mention. We need to mention Lubitsch more. He may not have had the physical comedy in his films that these other three did, but he was no less of a genius.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
A Wild Ride
notalkiesallowed30 January 2019
Viewing "The Wildcat," is like watching a live action Max Fleischer cartoon. Like those early animated wonders, this comedy is full of goofy characters and creative direction. The cast, especially Pola Negri and Paul Heidemann show no fear in bringing Lubitsch's wild vision to life, which include some truly laugh out loud moments. While the Fleischer cartoons are only around seven minutes long, "The Wildcat," struggles at times to maintain its energy for a feature length film. The pros of this movie far out weigh the cons, though, and if you're looking for a non-traditional silent film that will put a smile upon your face, then you need to search no further.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Amusing
davidmvining7 April 2023
It really is obvious at this point that Ernst Lubitsch needed dialogue to shine. I don't think he'd made a bad film yet (well, except for The Eyes of the Mummy which I've mostly pushed out of my brain), but he was consistently held back by the silent film medium's inherently different approach to building character than sound films or stage plays. His best films are comedies that take a broader approach to things, which The Wildcat tries to fit in, but, at the same time, this film embraces a level of character complexity that Lubitsch can't quite justify through the actual narrative. The film's focus, though, ends up being zany comic antics, which is where the film is easily at its best and most entertaining, but I feel like if Lubitsch wasn't going to figure out how to write more rounded characters in the silent film space, he should have simplified the storytelling, especially in the final act.

Lieutenant Alexis (Paul Heidemann) is a ladies' man who is sent to the remote outpost run by a fat, mustachioed commander (Victor Janson). The commander has a wife (Marge Kohler) who lords over him and a daughter Lilli (Edith Meller) whom the commander decides should marry Alexis when he comes. On his way to the fortress, Alexis is waylaid by bandits led by the titular wildcat, Rischka (Pola Negri) who becomes completely enraptured by this gentleman soldier who manages to get away from his captors through a series of caves that he just kind of wanders through. It's a comedy, so it's slightly amusing, at least. These first two acts (like most of Lubitsch's early films, there are explicit acts) are the weakest of the five and they are really just about setting up the characters (borderline caricatures) and overall situation.

With news of the bandits, the commander sends Alexis and the men out to punish the attackers, but Rischka and the men under her are easily able to embarrass the soldiers with snowballs and superior placement, sending Alexis back defeated. However, the commander just assumes a victory and decides to marry Alexis to Lilli as a reward. The soldiers deciding to not correct their commander is honestly pretty funny. What follows is the central comic set piece of the film, the celebratory dance in honor of the betrothed. Reminiscent of the foxtrot epidemic in The Oyster Princess, it's a party that steadily grows out of control as people get into the music, including two guards outside the fortress's main gate. It's a raucous affair that gets intertwined with Rischka leading a small raiding party into the fortress, stealing some clothes, running into the drunk commander who salutes them, and, ultimately, with Alexis and Rischka chasing after each other through the large, unreal sets.

There's a moment where both Rischka and Alexis are spinning on a pole as they chase after each other that's completely unreal but highly entertaining and just part of the escalating comic and manic energy of the sequence. There's no effort to make it connect from an editing perspective to what comes before and after, with a quick cut to Rischka running in another room being the next shot, but it's kind of perfect with the silly quality that the film is embracing.

The actual dramatics of the film don't work quite as well. It's a situation where Alexis has to choose between Lilli and Rischka but also where Rischka has to choose between Alexis and the bandit Pepo (Hermann Thimig). This sort of two-sided question really needs strong character work, even in a silly movie like this one, to work. Why does Alexis ultimately choose Lilli? Is it his duty? It's kind of hard to figure out. The harder side is Rischka deciding to let Alexis go and return to Pepo, willingly just walking away from the man she was consumed with having for herself. Even in a silly film that embraces some early form of cartoon logic, if these dramatic turns come up they need to be supported, and I don't think they are.

