Der Mörder Dimitri Karamasoff (1931) Poster

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10/10
`A forgotten masterpiece'
Dave Godin11 January 2001
Even by today's standards, this is still a film masterpiece, but, when one considers when it was made it is even more stunning, for it is so innovative and original that it is a tragedy that it is not more widely known. Seeing it with contemporary eyes and ears, it is easy to forget that sound film was then still new and in its infancy, and yet Otsep and Karol Rathaus (given his first opportunity to compose for a film), immediately grasped the fundamental potential music could play in propelling dramatic narrative. To his eternal credit, the late, great Bernard Herrmann in a published interview, cited this film as the one he most admired for its creative use of a musical score.

The frantic coach ride, when Karamazov pursues Grushenka when she has abandoned him, must rank, even today, as one of the most dynamic scenes in world cinema. With its rapid cross cutting and editing, allied with Rathaus' incredible score, which uses frantic drumming, Chinese blocks and assorted percussion instruments, it perfectly conveys the desperation and mad love we are confronted with, and, although probably only lasting less than a minute in screen time, leaves one stunned and breathless with excitement.

Then, when Karamazov arrives at the bordello to which Grushenka has fled, can you believe, in a film shot in 1930, (when sound cameras weighed a ton), Otsep introduces an uninterrupted tracking shot, as Karmazov wanders from room to room, trailed and proceeded by the camera in real time, as he seeks to find her, which is every bit as dynamic and fascinating as the opening shot of `A Touch of Evil'?

I am convinced that Orson Welles had already seen this film before setting out to make `Citizen Kane', since so many of the innovations in that for which he was hailed, actually first appeared in Otsep's film. It is a perfect marriage of silent film montage and editing, with all the new potential that sound unleashed fully realised, and Otsep combines the two with incredible skill and mastery.

Full of atmosphere and a Slavonic expressionistic fatalism, it is in many ways much more of a `Russian' film than a German one, (it is interesting to note that a French speaking version was simultaneously filmed alongside this). Although there is a slight narrative blurring and overlap between Dostoyevsky's `Karamazov' and Tolstoy's `Resurrection', (both often filmed in any case), this does at least provide the ending of the film with a slight modicum of hope.

Set within baroque interiors which hardly ever leave any surface uncovered, unpatterned, or not seducing the eye to gain its attention, and contrasted with bleak and hostile exteriors, the inner and outer worlds of human experience are constantly juxtaposed and shown to be in perpetual conflict. If only modern film-makers would study and learn from the sheer economy of space and time used in pre-50s cinema!

As befits writers of the calibre of Dostoyevsky, (and, perhaps even more so, the borrowing from Tolstoy), a wild anarchic spirit animates the characters as they act out their fatalistic drama, (the amour fou that Otsep was later to explore in `Amok'), but, all through, and in part heightened by Rathaus' music, there is a fearful melancholy that pervades it all; a sense of impending doom. These are what we would today call dysfunctional characters, but they are imprisoned in the manners and mores of their time; trying to claw some small space in which they can be free, but in their innermost heart of hearts knowing that it is unlikely to be.

When Grushenka decides to join Karamazov in his exile in Siberia, the train which takes them away, (that constant and valuable cinematic metaphor of inevitability and mechanistic fatalism, and with hindsight, so similar to the transportations used by the Nazis ten years later), is seen vanishing into oblivion, with the camera astride the track, against which backdrop Rathaus added a musical chord sequence that borders on heartbreak, poignancy and pain.

A masterpiece of world cinema that must one day be rediscovered and given its rightful respect and critical admiration.

