Inflation (1928) Poster

(1928)

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6/10
Germany's inflation
rbverhoef27 March 2007
'Inflation' is a short film depicting Germany's inflation between the two World Wars. With quite some special effects, director Hans Richter compares the US dollar with the Deutsche Mark and shows that in a short period of time the dollar is equal to 50.000.000 DM. The story in this film, which could be seen as a documentary, is just that.

The film is interesting from a technical point of view. The somewhat surrealistic images are created through various kind of special effects and although dated, they still look pretty nice. Although I would sooner recommend a Dziga Vertov film (same time, more different techniques), 'Inflation' is still well worth seeing. After all, it only takes a couple of minutes.
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6/10
Worthless money
ackstasis9 December 2008
German avant-garde director Hans Richter is well-known for his unique brand of abstract film-making. Next to the craziness that was 'Ghosts Before Breakfast (1928),' this particular short seems comparatively ordinary by comparison. At least 'Inflation (1928)' has a basis in reality, so it doesn't ache your brain to try and work out what contention, if any, Richter is trying to communicate through his work. From 1921-1923, Germany suffered a significant period of hyperinflation, certainly one of the most studied cases in world economic history. In 1922, the highest denomination was 50,000 Mark. By 1923, the highest denomination was 100,000,000,000,000 Mark. Richter traces the rapid degradation of the US-German exchange rate, dramatically working towards the moment when it took 50 million Marks to buy a single US dollar. The notion of hyperinflation is one economic concept that boggles the mind. An inflation rate that reaches the millions? The mere thought seems absurd, even surreal. It's only appropriate that Richter would treat it as exactly that: a bizarre, surreal nightmare.

For 'Inflation,' Richter utilises his usual bag of tricks – quick editing, cross-fades, double-exposures, blurred photography and superimpositions. The film cuts frequently between piles of banknotes – lots and lots of money, now utterly worthless – as men beg weakly on the streets, and cigar-smoking fat-cats obliviously await their demise. Nervous shareholders bustle to sell their stock; worried faces survey their financial situation. A respectable-looking middle-class worker buys the newspaper, reads the latest inflation-related news, and removes his hat to plead for charity. Nobody can escape, and doom is inevitable. Like a frantic nightmarish curse, the inflation destroys all in its path, and the film's feverish pacing underlines the rapidity with which this economic plague arose and is growing. Richter's montage concludes with the demolition of a building, slow-motion images of wooden pylons tumbling into the dirt. Is this the sight of a nation being brought to its knees? Ironically, Richter was here being stunningly prescient: the Great Depression was just around the corner, and the rest of the world would fair no better than Germany.
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7/10
Off The Richter Scale.
morrison-dylan-fan4 September 2015
Warning: Spoilers
After seeing director Hans Richter's Ghosts and Breakfasts,I stumbled across a short film that Richter had made in the same year,which led to me getting ready to discover how high the inflation could go.

The plot:

Opening with coins on the ground and notes falling in the air,the film shows the rich getting richer as the poor get poorer.

View on the film:

Made just before the "Golden Era" crashed in 1929,Hans Richter delivers harsh comparisons between the German economy and the US,as Richter splashes numbers across the screen revealing the terrible state that the German economy was in.Giving a human face to the inflation,Richter uses startling photo-animation to display the rich continuing to spend cash on luxuries,as the faces of the poor look on with no hope.
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10/10
one of the best films I've ever seen
tpfaff10024 September 2016
This film is about what happens when/if there is an economic collapse (for us) and documents the total failure of the Weimar Republic in Germany after WW1.

Well for us it is more about imagining the powerlessness; economic collapse could happen at any time, yielding us powerless. I would say that to a modern viewer, this film is largely about imagining what happens when your society fall into complete helplessness.

The use of montage is powerful.

I last saw this film in 1992, projected in Los Angeles in a nice theater. It made an impact and when I close my eyes I can still imagine scenes from the film. That, to me, is impact.

Find a way to see this film. It is incredible.
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4/10
Interesting in its historic context
Horst_In_Translation4 December 2015
Warning: Spoilers
IMDb lists "Inflation" as an 8-minute movie, but the one I watched did not even cross the 3-minute mark. I guess they sped it up like they did with other films by early German filmmaker Hans Richter. This one here is among his most known works and he obviously knew what was going on as this film was made 1-2 years before the big crash at the New York Stock Exchange. This reference is also the only real reason to watch the film. It is among Richter's better works for sure, but it's not a particularly memorable watch again. Also the colors do not really play a role in this one. It's more about the people we see here. Improvement is certainly visible compared to his earlier works, but it is a pretty slow process.
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Effective Blend of Images
Tornado_Sam9 June 2021
Hans Richter, following his previous effort "Filmstudie", made this even shorter film in which he did not utilize any sort of geometric abstraction, which was prominent in his earlier work. Initially, film for him had been all about expanding on the work of his cubist/expressionist paintings, including shapes like squares, circles, etc.; but the more he experimented, the more he became a true filmmaker in his own right, and "Inflation" could be considered his first real exploration into photography. The film's images, blended skillfully with some very good special effects, intend to convey a sense of overwhelming desperation while still remaining abstract enough to call experimental, and that they do.

"Inflation" bases itself off of the economic period of Germany in the 1920's, where hyperinflation was prominent and one was literally faced with the "wheelbarrow of money for a loaf of bread" stereotype, which led to Hitler's rise to power. Through images of currency, numbers, etc., Richter paints an effective picture of the crisis his country was experiencing through the mounting tension as the numbers grow higher and higher. Considering his other work, the film is hardly anything overly exciting, but for the three minutes it runs it successfully fulfills its goal in a rather striking fashion. Solid evidence of Richter's technical skills, and a good if not perfect way of introducing the work of this filmmaker.
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