Does that sink the film? Not at all. It just limits my appreciation. This isn't the top tier of Lubitsch's early comic work in the German film industry. It's second tier behind The Doll and The Oyster Princess, but it's certainly funnier than the Sally Meyer stuff.

Essentially, I really look forward to sound coming into Lubitsch's toolbox.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
"Shame on you – in my wardrobe!"
Steffi_P24 January 2010
Die Bergkatze brings us poignantly yet triumphantly to the end of an era, being the last of Ernst Lubitsch's German comedies. The director, best known for his "sophisticated" bedroom farces from the 1930s, carved out these little gems in his youth, and while rather different in tone and pace from his Hollywood work, they provide a unique and hilarious experience that should not go overlooked.

As if in anticipation of his forthcoming change in style, Die Bergkatze was Lubitsch's most riotous and stylised to date. Whereas he often based gags around a large group of people doing something (such as falling over or running away) simultaneously, he now takes the trick to the level of hyperbole, playing around with the largest horde of extras to be seen outside of an epic. Lubitsch has also turned his sense of the absurd up to eleven, and the picture is flavoured with dozens of wonderfully silly touches, such as the fort commander's exaggerated uniform having an extra pair of shoulder pads for the elbows.

Of course, Lubitsch was still to make a couple of straight dramas before receiving his invite to Hollywood. I'm sure he didn't know this was to be his comedic last hurrah in Berlin. So why is Die Bergkatze such a ridiculously extrovert production? The answer is almost certainly the director's confidence. Lubitsch was by now the most prestigious filmmaker in his home country, and his bizarre comic genius had gone down a treat with the public. Having more or less Carte Blanche from the studio, it seems that with Die Bergkatze he was seeing just how much he could get away with. He was also getting bigger budgets than ever before (prior to this he had helmed Anna Boleyn, Germany's most expensive production to date), it should come as no surprise to those familiar with the earlier comedies directed by Lubitsch and with sets designed by Kurt Richter (perhaps the most important collaborator during this part of Lubitsch's career), that if you unite these two with a large sum of money, you are bound to get something as gloriously demented as a fort that looks like a giant wedding cake covered in cannons.

Even in post-production, Lubitsch is playing around more than ever before, giving us those crazy frame shapes which look almost like a deliberate attempt to poke fun at the masking technique pioneered by DW Griffith five years earlier. Lubitsch was always a real aesthete when it came to shot composition, often delicately framing his actors with the luxurious curtains, window panes and assorted ornamentation that tended to make up the exquisite sets, both here and in Hollywood. In Die Bergkatze he has just literalised the process, treating the image as a work of art that could be either landscape or portrait, and once in a while mucking about and turning the screen into a squiggle or a pair of jaws.

And does Lubitsch get away with what he is doing? Yes, by the skin of his teeth! Why? Because Die Bergkatze is all of a piece. Considered individually, each of its exaggerations would be daft and distracting, but because Lubitsch has created a seamless world in which every idea is stretched to breaking point, it works. Every shot has some kind of oddity in it, not necessarily thrust in your face, but simply keeping the surreal tone going. No character is immune. In silent comedy in the US, women (at least the young women) tended to be treated with tender respect, and were often the only completely straight characters. But in Die Bergkatze we have a straggle-haired Pola Negri up to her neck in undignified antics alongside the boys, and doing a fine job of it, although I have to say I find myself missing the divine Ossi Oswalda, star of many earlier Lubitsch pictures.

Lubitsch's comedies after this were contrastingly sedate in pace and comparatively sensible in tone. This was not a regression, but neither was it an advance on these earlier chaotic creations. It was simply a case of a genius taking his talent in a different direction. And despite the neglect and underrating of pictures like Die Bergkatze, Sumurun, Die Puppe and Die Austernprinzessin, they are nevertheless inspired masterpieces, and every bit as worthy of our attention as The Marriage Circle, The Smiling Lieutenant and Trouble in Paradise.
21 out of 21 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Some nice artistry, but the comedy is a little dated
gbill-7487712 September 2018
There is a surreal playfulness to this farce, the last of director Ernst Lubitsch's German comedies, but it failed to completely win me over. There is just not enough humor or plot development to it, and at least for me, it doesn't seem to have aged all that well.