(A sinister footnote should perhaps mention that out-of-context sequences from this film were strung together as part of the Nazi anti-Semitic film `Der Ewige Jude', (together with scenes similarly lifted from Fritz Lang's `M'), to illustrate what were termed `degenerate Jewish influences in German cinema'. It is fortunate that Otsep and his wife were able to leave Paris where they were then living, just days before the Germans arrived during WW2, since they immediately closed all cinemas and then, after a week or so, allowed a few to re-open which were forced to show `Der Ewige Jude'. Unfortunately, Otsep's career was never able to recover and find the opportunities through which to re-establish himself as a master film craftsman in the USA, and he died in 1949).
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9/10
Anna Sten Shows Why Goldwyn Had Faith in Her!!
kidboots28 November 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Before she became known as "Goldwyn's Folly" Anna Sten was one of Europe's brightest stars. Starting out in Russia she was soon sent to Berlin because of the city's superior equipment and studios. She specialized in musicals but of course cherished an ambition to play Gruschenka in "The Brothers Karamazov", a role that may have remained a dream if it wasn't for her mentor and husband Dr. Eugene Frenke. He was captivated by her and devoted himself to furthering her career. He ended up producing the film himself and surrounding her with a stellar cast which guaranteed the film's great public success and got Anna a contract with U.F.A.

The title is "Der Morder Dimitri Karamasoff" - "after motives by Dostoyevsky" so it has taken only one theme from Dostoyevsky's mammoth novel. Fritz Kortner gives a superb performance as the tormented Alexis as well as directing it, in fact this was his last German film before he fled to Britain to escape Nazi persecution.

Alexis desperately needs the 2,000 rubles of his mother's legacy to marry the frigid Katya - but his father is anxious to marry Gruschenka, the town slut, so is reluctant to advance the money. Alexis visits her to persuade her to stop his father making a fool of himself but her beauty mesmerizes him and her taunts about the pious Katya whip him into a frenzy. Anna Sten is just a stunning Gruschenka, just luminous and you can understand why Goldwyn thought she could be his next big star. There is even a song sequence to highlight Sten's musical ability.

Just as important are the stunning visuals featuring striking camera angles, drops of dew on a leafless tree (Alexis bathes his face after a night of passion) and scenes played out in different mirrors. Alexis has been going to the dogs in his lust for Gruschenka and his father writes to Katya to come and use her influence to put him on the straight and narrow. She comes but goes, thinking Alexis will meet her at the station but his life has taken a turn for the worse - he is involved in his father's death and joins Gruschenka in an abandoned orgy. The rest of the film (all 15 minutes of it) is taken up with the trial and the ramifications.

Fritz Rasp who had featured in "The Diary of a Lost Girl" was the sinister servant Smerdjakoff, the "holy fool". Even though the film lacked the interweaving plot lines of the novel, it made up for it in it's artistry and atmosphere.

Highly Recommended.
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9/10
Arguably the best adaptation of Dostoevsky to the cinema
jgcorrea15 April 2023
Full of atmosphere and a Slavonic, expressionistic fatalism, it is in many ways much more 'Russian' than German. Although there is a slight narrative overlap between Dostoyevsky's Karamazovs and Tolstoy's Resurrection, this does at least provide the ending of the film with a slight quantum of solace, or modicum of hope. Set within baroque interiors, the inner and outer worlds of human experience are constantly juxtaposed and shown to be in perpetual conflict. As befits Dostoyevsky, a wild anarchic spirit animates the characters as they act out their fatalistic drama, (l'amour fou, which director Fedor Otsep was later to explore in his version of Stefan Zweig's 'Amok'). All through, there is a fearful, pervading melancholy, a sense of impending doom. These are what we would today call dysfunctional characters, but they are imprisoned in the manners and mores of their time, trying to claw some small space in which they can be free, but in their innermost heart of hearts knowing that it is unlikely to be so.
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9/10
A hidden gem for so many reasons
theanarchistclubhouse21 November 2020
First, this is simply a well made film that anyone can appreciate. You don't have to be film aficionado. You can be unfamiliar with the source material. The quality story telling alone can draw an audience in.

Second, this is the best film adaptation of a Dostoevsky novel we'll ever get I bet. While I haven't seen everything ever produced I just doubt anything else blends art with cinema the way this film has done.

Third, Orson Welles fans will find a lot to like in this movie. The leading man looks and carries himself like Welles. And there's just something about the construction of the film that reminded me of his works.