There are some clever moments and scenes that do make it worth watching, however, and I liked its gentle subversiveness. An example of this comes during the first scene, when a playboy lieutenant (Paul Heidemann) is being exiled to an isolated outpost, and a big crowd of children all wave and say 'Bye Daddy!' Another comes when we first meet the daughter of a band of robbers near the outpost (Pola Negri); in that scene, she's dishing out some punishment to a couple of the men by giving them a whip on their behinds. Perversely, they smile and return for more, which I was a little surprised to see and had me chuckling. Of course the two are destined to meet, and despite having little apparent chemistry, fall for one another. The captain of the fortress (Victor Jansen), meanwhile, wants the new guy to marry his daughter (Edith Meller), after he proves himself in a battle with the robbers.

Unfortunately the humor in most of that sequence involves people just running around, which is a weakness throughout the film, and perhaps at the heart of the matter for me. There is a nice moment when some of the robbers dramatically feign being shot, and then get up to surprise the soldiers. It's tough for me to think of other moments which were truly funny, and it's hard to fathom this being on some reviewer's lists of top all-time comedies. Everyone's taste is of course different though.

More interesting for me were the artistic touches, starting with Lubitsch's experimentation in post-production, using all sorts of cutouts (circles, diagonal bands, rectangles with scalloped edges, a pair of jaws, etc) to add to a feeling that is almost a storybook set of absurd vignettes. The interior of the fortress has some fantastic curved surfaces, seeming to blend Expressionism and Art Deco. Lastly, there is a cool dream sequence in the final act, which features a transparent effect, and a bizarre band of musicians who appear to be Stay Puft Marshmellow men, 1921-style (actually snowmen).

Not an awful film, but not one I'd recommend to anyone other than a true silent film buff, or Lubitsch aficionado.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Love Grown Cold
boblipton4 July 2003
One of the better of Lubitsch's rough mountain comedies, with Pola Negri as the wild daughter of the bandit chief (all of the the bandits' possessions are festooned with skulls, to show how dangerous they are) who falls in love with the handsome lieutenant brought in to marry the daughter of the corpulent and ineffectual colonel of the fort. Like his other mountain comedies -- MEYER FROM BERLIN, ROMEO AND JULIET IN THE SNOW and KOHLHEISEL'S DAUGHTER -- it is a very broad comedy, with much falling down in the snow.

In those days, Lubitsch would shoot half a dozen films a year for UFA, and one would always be a mountain comedy shot on site in Bavaria, where he liked to take a working vacation every winter. They were not polished and witty pieces like The Oyster Princess and The Doll, but they were very popular.
28 out of 30 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Military Historians generally recognize this flick as a leading cause of . . .
tadpole-596-9182569 November 2018
Warning: Spoilers
. . . World War Two. As depicted during THE WILDCAT, a Germanic army cannot fight its way out of a carpet bag. Populated by fops and drunks, the hapless military menagerie shown here is sure to raise the blood pressure of any would-be Fuhrer. In fact, the furor evoked by THE WILDCAT created a lasting backlash against the sort of gypsy-like nomads making up its on-screen bandit gang, as well as creating animosity toward the general ilk of Artsy-Fartsy types behind the camera. If THE WILDCAT was originally intended as a pointed prick to puncture the blimp of Prussian Hot Air emanating from the Kaiser's recently disemboweled Military\Industrial Complex, any small short-term achievement in this regard constitutes a Classic Pyrrhic Victory. With the help of a slew of U.S. collaborators professing to be "feeling sorry" for the losers of World War One, THE WILDCAT soon instigated a revival of the Teutonic War Machine that was Bigger and Better then ever before. History may record that a self-styled cadre of elitist "Film Buffs" enjoyed the last laugh elicited by THE WILDCAT, but aren't these pompous proles "Whistling Dixie" over 100 million graves?
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
A Farce in the Snow
wes-connors13 November 2014
In the snowy Bavarian Alps, the arrival of preening soldier Paul Heidemann (as Alexis) causes pandemonium in a military town. Thousands of women surround him, foreshadowing the attention given Rudolph Valentino and The Beatles. Not participating in the initial adulation is spirited mountain girl Pola Negri (as Rischka). A regular wildcat, Ms. Negri is introduced in a scene which shows her driving men crazy by whipping their buttocks. The men rub their rumps and complain, but return for more attention. After some kissing, Negri sees Mr. Heidemann's coach and throws a snowball at him. When he gets out and she sees his plump heinie, they get romantic...

Released when Negri and director Ernst Lubitsch were international favorites, "Die Bergkatze" was not a favorite with audiences. It's a farcical comedy inhibited by Mr. Lubitsch's relentless parody of an old film staple known as the "iris shot". This is when the screen, usually to close a scene, will turn black for a diminishing circle. In the theater, the look was achieved with lightning. Filmmakers were experimenting with the visual and Lubitsch employs it all over this film, and in a variety of shapes...

A decade earlier, there was a debate about whether motion pictures should use the "close-up shot" because some felt the audience would feel like they were denied a full look at the performer (as on the stage). With a "close-up" you still get the full look; with the "iris shot", you do not. In this film, the visual is excessive and distracting. We're denied full-screen looks at the film's chief strength, its beautiful set decoration. Another feature, the "double exposure", nicely introduces Act IV "Rischka's Dream". Usually cast as a seductress, Negri is most engaging as a comedienne. The available print looks great and is accompanied by a new, oppressive soundtrack.

***** Die Bergkatze (4/14/21) Ernst Lubitsch ~ Pola Negri, Paul Heidemann, Victor Janson, Wilhelm Diegelmann
6 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
An absolute delight from beginning to end
I_Ailurophile19 January 2022
What a remarkable film! Within minutes one immediately gets the impression that if 'The wildcat' were made in the modern era, it would be a bombastic, proverbial Technicolor nightmare of a farce. Though there's no color or sound here, Ernst Lubitsch's feature is no less of a spectacle of frivolity. The consideration given to hair, makeup - and even more so imaginative costume design, and stupendous set design and decoration - is only of the utmost playful grandiosity, fetching sights by all accounts and nigh fantastical. This rather goes as well for the framing of each scene, as most of the footage presents to us through cut-outs of wildly varying shape and size. And so it is down the line, including sharp editing: from start to finish, this movie is filled a jovial air of comedy on par with the most robust nonsense of silent stars like Buster Keaton, Harold Lloyd, or Charlie Chaplin. And it's so much fun!

In his direction, and in his screenplay co-written with Hanns Kräly, Lubitsch has a mind for lighthearted silliness that makes the picture a true joy to behold. This is reflected in the (reconstructed) intertitles, the characters, the writing and orchestration of each scene, the overall narrative, and in the guidance of the cast. There are some familiar themes at the core of the story, yet every element is marked with such a sense of caricature and exaggeration as to ensure that no one steps away from 'The wildcat' without having a good time. The assembled actors lean wholeheartedly into that slant, each giving performances of strong physicality and personality - with body language and facial expression heightened well beyond even what is characteristic of the silent era. The nearest approximation that readily comes to mind is in the most enthusiastically madcap moments of 2001 musical 'Moulin Rouge!' - but even that comparison fails to wholly account for the charming gaiety on hand. I'm loathe to single out only one or two figures, but it must be said that Pola Negri is fabulous, a marvel as untamed Rischka - stealing the spotlight with her every appearance on the screen. Only just shy of Negri's terrific display, Paul Heidemann's performance as Lieutenant Alexis is a slick show of flippant impertinence that's gratifying to witness.