A free version exists on YouTube as of 2020 so please give it a go if curious.
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9/10
good but a bit slow
cynthiahost23 October 2012
Warning: Spoilers
I just found out that the book,the Brothers Karamazov. is like war and piece.It's complicated.This early version has it condensed. It does have an advance cinema photography technique.The camera moves around in a shaky fashion in the dance sequence at the café, while Gruschenkas,played by Anna Stein, is dancing and teasing Dimitri , played by Fritz Kortner ,Imagine how heavy that camera was.I had through that Fritz's character was killing the servant ,not his daddy, played by Max Pohl.This version was low a bit but it entertaining . They seem to take their time somewhat in their characters. Frtis Rasp,who combs his hair in a funny way, Played one of the illegitimate brothers Smerjakoff. His character is treated like a servant .The father ,played by Pohl,is very vain acting and is selfish with his sons.At this time a film like this was consider to be excellent, but it's no different than John Gilbert film ,"Redemption some slight over acting on Rasp part and some times Kortner .At first I thought He killed his servant.But it was his father.For 1931 this is a good rendition of the classic book.Fritz would eventually be forced to leave Germany cause of his Jewish heritage.He made some British films and three American films. 10/23/12
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4/10
Not bad, not good
Horst_In_Translation17 June 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"Der Mörder Dimitri Karamasoff" or "The Murderer Dimitri Karamazov" is a German black-and-white film from 1931 and if you look at the year, you will see that this was a time when silent films slowly transitioned into sound and here we have one example of it. Even if this movie is already 85 years old, it is still far from the very early works of scary German cinema. A duo of writers and directors made this, namely Erich Engels and Fyodor Otsep and it is among their more known works. This also has to do with Fyodor Dostoevsky, a really famous writer, being the one who wrote the base material and he was only half a century dead when this film came out. The movie runs for approximately 90 minutes, so it is not among the shortest or longest from the era. I personally would say that I have seen better and worse films from the 1930s and from Germany around that era, but it shows that there were all kinds of movies as this one here is something entirely different compared to the mountain films for example. All in all, I give it a thumbs down.
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9/10
Atmospheric German-made expressionism respects Russian spirit
adrianovasconcelos12 August 2023
Fjodor Ozep and Erich Engel direct this marvelous piece of early sound moviemaking, accompanied by a superb musical score by Karol Rathaus, all in tune with the mentally unstable characters and situations offered by Fyodor Dostoyevsky in his literary masterpiece, THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV.

From my standpoint, the psychotic atmosphere amounts to the lifeblood of Dostoyevsky's work, and BROTHERS remains possibly his most "normal" book, especially when compared with THE POSSESSED (also known as THE DEVILS) and THE IDIOT.

Dmitri Karamasoff (spelling in the film) is driven by his spirit, his emotions, his mad love for Grushenka (well portrayed by the exceedingly nubile Anna Sten) even as he realizes that Katja (quietly dignified show from Hanna Waag) is probably the woman to bring peace and normality to his existence.

Interesting contribution from Fritz Rasp as Smerdiakov, "merd" short for "merde" in the much spoken French in Russian society at the time, a truly devious and evil character that has epilepsy as extenuating circumstance for his underhand behavior.

Albeit flawed and with acting from Fritz Kortner that must have complied with the requisites of his time but which in our age of the computer and communicative immediacy seems excessive, DER MORDER DMITRI KARAMASOFF posts terrific cinematography (the short sequence with the horse-drawn caleche in the Russian steppes is memorable) and a quasi-chaotic atmosphere.

PS - I can never understand how some reviewers consider a film dated or slow. A film made in the silent period, or even in the 1930s or 1950s, cannot possibly cater for the world of today, which moves at far greater speed, with verbal exchanges in real time across the globe - not to mention all the other differences since 1931.

One has to try to inhabit the movie's time in order to appreciate the high art of a DER MORDER DMITRI KARAMASOFF. 9/10.
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