Among other things, the movie is built on physical comedy, sight gags, satirical foolishness, and turnabout and upended expectations. Through it all we're treated to a veritable feast of visual bedazzlement, not just in the arrangement of scenes and the fastidious work of the crew but also in the very filming locations. This is nothing if not a labor of the greatest passion and care, and love for film-making; all due commendations as well to composer Marco Dalpane and the Ensemble Playground, whose contemporary score is a wonderful match for the feature. In all sincerity, I find it hard to believe that 'The wild cat' isn't more well known in the years since, alongside those select few silent titles that are most memorably acclaimed: I think this easily stands shoulder to shoulder with the very best of early cinema, as a comedy but also on its own merits broadly. It's clear how much hard work went into the production, and the result speaks for itself as an outstanding, highly enjoyable romp that easily holds up and entertains even 100 years later. So heartily carefree and mirthful is this feature that I'd have no qualms recommending it even to viewers who generally have difficulty abiding titles of the era. Hats off to Lubitsch and all involved: Wherever you can watch it, 'The wildcat' lives up to its name as a rowdy ride of rollicking wit and good cheer - and gets my highest recommendation!
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
An Ernst Lubitsch Student Film
MogwaiMovieReviews22 November 2020
Very early and primitive comedy, amateurishly photographed on Dr. Caligari-esque sets (many of the outdoor shots look more like home movies) and with a few too many Keystone Cops-like running around antics for it to have dated well.

Having said that, there are flashes of the Lubitsch Touch, with witty title cards and plenty of his patented subversive naughtiness in a number of scenes, the best being the dashing lieutenant departing for his new assignment and being waved off by literally hundreds of his ex-lovers (and children). The lieutenant himself, though, is not nearly attractive enough, and you can feel how badly Ernst was in need of a lead with the charm and star power of Maurice Chevalier.

Perhaps best viewed as a film student project of a great later director, The Wildcat is still a likeable and sporadically amusing bit of fun, even a hundred years on.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Wild is right
TheLittleSongbird27 April 2020
While there are not many personal favourites from Ernst Lubitsch early German silent films, done before he had found his signature style, there were certainly gems. 'The Doll' and 'The Oyster Princess' being two examples. The late 1910s-early 20s was a very interesting and worthwhile period in Lubitsch's career, especially to see how he fared early on in his career before properly finding his style with 'The Love Parade' and got even stronger from there.

'The Wild Cat' is another film from the German silent film period and lives up to its wild name all right. Is it one of Lubitsch's very best? No, nowhere close and it is a long way from being a classic. But it is one of the better and more entertaining films of his from his German silent film period in my view, and if asked whether it is recommended my answer would be yes as long as you know what to expect. Which is an entertaining and inoffensive ride but not yet the witty and sophisticated Lubitsch that he became very well known justifiably for.

Admittedly, 'The Wild Cat's' story is very thin, and it is also one that doesn't have a lot of substance and can be a little too controlled in spots.

Maybe it could have done with a little more variety in places.

However, 'The Wild Cat' is well made visually. Really loved the mountain scenery and exteriors and the photography is not claustrophobic or gimmicky, some of it came over as quite elegant to me. Lubitsch's direction is not refined yet, but he clearly seemed to know what he was doing and didn't seem uncomfortable with it. The music is unobtrusive and is not large in scoring or over-complicated rhythmically, allowing the comedy to speak.

Something that does very much happen here. The humour is plenty and it is never less than amusing and actually even very funny at its best (if one disagrees that's fine). It is of the broad kind, not the sophisticated and witty kind that Lubitsch later would be famous for, but not in a way that gets overly silly or vulgar. The situations do suspend a bit of disbelief but have a wild energy about them and don't resort heavily in repetition, while the energy is always there and the characters didn't come over as dull or annoying here. The cast do very well, with Pola Negri handling her very physical comedy with ease and her comic timing is far from flabby.

All in all, very enjoyable if not a Lubitsch essential. 8/10
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
The lioness.
morrison-dylan-fan7 June 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Finding Sumurun (1920-also reviewed) to be an enchanting tale,I decided to create a double bill of Ernst Lubitsch's Silent works,by discovering how wild this wildcat could be.

View on the film:

Detailed in the booklet from Masters of Cinema excellent box set that the movie flopped in Germany, (it was screened in no other countries)and that the film maker looked back on it later and said "I found the German audience in no mood for a picture which satirised militarism and war." Co-writer/(with regular collaborator of this era Hanns Kraly) marches in with a creation which binds together the separate themes and motifs that had been weaved in his earlier works.

Inspired by his experience of working on Berlin stages under theatre director Max Reinhardt, Lubitsch ambitiously alters the matting of each shot into highly stylised unusual cardboard cut out frames,with the real Bavarian Alps being made to look like it is contained inside a snow globe.

Along with continuing his surreal fantasy stylisation, Lubitsch crosses it over in the continuation of hid farce staging,with a hallucinatory atmosphere washing over the panning shots of the military fort,where comically macho troops go to battle against mustache twirling bandits.

Rolling onto the screen like a tornado, Pola Negri gives a magnetic performance as Rischka, whose fiery, seductive swaying from Negri grooves perfectly with the heightened atmosphere, and Negri untamed expressiveness clawing all the men off the screen,as the wild cat is unleashed.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Owch---this one doesn't play well in the 21st century
planktonrules22 August 2010
Although film buffs today would consider director Ernst Lubitsch to be a film genius, the fact is that it took him years of film work to produce the wonderful masterpieces he made for Hollywood in the 1930s and 40s. His German films of the late 1910s and 1920s were, generally, a bit rough and were a training ground for him to hone his craft. To some, suggesting his earlier films were not masterpieces is blasphemy, but I have seen quite a few and only a few were exceptional films..."Die Bergkatze" is NOT an exceptional film. In fact, it really is tough to watch today because the comedy is too broad--too unsophisticated. However, I must admit that at the time, it was more mainstream than it is today. By 1921, broad slapstick comedy was on its way out (as the style was mostly popular in the previous decade), but still was not unusual. But now, you certainly can't see the famed 'Lubitsch touch' in this occasionally annoying film.

Pola Negri plays a mountain girl whose family are bandits. Her character is pretty ambiguous. At the same time you see her story, you also follow the story of a womanizing Lieutenant. His tale IS much more interesting and I loved the farewell scene early in the film when a bazillion adoring women came to see him. It was cute. Unfortunately, the rest of the movie was just dull and full of pratfalls and the like. An interesting curio for film fans, but that is all.
6 out of 26 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Silly But Charming
LenoJeno11 April 2022
THE WILDCAT is another silly movie by Ernst Lubitsch, and I wasn't expecting that I would like it that much, considering some of his other silly silent movies are too odd for my taste - and the first act of this one admittedly had me further confirming my prejudices, as I was continuing to expect an awful end result. But THE WILDCAT is actually pretty sweet, it had nice landscapes, had me chuckle many times and it is above all nice and silly.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Never tense, never funny
Horst_In_Translation23 December 2015
Warning: Spoilers
"Die Bergkatze" or "The Wild Cat" is a German 80-minute silent film from almost 100 years ago. This was directed by filmmaker Ernst Lubitsch when he moved from acting to directing (and writing in this case too), but still a couple years before his big breakthrough in Hollywood. Lead actress and title character is Pola Negri in here, who was already quite a star back then despite her young age. And of course, it is a black-and-white film. There are some dramatic moments in here, but it is mostly a comedy. Unfortunately I must say I never thought this was a truly funny or entertaining watch. Most of the moments felt like unfunny scenes from Chaplin or Lloyd films from a couple years earlier already. Fairly disappointing overall and I do not recommend the watch. Negri also did not impress me much and the only memorable thing here is how much she resembles the young Helena Bonham Carter. Not recommended.
2 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed