BFI - Sunrise
BFI - Sunrise
BFI - Sunrise
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SUNRISE
A SONG OF TWO HUMANS
Publishing
Fir st published in 1998 by the
BRITISH FILM INSTITUTE
21 Stephen StIeet, London W1P 2LN
Copyright Lucy Fischer 1998
Reprinted 2002
The British Film Institute
is the UK national agency with
responsibi1ity for encouraging the arts
of film and television and
conserving them in the national interest
British library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 0-85170--668-1
Series design by
Andrew Barron & CoIlis Clements Associates
TyPesetting by
D R Bungay Associates, Burghfield, Berks
Printed in Great Britain by Norwich Colour Print
CONTENT5
Acknowledgments 7
'Sunrise': Border Crossings 8
Europe/America 8
Film/Literature 20
Silence/Sound 28
City/ Country 32
The Madonna/The Whore 40
Objective/Subjective 47
Poetry/Narrative 52
Stasis/Movement 54
Painting/ Cinema 56
Classical/Modernist 59
SurveyorlSurveyed 62
Lost/Found 66
Notes 72
Credits 73
Works Cited 74
Bibliography 77
Far Madeleine, Richard, Brzan, and Daniel Fish
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
There are many individuals 1would like to thank for their assistance on this
project. Lorraine Jurist o Fox Studios gave me permission to examine the
files on Sunrise at the UCLALibrary. At the same institution, 1also received
guidance fIom librarian, Raymond Soto.. In Los Angeles, 1 profited from
work done at the Margaret Herrick Library o the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences. As always, 1 received warm assistance at The
Museum of Modern Art Film Study Center from Charles Silver. The
American Philosophical Society provided me with a travel grant in the
summer o 1994 to conduct sorne of this research.
At the University o Pittsburgh 1was assisted by several graduate
students who helped with bibliographic research or to locate stills: Julie
Cramer, John McCombe, Anne Ciecko, Michael Aronson" 1 was also
assisted by Cindy Nef in the media centre and by Sandy Russo in the
Film Studies office,. 1drew continuing support from my colleagues Dana
Polan, Marcia Landy and Colin MacCabe, and from my departmental
chairs, Phillip Smith and David Bartholomae" In addition, 1was aided by
a grant from the Office of Research.
At the British Film Institute, 1would like to give my thanks to Ed
Buscombe for initiating this project and for having patience in directing
it, and to Rob White for stepping in when Ed retired to take the book
through its final stages,
As ever, Mark and David sustained me on the home fIont and
helped see me through aH the sunrises and sunsets that marked my work
on the book
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'SUNRISE': BORDER CROSSINGS
Modern environments and experiences cut across all boundaries
of geography and ethnicity, of class and nationality, of religion
and ideology. In this sense, modernity can be said to unite all
mankind.. But it is a paradoxical unity, a unity of disunity .... of
struggle and contradiction, of ambiguity and anguish..
Marshall Berman (15)
In the quote aboye, Berman conceives modernity as entailing two major
features: a lack of boundaries and a wealth of contradictions. As an
exemplary modern text, it should not come as a surprise that such
elements profoundly structure Sunrise (1927).
For Nestor Almendros, SunriSe is 'a dialectical movie', Similarly,
for Tony Rayns, its 'meaning springs largely ftom [its] oppositions'
(92V For Dorothy .Iones, it 'communicate[s] by establishing significant
contrasts' (255) .. While these critical views highlight the film's antitheses
(a trope that Berman associates with modernity), they stress separation
at the expense of continuity (or 'disunity' at the expense of 'unity') ..
Rather than embrace fixed divisions, Sunnse is a text marked by fluid
boundaries - junctions that trace the subtle connection between entities
rather than their clear demarcation.. It is this complex mode of 'border
crossing' (this world of 'Both/And' - not - 'Either/Or' [Berman, 24])
that makes the film so poignant, resonant, fascinating and modern..
EUROPE/ AMERICA
As contemporary critics observed, Murnau had made neither an
'American' nor a 'Continental' film, but something with a
deliberately 'universal' quality that mediated between the two.
Graham Petrie (41)
In .Iuly 1926, Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau (1888-1931) travelled from
Germany to the United States - traversing national and continental
perimeters - to make Sunnse for the Fox Film Corporation in
Hollywood (Eisner, 167)" Born F..W, Plumpe in Bielefe1d, Westphalia, he
adopted the name of Murnau after a small Bavarian town famous for its
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artists colony, the Blaue Reiter group.. As a student he studied literature
and art history at the University of Heidelberg (Eisner, 13, 17).. Since
childhood, Murnau had displayed an interest in the theatre, and, as a
young man, had acted in numerous productions. When Max Reinhardt
observed Murnau perform, he invited him to join his Deutsches Theatre.
Murnau's stage career was briefiy interrupted by infantry service in
World War 1, but he returned to Berlin and, along with others from the
Reinhardt school (among them Gonrad Veidt), devoted himself to the
cinema - founding the Murnau Veidt Filmgesellschafi: (Eisner, 23)..
Between 1919 and 1923, Murnau directed some fourteen films, most
of which have been lost.. Especially noteworthy is Nosjratu (1922), his
brilliant adaptation of Bram Stoker's Dracula - a film which many have
seen as presaging Sunrise in its fascination with 'perverse' love (Wood,
16). With Da Letzte Mann (1924), Murnau achieved international fame
and became renowned for his use of camera movement.. When the film
opened in the United States as The Last Laugh, it enjoyed great critical
success.
Hailed in America as the 'German genius', Murnau caught the
attention of William Fox who was seeking to lend art-house prestige to
his studio in the mid-20s.. Negotiations with Murnau began in 1924 and
contracts were signed in 1925 (Everson, 318, 321) .. As Robert C. Allen
and Douglas Gomery note, the decision to produce Sunrise was 'a
fortuitous historical accident by which the resources of Hollywood were
put, for once, at the ser vice of a great film artist' (91) ..
Of course, Murnau's success should be seen as part of a broader
context - that is the international cachet of German cinema in the silent
era. Such directors as Ernst Lubitsch, Fritz Lang, Ludwig Berger, Paul
Leni, and KA. Dupont had already made their mark on American
cinema, and films like Das Caoinet des Dr.. Calzgan (The Caoznet oI Dr.
Caligan, 1919), Passion (1919), The Golem (1920) and Szegfrzed (1924),
had achieved acclaim. According to Allen and Gomery, Fox Studios
signed Murnau in order 'to demonstrate that they were more than
vender s of entertainment for the masses but were also patrons of the
highest cinematic art' (99). Since The Last Laugh had been a commercial
failure in the United States, Fox could have had no delusions that
Murnau would be a box-office winner..
Murnau was given almost unprecedented fteedom and control
over his first project for Fox - a film titled Sunrise to be based on a story
10
The Cab!net of Dr. Caligar! (1919)
The Las! Laugh (1924)
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by Hermann Sudermann, In addition to his drawing on a German
literary source, Murnau employed a host of European colleagues far the
project His scenarist was Cad Mayer (1894-1944), an Austrian writer
who collaborated with Murnau on seven films over the course of his
career, inc1uding The Last Laugh.. With Mayer, came the legacy of
German Expressionism: he had co-authored the script for Das Cabinet
des Dr" Caligan.. Some c1aim that Mayer was also infiuential in bringing
camera movement to Murnau's"work, and in valorising a purely visual
(almost title-Iess) farm of silent cinema (Desilets, 6-7)" Rather than
travel to Hollywood, Mayer remained in Germany to write the treatment
for Sunrise, which modified Sudermann's story about a married farmer
who becomes involved in an obsessive, adulterous affair,
The set designer for Sunrise, Rochus Gliese (1891-1978), was also
German, but, unlike Mayer, he accompanied Murnau to Hollywood.
Gliese had worked on three of Murnau's previous films (Der Brennende
Acker [The Burning Earth, 1922]; Die Austreilbung [The Expulszon, 1923];
and Die Fananzen des Grossherhozgs [The Finances of the Grand Duke,
1923]), as well as on Paul Wegener's Expressionist c1assic, The Golem
Gliese 's work was central to the visual effect and aesthetics of Sunrise,
and the film immediately became known for its grand, ambitious and
expensive mise en scene, (Mordaunt Hall, in his New York Times review,
refened to Sunrise as costing 'a staggering sum of money'.) Especially
noteworthy was the elaborate artificial city Gliese created for the farm
couple's visit to town, as well as the scenery they passed on their way
there during a trolley ride.. Eisner quotes an Austrian journalist who
wrote:
Only what was strictly necessary was constructed, and the sets never
went beyond what the camera itself required, Everything was built
in terms of the camera lens, using ... trompe I'ceiL (Eisner, 180)
Gliese was also responsible for constructing a simulated rural village by
the shores of Lake Anowhead, California to serve as the farm couple's
community. Though the locale of Sunnse is lefr vague (the intertitles
explain that it is 'no place' and 'every place'), to Eisner, the village 'looks
eompletely German', with The Wife (Janet Gaynor, 1906-84) 'a sort of
German Gretchen' (176, 183).. As far the city, Petrie observes that,
though it is 'furnished with shop signs in English, [it] is not reeognisably
12
The village where The Man and The Wife live
City view: opening montage
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Karl Struss, received the first Academy Award for Cinematography in
honour of their work.,
The American, Karl Struss (1891-1981) began his career studying
photography at Columbia University, and later became a member of
Alfred Stieglitz's Photo-Secession group Aftet publishing in such
magazines as Camera Wrk, VOgue, Vanity Fair and Harper:s Ba{aar, he
moved 10 Hollywood, where he did portraiture for celebrities, including
Cecil B.. DeMille and Gloria Swanson" He then worked as a
einematographer on such films as Ben-Hur (1925) and Sparrows (1926).
It was on the latter film that he first worked with Rosher, who later
engaged him for Sunnse (Desilets, 51-2).,
Aside from its transcontinental crew and its European visual
tropes, the narrative of Sunrise bears traces of German Expressionism"
On the one hand, the film seems consonant with American traditions of
melodrama (the story's focus on domestic life, its prurient concern with
adultery, its quasi-Manichaean structure of good versus evi1, its
valorisation of female innocence). However, on the other hand, Sunrise
transcends its standard melodramatic roots and veers toward a more
eccentric style"
As Robin Wood exp1ains: 'Expressionism in the German cinema
was more than a style; it was an atmosphere and an ethos' (9).. For Wood,
the Expressionism of Sunrise lies in its 'oppressive sense of doom or fate,
and an obsessive assoeiation of sensuality with evil' (9). Similarly,
Thomas Elsaesser finds an Expressionist 10uch in 'the often tormented
psychology of [Murnau's] characters' (35), Extending this focus on
interiority, Molly Haskell finds Sunnse consonant with Das Cabinet del
Dr:, Caligan's 'theme """ of the implicit continuity between conscious
and unconscious forces, mediated by instinct' (405),.
For Eisner, Murnau's Expressionism is also apparent in his
handling of the actors" In particular, the direc1Or's coaching of George
O'Brien (1900-85) - who plays the farmer (The Man) ~ was notorious
for Murnau's insistence that the actor wear lead weights in his shoes
during the first part of the film (including the scenes in the marshes
where he meets his paramour, the Woman from the City [Margaret
Livingston]; and his failed attempt to drown his wife [Wood, 12]). This
strategy gave O'Brien a slow, 1umbering, gait that connoted monstrosity"
Referring to O'Brien's slouched posture, Eisner claims that Murnau
taught him to 'act with his back' (183)" Disparaging such Expressionist
One of the cameramen on Sunrise, Charles Rosher (1885-1974),
was an Englishman who had worked in Hollywood since the early days"
By the time Rosher met Murnau, the cinema10grapher had worked with
Cecil B.. DeMille and was Mary Pickford's chief cameraman and
publicity pho1Ographer. Rosher's first professional contact with Murnau
was when the cameraman spent a year in residence at the Ufa studios in
Berlin, serving as a consultant on Murnau's last European film, Faust
(1925)" Since Murnau knew that he was about to start work in the States,
he asked Rosher's advice about how scenes were shot in Hollywood For
his part, Rosher claims to have learnt a great deal from Faust's German
cameraman, Carl Hoffman: '1 100k several ideas back, including a dolly
suspended from railway tracks in the ceiling which 1adapted for Sunrise'
(Desilets, 29-30)" Both Rosher and the other cameraman on Sunrise,
Due in large part to Gliese's superb work on thefilm, Sunnse received a
special Academy Award for 'Artistic Quality of Production' (Desilets,
28)"
American in architecture' (41)" Likewise, Everson finds the setting of
Sunrise 'ambiguous' and filled with elements that 'suggest Europe' (324)"
The result is a kind of 'no man's land', or, as Petrie describes it, a world
that is 'exotic without being totally alien' (41),
Gliese also brought 10 the look of SunriSe an Expressionist use of
'forced perspective', This means that objects in the foreground of t ~ e
fIame are sometimes unusually large, making the background recede m
an exaggerated manner (for exarhple, the mise en scene of the farm house
in which the Woman from the City resides)" Similarly, to heighten the
sense of artifieiality, Gliese 'combined life-size structures (and people)
with scale models, sloping fioors, dwarfs and dolls' (Desilets, 27)" One
of the most dazzling instances of this technique occurs in the opening
montage of the film which entails a modernist, graphic representation of
summer vacation time, with images of people leaving the eity As Eisner
states:
For this quite short sequence Gliese made a model for the camera
about 20 yards high, overlooking the square. In front of this '1Ower'
he suspended two model train rails in such a way that, between
them, the camera could photograph two platforms with
passenger s, (172, note)
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16 Murnau and Charles Rosher
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The Man lunges towards his Wife on the boat
18 George 'Brien 'acts with his back'
rouches, one reviewer named O'Brien 'Golem's little boy' ('The Shadow
Stage " 52).
Jo Leslie Collier sees Murnau's style as marked by German
Romanticism as well as by Expressionism, thus supporting Fieschi's sense
of the film' s 'strategic refusal to let itself be defined by any particular
aesthetic dogma' (Fieschi, 704) .. As Collier notes: 'the cycle of anti-
realistic-romantic theatrical expression which had its roots in Richard
Wagner ultimately reached its peak in the work of Friedrich Wilhelm
Murnau' (5). In particular, she sees Sunnse as a 'remake' of Wagner's
Tannhauser (122) .. Among the 'tenets of romanticism' that Collier finds
prominent in Murnau's work are 'a concern with the individual, not the
social group; .... a special emphasis on Nature; ..... an opposition between
Nature and Culture; .... a fondness of .. "the earthy peasant and the noble
savage; ... the idealization of Woman; and .... most particularly .... the
privileged place afforded to emotions' (105).
What is clear from the American critical reception of Sunrlse
is how the film tapped into a debate about cinema and culture.. Priety
called it 'a distinguished contribution to the screen, made in this country,
but produced after the best manner of the German school' (Rush, 21);
the Lerary Digest deemed Sunnse 'art .". with a big A' ('Sunrise', Dec
1927; 1); Mordaunt Hall declared Murnau 'an artist in camera studies'
and his film an 'exotic .... mixture of Russian gloom and Berlin
brightness' "
By the time Murnau started work on Sunnse, however, a critical
backlash had begun against German imports and migrs working in the
film industry. Sorne European directors were regarded as temperamental,
extravagant 'prima donnas' and European infiuences were seen as
'strange' rather than innovative (Lipkin, 344; Allen and Gomery, 100-1).
Petrie quotes Welford Beaton of the Film Speetator as stating that,
'Murnau's direction refiects Germanic arrogance' (Petrie, 47). Similarly,
a Photoplay critic saw Sunnse as '[t]he sort of picture that fools high-
brows into hollering "Artl" - full of ... trick photography and fancy
effects,' but having 'no story interest and only stilted, mannered acting'"
The reviewer concludes that 'F.W. Murnau .... could learn a lot about
story-telling trom local talent' ('The Shadow Stage', 52) .. Disagreeing
with this position, Matthew Josephson of Motwn Puture elaSlie decried
such chauvinistic sentiments which 'grumble[d] at the inroads of foreign
film stars and director s'.
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In Sunnse, Murnau produced a work in which American and
European sensibilities blend rather than c1ash. As Tony Rayns has
remarked it is an 'almost miraculous fusion of American and European
ideals' (93) Using a metaphor that draws on the certtrality of the couple
in Murnau's work, Haske1l notes that, 'Sunrise becomes the lyrical
culmination of a strain of German Expressionism that, [is] mamed to
American technology' (404, my italics)
FILM/L1TERATURE
[Sudermann's stories] were fu1l of dramatic suspense, good roles
and a bourgeois outlook, abounded in realistic details, and
rendered the melancholy of East Prussian landscape
painstakingly - qualities which made them attractive to film
producers for many years to come.
Siegftied Kracauer (quoted in Desilets, 11)
While disputes continued about the 'auteur' status of European film
directors, what wasn't in doubt was the standing of the author of the
literary source for Sunrise, who was widely known as a novelist and
playwright.. Sunnse is based on the story 'The Excursion to Tilsit' ( ' ~ i e
Reise nach Tilsit'),which was inc1uded in Sudermann's 1917 co1lectlon,
Lithuanian Tales (Litaui.sche Ge.schichten) .. The anthology was published
in the United States in 1930 by Horace Liveright, with a translation by
Lewis Galantiere.
It is interesting to examine the continuities and disjunctions
traced by the adaptation of the piece from prose to cinema.. Whereas
the setting of Sunrise is indefinite, in Sudermann's story it is clear:
the town of Wilwischken, a sma1l but prosperous Lithuanian fishing
village. As in Sunnse, the book's narrative involves an adulterous
triangle; but in the book the participants are a1l members of the local,
rural community: the fisherman (Ansas Balezus), his wife (Indra)
and their maid (Busza), there is no urban outsider.. None the less,
when Ansas and Indra travel to Tilsit, ethnic divisions are shown to
exist between the German residents of the city, the Russians that
Ansas and Indra pass on the river, and the rustic village couple
themse1ves.
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Some of the scenes in Sunrise are directly inspired by Sudermann's
The memorable walk of The Man thraugh the marshes to meet
conspire with the City Woman, seems to arise from the fo1lowing
And where did Ansas go when night fe1l? No one knew.. He
wandered along the Parva [River] where the willow shoots were so
thick that none of the glow of evening penetrated to the water.. ....
There, where none of the glow of evening reached the water, they
[Ansas and Busza] would sit far into the night and make their plans
for the future. But however pleasant they might imagine it to be,
Indra, his wife stood always in the way.. (Sudermann, 11-12)
SimilarIy, the day/ night iconography that structures Sunrzse is present in
Sudermann's text.. Indra is described as 'pale as a daughter of the sun'
(4), and when she and Ansas sail horne fi:om Tilsit, 'moonbeams lay ....
brightly on the water' (43) .. As in the film, day and night have
symboliclpsychic overtones.. While the couple's morning trip to the city
is fraught with the threat of violence, their nighttime return is peaceful
and romantic.. As Indra ironica1ly muses that evening: 'now it is day, and
then it was night' (41).
In the way that Sunrise makes comparisons between 'Now' and
'Then' (the couple's present rancour versus their idyllic past), so the
short story invokes nostalgic reco1lection.. EarIy on in the tale, 'Indra
remembered with sadness what a splendid husband she had had before
Busza came into their home' (6); and later, her 'thoughts [go] back to a
spring day seven years before' when she was joyful and pregnant with
their fir st child (22) ..
In addition to having the rural couple travel to the city (a
progression which Sunrise retains), the short story focuses on sites such
as the cafe and amusement park - both of which are central to the film's
mise en scene.. Sudermann describes Indra's thrill on riding a carouse1 as:
'The whole world had fina1ly become a wheel, and the sky ga1loped
backwards around them like a fiery topo ... Life can be so beautiful when
one is in love and riding on the merry-go-round!' (39).
There are, however, numerous ways in which Sudermann's story
differs fram Murnau's film.. First, there is the more traditional religious
tone of the book, with its comparison of Indra to the Madonna, and
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22 The Man approaches lhe moonlil marshes al nighl
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broad references to celestial spheres: when the couple listens to music in
Tilsit, it is 'like being wafted to heaven' (33). Primar y in Sudermann's
text, is a discourse o sin and forgiveness. During the couple's sail home,
Indra convinces Ansas to ask God for exmeration from his
adulterous/murderous impulses: 'confess now and we will pray
together' (42).
Perhaps the greatest alteration from Sudermann's version is in
the psychic dynamic o the stor) and its denouement.. In Sunrise, The
Wife is largely unaware o her husband's scheme to drown her; in the
story, Indra is fully cognisant. She goes on the boat trip to Tilsit as a
kind o suicidal gesture, passively accepting her fate" Before leaving,
'she laid out her shroud and whatever else she would be wearing in her
cofnn ... [a]nd .. , made ready for the excursion' (18). In the boat, she
wonders:
how was she to know when the terrible thing was about to happen
so that she might have time to plead with him? It might happen at
any momento ..... 'The best way,' she thought, 'is to let come what
will and use the time to make my peace with the Lord', (24)
Though Indra eventually confronts Ansas with his crime, and the two
miraculously reconcile (as they do in Sunrise), the short story does not
end on a propitious note.. A storm plagues the couple's journey home in
the movie, whereas in the story catastrophe is caused by their unwise
decision to celebr ate and drink liquor - an act which leads to their dozing
oH and the boat capsizing, As in Sunrise, the bull rushes that Ansas had
brought to save himself, he gives to his wife, But, while both survive in
the film, in the story, Ansas drowns - a wrenching twist o fate" While
sorne have seen the happy ending o Sunrise as a concession to
Hollywood (Jacobs, 362), others have rejected this view, citing the
extraordinary control and autonomy which Murnau enjoyed on the
production (Wood, 16; Jones, 258).,
Like the film which it would inspire, 'The Excursion to Tilsit' is a
complex text trom which one must peel away numerous layers. Perhaps
Sudermann hints at this process in his choice o agricultural imagery in
the tale, for, he makes a point of telling us: 'The onions o Wilwischken
are renowned' (3) ..
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Awakening The Man recalls his murderous plans
The Man and his Wife in stunned silence on the trolley
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26 The boat trip
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SllENCEjSOUND
One would hesitate to call any film the finest of its era, though as
a climax 10 the silent film, one could certainly defend the
statement if it were applied to Sunri'se.
William K. Everson (324)
In the same way that Sunnse is an uncommon mix of literature and film,
of American melodrama and European avant-garde, it also occupies a
peculiar median position between silence and sound, making it 'a curious
technological hybrid' (Allen and Gomery, 92).. Although
experimentation with film sound had been one of the key challenges
since the days of the primitive cinema (when Thomas Alva Edison
conceived the Kinetoscope as an extension of his phonograph),
commercial sound exhibition had been detened by problems with
synchronisation and amplification.. These difficulties were by and large
solved by the mid-20s, when various studios adopted competing (and
incompatible) methods of sound reproductin Warner Bros. embraced
Vitaphone, a sound-on-disc system, and, in 1926, released a series of
short films using this technology. In 1927 (only a few days afi:er the
opening of Sunrse [Lipkin, 349]), Warner Bros. created history with
the premiere of The }aH Singa, a 'part-talkie', and again in 1928 with
the production of an 'all-talkie', The Lights of New York.. Fox, on the
other hand, who had more technological foresight, utilised Movie1One, a
sound-on-film system - the system that eventually won out over the
others. In 1927, it released a series of newsreels as well as Sunrise, which
was shot as a silent film but synchronised with a musical score for
distribution (Thompson and Bordwell, 213-15).. Ironically, the graphic
illustration that graced the programme for the film' s showing at the
Cathay Circle theatre in Los Angles, depicted Gaynor and O'Brien
framed in the centre of a sun that resembled the hole of a sound-on-disc
recording.
2
Sunrise is regarded as an unsurpassed work of early cinema. (Even
the Cathay Circle programme refened to it as the 'Astounding Fox Film
Picture Which Has Amazed New York' ..) Among later critics, not only
Everson but Almendros gran it classic status, with the latter describing
it as the 'peak of the gente' (30). Similarly, Fieschi describes it as 'a
summation' and 'a point of perfection in the silent cinema' (706) .. The
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The Man calls out to his Wife from the rocks
The City Woman in femme fatale pose
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film' s exemplary natme is apparent on numerous levels. WhiJe aspects of
its acting style are infiuenced by Expressionism, other elements belong
to the broader history of gestural pantomime perfected by D,.W Griffith..
For example, when The Man awakes on the day he will sail to town, he
presses his hands to his temples, horrified to recollect his murderous plot
against his wife.. And the sequence in which the couple leaves the farm
by boat: The Wife has momentary doubts about The Man's intentions;
she stands up in the boat (as though to escape) - a look of concern
crosses her face - she then sits down again, calm having retmned to her
visage. Her thought process is entirely legible in both her movements
and countenance. Later on, afi:er The Man has almost killed her, and she
has fied to shore, the two ride silently together on a trolley - with him
attempting to catch her attention, and with her avoiding his eyes.. In this
and the sequences that follow, their entire relationship is dramatised
through a discomse of returned and averted gazes..
In addition, there is a sense of character stereotype in Sunrise
indicative of silent film technique, which delineated persona without the
benefit of speech. As Claite Johnston notes (in discussing the theories of
Erwin Panofsky):
in the early cinema the audience had much difficulty deciphering
what appeared on the screen. Fixed iconography, then, was
introduced to aid understanding and provide the audience with
basic facts with which to comprehend the narrative.. (408)
lt is no smprise, then, that the leading characters in Sunrise are noted
only as 'The Woman trom the City', 'The Man', and 'The Wife' -labels
which emphasise their broad, universal qualities. Fmthermore, the
Woman trom the City's natme is registered in visible clues such as her
dcollet black dress, cigarettes, and make-up.
The graceful camera movement for which Sunre is celebrated
(far example, the tracking shot through the marshes, the ride on the
trolley) is a clear signatme of the silent era since, with the coming of
sound, cameras were ofi:en trapped in soundproofed 'iceboxes', unable
to move (at least, dming synchronised dialogue sequences). Gn the
other hand, with its highly effective and experimental score (composed
by Hugo Riesenfeld), Sunnse is also a noteworthy work of the early
sound period.. Few who have seen the film can forget the musical
30
far example, the fareboding, repetitive theme (consisting
of two alternating, ominous notes) that accompanies The Man's
through the marshes to meet his lover; the raucous jazz motif (with
and voice effects) that conjoins the city sequence; the rippling
(with wind sounds) that marks the episode of the couple's sail
in a storm; the church bells that ring at the exact moment The Man
to spare his wife.. But perhaps the most extraordinary instance of
in the film is one which is precisely synchronised to the human
but without recomse to speech.. After the boat has capsized and
Man awakes by the rocks, he realises that his wife is not beside him
desperately calls out to her in the darkness. As he cups his hand to
his mouth, we hear a plaintive series of notes on the French horn that
aDlJtC1xlnate his cry.. This strategy is used on numerous other occasions
ro signify his call or that of others dming the search and rescue
operation. It is, in fact, suggested in Sudermann's story in which on the
morning after the couple's shipwreck, 'A voice, a woman's voice, was
for help through the fag' (48).
Because of the success of Riesenfeld's score, it is hard to imagine
Sunrise conjoined with any other accompaniment. Yet, as part of the
The Jazz Singer (1927)
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1989 Sundance Film Festival, a new composltlon (written by
Newman) accompanied the exhibition o the film and was performed
again in 1992 by the Los Angeles Pops Orchestra (Farber, 48) ..
While the film's bold straddling of silence and sound is intriguing,
its release was not a commercial success. As Allen and Gomery note:
'Poorly promoted, released amidst the hoopla o The Jazz Singa and
misteamed with Fox's Movietone newsreel, Sunnse had no chance at the
box office.' As Fox's most exp'ensive silent film, ir failed to recoup its
costs (Allen and Gomery, 91, 103) .. Significantly, Haskell reads its
narrative (with its shift ftom country to town) as allegorical of changes
in cinema history: 'Murnau's city often seems like a metaphor for the
sound film, trying to burst into the peaceful haven o the country, the
silent film' (406) ..
CITYjCOUNTRY
'Country' and 'city' are very powerful words, and this is not
surprising when we remember how much they seem to stand for
in the experience of human communities..
In recent years, so-called 'eco-critics' have brought attention to the issue
o lacale in film narrative. As Lawrence Buell has stated: 'We've gotten
used to character, theme and plot; it's the sense of place that is ignored
or slighted' (quoted in Parini, 52) .. Raymond Williams argues that,
wirhin this 'scenic' discourse, the dichotomy of urban versus rural is one
that fundamentally organises human existence.
The drama of Sunrise is structured around this kind of tension
(Belton, 131-2).. The Man is seduced by a vacationing woman ftom the
city who urges him to sell his farm and join her in the metropolis. In one
scene, we see her circling a newspaper advertisement for purchasing
agriculturalland; and in another, we learn that The Man has mortgaged
his farm to sustain their illicit affair.
Sorne critics have seen Murnau as drawing on schematic and
familiar notions o the two locales. Petrie writes o Sunnse as dealing in
'moral absolutes' that tap 'a traditional body o assumptions about the
virtues o the countryside and the evils o the city' (43).. And Wood finds
32
Murnau has a 'Romantic attitude to nature', with the simple life
upheld against the corruption and artificiality o the City' (5).
in truth, Murnau's drama has greater depth - resembling more
,vl'11 , - - ~ , ambivalent view o cultural conceptions o locale:
On the country has gathered the idea o a natural way o life: of
peace, innocence, and simple virtue. On the city has gathered the
idea of an achieved centre: o learning, communication, light.
Powerful hostile associations have also developed: on the city as a
place of noise, worldliness and ambition; on the country as a place
of backwardness, ignorance, limitation.. (Williams, 1)
is this sense of duality and contradiction that informs Murnau's vision
in Sunrzse. Like other modern artists, he is simultaneously an 'enthusiast'
an 'enemy' o contemporary life (Berman, 24).
It is also this complexity one finds in Murnau's later film, Cy Girl
(1930), a work which draws on similar themes.. Rather than depict the
eity and country in black and white terms, Murnau portrays them in
shades of grey. Initially, Chicago seems a dreary, exhausting place ftom
which a young waitress wishes to escape, when she meets a country boy
in her restaurant. When, however, she marries him and accompanies him
to the farm, she faces even greater problems. His father thinks she is
'loose' and has wed his son to gain his land.. Furthermore, her 'two-
fisted' husband proves entirely emasculated by the patriarch.. Finally, the
farm hands are lascivious men, one of whom insinuates that he and the
bride are having an affair. Eventually, the situation is resolved, but the
country is never portrayed as paradisicaL
For Williams, the rural and the urban have particular temporal
configurations: 'the common image o the country is now an image o the
past, and the common image o the eity an image of the future' (297). This
concept is linked to the phenomenon - historic and contemporary - o the
migration from country to town.. Sunrise openly embraces such a temporal
formulation with the couple's idealised bucolic existence in their past, and
The Man's ecstatic urban existence in his ostensible future.. This discourse is
imbued with nostalgia - a tone associated in the film with the flashback o the
couple shown content on their fium: The Wife and child relaxingunder a tree
as The Man plows the land with his oxen - a scene which resembles the
utopian view in traditionallandscape painting.
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The Man and The Wife in the City
34 City Girl (1930) shares a similar city/country theme Man and The Wife photographed in the City
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But it is to Murnau's credit that the country is not made to seem
entirely attractive or safe. Though it is clear that the sense of menace
that permeates The Man's midnight walk to the marshes is related to the
Woman from the City, it is also the swamp that seems dangerous in its
ability to drag one down. Similarly, the picturesque lake on which the
couple's village sits is, at one moment, a site for a tourist postcard, and
at another, a crime scene.
While the city is tied to the figure of a seductive, home-wrecking
woman - and thereby carres considerable negative weight - it is also a
site of great excitement and appeaL Janet Bergstrom regards it as highly
'sexualized', a sense heightened by Murnau's use of 'fan-like montages
of jazz musicians, dancers, [and an] amusement park' (259-60).
Although the Woman from the City almost destroys the couple's
marriage, it is only because of her that The Man takes his wife to town
(albeit as a ploy to murder her en mute) .. It is, in fact, this trip that
rejuvenates their relationship and allows it to flourish. 1t is as though the
eroticism of the city (originally tied to the provocative visitor) now
attaches itself to The Wife and transforms the couple's immature and
quasi-platonic union into one which is more carnal. Many writers have
remarked on Caynor's asexual demeanour - especially at the opening of
the film.. Particularly noteworthy (as a sign of The Wife's repression) is
the heavy matted wig that she wears - a costuming touch which drew
critical scorn when the film was released.. (Photoplay wrote that Caynar
looked 'all wrong in a blonde wig which wouldn't fool anybody' ['The
Shadow Stage1)
Far Williams, 'an idea of the country is [often] an idea of
childhood' (297),. 1t is as though the city brngs the couple from youth
into the adult, carporeal realm. Hence, it is significant that, when they
have their picture taken at the photographer's studio, they are captured
stealing a kiss, like naughty teenagers.
Particularly important in Murnau's merging of the city and the
country are the controversial scenes of 'comic relief' - episodes which
sorne critics have seen as 'imposed' on Murnau and Mayer by the studio
(Eisner, 183),. At one point in their urban holiday, the couple frequents a
fair.. The Man tries his hand at a game that involves pitching a ball, which
on hitting the target releases a pig down a slide. One of the animals
escapes and makes his way into a restaurant, causing great dismay and
panic. The Man manages to catch the swine and return it to its owner..
The Man calches a runaway pig
The Man and The Wife folk dance
Flashback lo happy limes in a bucolic setting
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Recognising The Man as the hero of the evening, the restaurant band
begins to playa peasant song and the couple is urged to dance" Though
initial1y reluctant, they final1y agree.
This vignette can be read in several ways" Gn one level, the fact
that the rural couple are made a charming spectacle for the urban crowd
signifies that country ways are seen as pass - the stuff of ethnographic
folklore - thus validating Williams' association of the agrarian with the
pas! But more importantly, Murnau finds a way of blurring the
distinction between city and country by bringing the rural atmosphere
directly into the urban - in the form of the farm animal and the peasant
dance,
Significantly, Sunrise is al50 a film which emphasises means of
transportation - ways of connecting one space with another.. In the
opening 'vacation montage', we see images of trains and steam ships as
part of an abstract col1age. The trol1ey (which, literal1y, joins country to
town) is also a crucial vehicle in the film - one which crosses not only
geographical but psychological borders in the characters' lives,. In her
description of it, Eisner emphasises how one locale almost 'bleeds' into
another: 'Gliese had created every kind of landscape, fi:om fields and
meadows, through an industrial area and the sparse gardens of the
suburbs to the city itself' (180),
This overlapping of boundaries is made explicit in two
sequences involving the couple crossing a city street. Gn their way
into town (when their relationship is in turmoil), The Wife is almost
run over by traffic, befare being rescued by The Man" Toward the end
of their visit, when they again traverse the street, the urban scene is
transformed (through a dissolve shot) into a bucolic fantasy of them
walking through a field" Though urban chaos soon returns (in the form
of honking cars), the two locales have been forever fused, Rather than
al10w city and country to remain false polarities (in the ser vice of
clich ideological oppositions), Murnau negotiates a rapprochement
between the two, Here, Williams' words seem particularly relevant:
'we use the contrast of country and city to ratify an unresolved
division and conflict of impulses, which it might be better to face in its
own terms' (297)"
It seems no accident that the 'special effects' described aboye are
deployed in the city sequence, For Mary Ann Doane, the urban terrain
of Sunnse is metaphorical1y connected with notions of the cinema itself.
The eity traffie magieally beeomes a field
The Man and the City Woman imagine the City
Opening 'vaeation montage'
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She writes, for example, of the scene in which 'the Man and the Vamp lie
on the grass and watch the .film of the city projected against the sky'
(1977: 74, my italics).. She also emphasises that, while in the city, the
couple visits a photography studio to have their picture taken.. Thus,
Sunrise can be viewed as a self-reflexive text which, provisionally,
identifies the cinema with the metropolitan - and thereby saves that
locale from any facile dismissal or devaluation
Marshall Berman defines modernity as 'attempt[s] by modern men
and women .... to get a grip on the modern world and make themselves
at home in it' (5). One can view Sunrise precisely in those nanative
terms - as the farmer and his wife journey from the Old World to the
New, endeavouring to accommodate themselves to its 'possibilities and
perils' (lbid.. , 15) ..
THE MADONNA/THE WHORE
[T]here arose [in silent cinema], identifiable by standard
appearance, behaviour and attributes, the well-remembered types
of the Vamp and the Straight Girl (perhaps the most convincing
equivalents of the medieval personifications of the Vices and
Virtues), the Family Man and the Villain..... The conduct of the
characters was predetermined accordingly..'
Erwin Panofsky (in Mast, Cohen and Braudy, 240-1)
One of the major contrasts discussed in the literature on Sunme is that
of the farm girl versus the City Woman.. The frmer is a familiar figure
of supreme good and is associated with melodrama, whereas the latter is
a nebulous figure tied to modernity.
The vamp's cinematic roots can be found in an earlier Fox film-
A Fool There Was (1915) starring Theda Bara (Higashi, 55) .. (The
character was later developed in films like Blood and Sand [1922] with
Nita Naldi, and Flesh and the Devif [1927] starring Greta Garbo..) The
vamp's force, as stereotype, tapped into societal fears of 'the pleasure-
loving woman' - seen as erotic, heartless, diabolical, and supernaturally
empowered (Staiger, 150, 152) ..
For Doane, the vamp is associated with illusionism: 'her most
striking characteristic, perhaps, is the fact that she never really is what
40
she seems to be' (1991: 1). Fittingly, Doane links her to the film medium
itself; to 'new technologies of production and reproduction
(photography, the cinema) born of the Industrial Revolution' (Ibid.).
The fear of the vamp, of course, stems from her propensity to
destroy men - to lead them 'away from self-control toward alife of
sensual expressiveness' (Staiger, 150).. Her purpose in the narrative is to
initiate the 'fallen man plot' - a narrative which involves the
'establishment of a secure home and family; the intervention of
sexuality, which diverts the man from his family ways; his (at least
financial if not social) degeneration; and then either sorne kind of
reformation and rescue or a punishment' (Staiger, 151) ..
If, in the 'fallen man' scenario, the hero is eventually redeemed, it
is by the nemesis of the vamp - the pious woman, often a wife and
mother.. As Doane notes: 'the femme fatale is represented as the
antithesis of the maternal - sterile or barren, she produces nothing in a
society which fetishizes production' (1991, 2) .. Though maternal, the
good woman is often childlike, fulfilling the Victorian female ideaL As
Sumiko Higashi comments:
According to this doctrine, the woman was restricted to the private
or domestic sphere while man dealt with the cash nexus in the
public sphere. H woman was condemned to ignorance in a state of
perpetual childhood, she nevertheless had a significant maternal
function to discharge by virtue of her superior moral natme. The
home, in contrast to the masculine arena of the market place,
became the repository of virtue and woman its guardian.. (79)
It should be clear the degree to which Sunrise invokes the figures of good
and bad woman.. In fact, the entire narrative of the film can be seen as
charting the male protagonist's vacillation between the two.. As Doane
notes: 'The object of desire of the Man is not constant - it shifts from
the City Woman to his Wife' (1977: 73)..
The City Woman fits the classic model of the vamp in both her
clothing and mannerisms.. Since the term 'vamp' derives from the word
'vampire', it is not surprising that she resembles Murnau's Nosferatu-
magically summoning The Man with her whistle, hovering over his
neck as she kisses him, and slinking off at dawn when The Man is
reunited with his wife.. The kind of illusionism Doane associates with
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vamps is, here, registered in the City Woman's engagement of
masquerade (costume and make-up), her encouragement of the man's
duplicity (cheating on his wife, secretly planning her demise), and her
association with the 'movie' of the city which plays in The Man's mind"
Obviously, Sunrise is also a story of a 'fallen man' - on several
registers; moral, economic and psychic, In its focus on be1eaguered
masculinity, it once again references German cinema of the 20s, which
displayed 'a certain ambivalence'in male self-images and male sexuality'
(EIsaesser, 38)" The male character, however, is not the only figure who
is conflicted in his fee1ings far the vamp, As Pauline Kae1 has indicated,
so is the viewer:
The appeal of movies was in the details of crime and high living
and wicked cities and in the language of toughs and urchins; it was
In the dirty smile of the city gzrl who lured the hao away from ]anet
Gaynor. (104-5)
For Janet Staiger, thefemme [atale is a figure that fundamentally
bespeaks social turmoil:
42 The City Waman shimmies lar The Man
The character of the vamp seems almost to be mere1y a foil for an
extensive examination of the power of sex,women's rights in this
new age, and the crumbling be1ief in the assertion that some
nineteenth-century notions of the family's behavior were still
pertinent for twentieth-century America" (147-8)
But in historicising the City Woman, it is also important to see her as a
'flapper' - the archetypal metropolitan female of the 20s" Besides
urbanity, the flapper represented many things to the American
consciousness. For Frederick Allen, she was linked to female
independence and the aftermath of suffrage: 'Women were bent on
fi:eedom - fteedom to work and to play without the tramme1s that had
bound them heretofore to live lives of comparative inactivity' (108).
The flapper was also seen as hedonistic. As Higashi comments: 'The
concept of fun was essential to the flapper because it determined her
appearance and style' (111), Her joie de vivre was facilitated by the
growing leisure time available to the middle classes and by 'the
feasibility of life construed as a permanent weekend' (Higashi, 111)
This view supports the notion of the vamp as non-productive (as
In the city, The Man visits a barber shap
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opposed ro the wife/ mother, who engages in domestic and biological
'Iabour').
The vamp's hedonismwas visible in her shocking mode of dress: thin,
short-sleeved or sleeveless frocks, revealing skirts, silk or rayon underwear,
and flesh-coloured stockings (E Allen, 84, 103-4).. Despite her heightened
allure, however, she 'Iooked boyish and acted mannish' .. To subvert
conventional 'femininity', she cut her hair, slimmed down, and flattened her
breasts.. Furthermore, she often smoked and drank liquor (Higashi, 112)..
The flapper's quest for pleasure, however, was primarily associated
with sensuality - with 'petting parties' and jazz culture (Higashi, 112; E.
Allen, 85).. Regarding the latter, Allen notes: 'The new style o dancing
was denounced in religious journals as "impure, polluting, cOIIupting,
debasing, destroying spirituality, increasing carnality'" (92). The flapper
was also a product of post-war sexualliberation, when women 'for the
first time demand[ed] to live .... forbidden experiences' (Hinkle, in
Kirchwey, 247) .. As E. Allen notes, eros was suddenly regarded as 'the
central and pervasive force which moved mankind;' the 'first requirement
of mental health was to have an uninhibited sex life' (98-9).
Aligned with the flapper was the 'Iurid' motion picture:
The movies themselves, drawing millions to their doors every day
and every night, played incessantly upon the same lucrative theme.
The producers of one picture advertised 'brilliant men, beautiful
jazz babies, champagne baths, midnight revels, petting parties and
purple dawn ..... '; the venders of another promised ..... 'pleasure-mad
daughters, sensation-craving mothers'. (E. Allen, 101-2)
For Allen, the flapper's lust for life was bought at the expense of politics:
'Young men and women who a few years before would have been
championing radical economic or political doctrines were championing
the new morality and talking about it everywhere and thinking of it
incessantly' (120) ..
Also lost was the nineteenth-century ideal of womanhood. As
Allen comments: 'women no longer wanted ro be "Iadylike" or could
appeal to their daughters to be "wholesome"; "Victorian" and
"Puritan" were becoming terms o opprobrium' (Ibid 112).. Similarly, for
VE. Calverton, '[t]he old sanctity of marriage [was now] ridiculed by
sallies of wit and satire fired at it fIom every side' (12) .. Significantly, in
44
the same issue of The Literary Digest in which a review of Sunrise
appears, there is an artide decrying the breakdown of matrimony: 'This
increase in divorce is, no doubt, in harmony with the spirit of the times'
('The Alarming Increase', 34).
These multifold issues are played out in Sunrise, making the Good
Woman and the Bad Woman not only universal stereotypes, but figures of a
particular sociallhistorical nexus. The Woman fram the City has the look of
a flapp:r - w i ~ her .bobbed hair, short chemise, clutch handbag, flowing
scarf, sllk stockings, Clgarettes and cosmetics.. It is crucial that her appearance
takes time, money and effort to assemble, for as Robert L Daniel notes, 'the
Bapper symbolized the new consumer economy that became conspicuous in
the twenties' (56).. (No wonder the City Woman wants The Man to sell his
farm and bring his cash to the metropolis.') Significantly, when the farm
couple goes to town and The Man stops to get a hair cut, one of the
hairdressers sits The Wife down as well, and goes as if to trim her locks.. In
contrast to howthe City Woman would react, The Wife is horrified and runs
away refusing to shed her Victorian-style tresses.
The City Woman is a figure of carnality- represented by her bared
legs, negliges and her ability to lure The Man into her sensual sphere.
Furthermore, there could be no more apt symbol of hedonism than the
i m a ~ e o the city that she conjures - with its prismatic vision o jazz
mustc. The voluptuousness of this scene is later transferred directly to
her person, as the rear-screen projection fades and she is seen shimmying
madly in fIont of The Man: her gyrations reminiscent of Calverton's
description o the 'wild, Corybantian antics of the flapper, Binging
herself in [a] delirium of escape, night after night upon the edge of
nervous ecstasy' (11) ..
This contrast between the vamp's sexuality and The Wife's
maternity is made clear early on in the film with scenes of the lovers'
embrace in the marsh intercut with shots o The Wife and child at home.
In the late 20s, Margaret Sanger denounced the fate o brides (like the
farm girl) who suffered fIom 'premature parenthood':
She becomes a mother befare she is ready to have a family.. Young,
[ull of life, entitled to develop to maturity this love and romance,
many young wives .... find themselves all too soon slaves to
children.. ... Romance cannot live or bloom where fear and
discontent thrive like weeds.. (179)
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46 Madonna and child
The fact that Sunnse begins with a montage evoking summer travel
emphasises the way in which the flapper is associated with leisure - with
trm vacations, and not with the work ethic of the farm (where The
Wife cooks, tends her baby, and feeds the chickens)" As Doane notes, the
City Woman is 'either independently wealthy or at least of a higher class
.. on vacation, idle' (1977: 73)" As the titles tell us, 'several weeks had
passed since her coming and still she lingered',
The Wife represents the nineteenth-century feminine ideal that
was becoming obsolete by the 20s (as did Anna Moore [Lillian Gish] in
Way Down East [1920], who was contrasted to her urbane cousins, the
Tremonts)" Hence, perhaps, the awkward incongruity of Gaynor's wig
in Sunnse signals how her dramatis persona is no longer viable" At the
end of the couple's romantic night on the town, they sit drinking wine;
the background dissolves suddenly into a tableau of hovering angels,
Here, we feel that Mumau is offering us a piece of whimsical Victoriana
(like a yellowed Valentine in a Joseph Comell box) - simultaneously
quaint and antiquated. On the other hand, the triumph of the wholesome
woman throws doubt on the values of the vamp - a figure sorne have
associated with European decadence" As Andrew notes:
This film is Mumau's final death struggle with the expressionism of
his early films., The expulsion of the Vamp is then a clear victory
for Janet Gaynor (her hair now luxuriously undone) and the
American way" (43)
OBJECTIVEjSUBJECTlVE
The power accorded to the femme fatal e is a function of fears
linked to the notions of uncontrollable drives, the fading of
subjectivity, and the loss of conscious agency - all themes of the
emergent theories of psychoanalysis"
Mary Ann Doane (1991: 2)
In addition to being a film about a woman nearly drowning, Molly
Haskell finds Sunnse a work 'about aman losing - and regaining - his
mind' (405)., This is not surprising, as insanity often involves a 'plunge'
to the depths of existence.. Psychological themes are central to Sunrise,
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which was made when 'Freudian gospe1 began to circulate to a marked
extent among the American lay public' (E Al1en, 98). Significantly, the
cinema played a crucial role in this dissemination. As Al1en notes: 'lurid
motion pictures .. , had their effect on a class of readers and movie-goers
who had never heard and never would hear of Freud and the-libido'
(lOO). Murnau and Mayer brought a psychic perspective to the film,
influenced by German Expressionism, but, in Sunrise, it serves a more
realistic story line than it did in Das Cabinet des Dr.. Caligari or Nosferatu.
Thomas Elsaesser remarks on how Murnau 'integrated outdoor
photography and naturallocations into his psychological interiors' (36) .. The
director's penchant for realism (even in a supernatural tale such as Nosferatu)
has been noted by many critics. Mol1y Haskel1 argues that to 'cal1 Murnau
realistic is both true and false' (402).. We get a sense of this tension in the
marsh scene when The Man and the City Woman col1ect bul1 rushes.. The first
thing we notice is The Man's huge footprint in the mud, as the camera tracks
along the ground.. While the episode is imbued with a macabre and fantastical
air, the footprint stands as a sign of concrete materiality - like the
photographic image, which has traditional1y served as indexical 'evidence' of
the existence of phenomena in the real world.
Robin Wood sees Murnau's a;uvre as the perfect 'blend' of two
historic schools of film-making that traditional1y have been
counterposed.. Using a conjugal metaphor appropriate to Sunnse, Wood
states that Murnau's films represent 'the marriage of Mlies and
Lumiere' (Wood, 11) .. Whereas Mlies' style is associated with frivolous
stage illusions, within the narratives of his films such tricks sometimes
have psychological overtones, particularly when associated with a
character's reveries (for example, A Drunkard's Dream [1897], The
Chnstmas Dream [1900], The Dream of a Hlndu Beggar [1902], The
Ballet-Master's Dream [1903]). It is this sense of the psychic aura of
special effects that imbues Sunrise - in which cinematic 'magic' is linked
to the Unconscious.. As Haskel1 notes, Murnau creates 'a dreamlike
world of infinite extension' (402) ..
Though subjective in its focus,Sunrse is not concerned with the
individual psyche. As Wood remarks, Murnau 'shows remarkably little of the
novelist's interest in the development and interaction of individualized
characters their depth is that of universal archetypes' (lO).. Thus, Murnau
is concernedwiththe broad forces of the psyche (love, hate, lust, regret, guilt)
- drives that ostensibly motivate, plague and bedevil humankind..
48
In certain instances, the very landscape of the film seems to reflect
the characters' interior state.. When The Man plods through the marshes,
enveloped by fog, the mise en scene gives a sense of his being lost and
o b s e s s ~ d .. Similarly, the narrative's emplotment in terms of a journey
(especlal1y across dark, deep water s) signifies a psychic voyage.. And
when a storm erupts during the couple's boat trip home, the gale can be
seen to symbolise the affective turmoil The Man has undergone.
In the more 'magical' sequences, however, Murnau literal1y
depicts a character's consciousness, in an attempt to 'photograph
thought' (Murnau, 'Films of the Future', 90). Murnau boasted that
critics described him as a 'mental director' (Ibid.. ) and indicated his
interest in stream of consciousness techniques.. As he stated:
We have our thoughts and also our deeds.. James Joyce, the English
novelist, demonstrates this very wel1 in his works.. He first
picturizes the mind and then balances it with the action.. After all,
the mind is the motive behind the deed..' ('The Ideal Picture', 72)
This is displayed in Sunnse, during the sequences in which The Man sees
an enticing vision of the city (associated with his temptation), or when
he imagines an image of drowning his wife (linked to his homicidal
tendencies). Murnau also gains access to a character's interiority through
the technique of superimposition - for example, when The Man lies in
bed on the evening he first considers murder, water imagery is layered
over his body.. In the same scene, images of the Woman fi:om the City
are matted into the frame and matched so perfectly to his torso that she
seems to embrace him - a representation of his luse Final1y, when The
Man overcomes his moral struggle, and his sanity is restored, his new
found peace is represented by a scene of the couple walking through an
imaginar y field in the midst of city traffic (Haskel1, 405). Given these
sequences, it is understandable that Haskel1 finds the tone of Sunnse
'hal1ucinatory', and the narrative a 'victory of mind over matter' (404,
406) .. Similarly, Fieschi calls the film 'a voyage into the imaginary' (718).
It is also significant that Murnau's subjective techniques involve a
merging rather than a separation of fantasy and reality.. (Perhaps that is
why Elsaesser states that, 'Murnau's art .... comprised an ability to
naturalise artifice' [35]..) Instead of cutting away fi:om The Man and the
City Woman to a vision of the illusory metropolis, the scene is
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'projected' behind the couple, in the very same space.. Similarly, rather
than cut away fi:om The Man in his bed to an image of the water, Murnau
makes the lake 'wash' over him. And, finally, in the urban traffic jam, the
eity 'becomes' the country.. Mary Ann Doane finds this tension between
realism and fiction evinced in the film's c10sing image: 'the final signature
of the text is not that sun which is the most natural thing in nature but
an artificial stylized sun. The distinction between the natural and the
cultural (artificial) is a problem throughout the text' (1977: 76)
On the one hand, it is easy to read Sunrzse as a rather conservative
drama when viewed from a psychoanalytic perspective. For Wood, it is a
tale of 'untrammeled libido and its subjugation through the order of
marriage' (11) .. Given that Murnau was homosexual, Wood also finds
(in the text's banishment of the ambiguous City Woman) an allegory for
the directar's rejection of his own sexual preference: 'one cannot escape
the feeling that in relegating the City Woman ... to the night and the
marshes, Murnau was degrading his own sexual energies, under
the overwhelming weight of the dominant sexual ideology' (17). On the
other hand, by subtitling Sunrzse, 'A Song of Two Humans' (without
reference to men or women), Murnau is, perhaps, hinting that romantic
love is gender-neutraL
However, on another level, one could argue that the psychic
trajectory traced in Sunrise is daring, rather than tame.. Far, in The Man
and The Wife, we have characters who leave the constrained, sentimental
world of standard melodrama and descend inlO the abyss of the psyche
- testing the limits of human emotion, looking malevolence in the face,
and, then moving on.. If Sunrise teaches us anything, it is that love is only
possible by confronting hate - that attaining spiritual heights is likely
only if one has sunk to corporeal depths.. Perhaps this is why Dorothy
Jones argues that Sunrzse is not a conventional marality tale.. Instead, she
c1aims, it demonstrates 'that good and evil are both part of living, that our
mistakes and our suffering need not ruin us, but that what these events
mean lO us and what we do with them is what matters, for they may
indeed become the very means by which our lOmorrow may prove to be
a better day' (262). That The Man must almost slay his wife in order to
love her, that The Wife can confront his treachery, yet forgive him,
reveals how we must face the heart of darkness in arder to see the light
(an image that evokes the daily cyc1e so crucial to the narrative of
Sunrzse).
Water superimposed over The Man's body
The Gity Woman superimposed
The return voyage: a storm at sea
SUNRISE
50 51
SUNRISE
This could be the reason why Alexander Astruc identifies
Murnau's style with the act of destruction. As he cryptically writes:
'Every frame of Murnau's is the story of a murder The camera will have
the simplest and most shocking of roles: that of being the annunciating
and prescient terrain of an assassination, ... The story of the sequence
is the accomplishment of that promise of death' (71),'
POETRY/NARRATIVE
It is very strange to me that we have a generation born and
grown to manhood since the motion pictures were invented, and
yet so far, no great Poet of the new art has arisen,
F.W Murnau ('Films of the Future', 27)
In perhaps a gesture of false modesty, Murnau, writing in 1928, decried
the dearth of cinematic poets - though he himself was clearly a
candidate for such an appellation.. Decades later, in fact, Martin Scorsese
called Sunrise a 'superproduction, an experimental film and a visionar y
poem' (A Personal Journey, Part II).
Many of the sequences in the film (read previously along the axis
of subjectivity/ objectivity) could just as easily be examined along the
continuum of poetry and narrative, When The Man lies in bed plotting
his wife's murder, and shots of the water's surface are superimposed over
his body, the imagery functions as something more than a sign of his
homicidal plans, Rather, it serves on a semantic level to signal that he is
spiritually 'sunk' .. In general, such poetic touches come at highly stylised
moments in the film and tend to interrupt the flow of the narrative -
substituting the layered sense of metaphor far the progressive logic of
metonymy. Thus, the phantasmagoric image of the reconeiled couple
walking through a meadow, stops urban traffic dead in its tracks -
freezing an instant of time,
Sunnse opens with a dense poetic sequence that retards the
narrative befare it can begin: a visual collage is introduced by the words,
'Summertime .... vacation time', In a series of six shots, we see
catalogued and conjoined (through blocking, matting, or
superimposition) speeding trains, ocean liners, beach bathers, excursion
boats, sailboats, and warkday metropolitan streets.. Already embedded in
52
The Man returns home from a lovers' tryst
Intertitle representing the City Woman's words
The Art Deco sunrise at the film's end
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this complex discourse are sites and vehic1es of importance to the
upcoming drama: the city, the water, boats and trains, Already
resonating are thematic oppositions central to the narrative: labour
versus leisure, toil versus pleasure,
Frequently, props, intertitles and gestures in Sunrise take on a
symbolic charge. When, during his marshland tryst with the City
Woman, The Man nervously tosses away a flower, it signifies his
rejection of the world of Nature (wife, country) in favour of the realm
of Artifice (flapper, city). When he walks home from his rendezvous
amid hanging fish nets, the decor functions not only as realistic detail
but as a sign of his entrapment. When an intertitle ('spoken' by the
City Woman) asks The Man, 'Couldn't [your wife] get drowned?' -
the words themselves 'sink' on the screen, descending like lines of
concrete poetry.. Finally, when the hollow bull rushes (which The
Man has tied to his wife) dri away from her and float on the water's
surface, we are reminded of the inevitable rise (or return) of the
repressed - the very Desire which has led him to contemplate murder in
the first place,
STASIS/MOVEMENT
The feeling for the expressive force of movement is perhaps the
essence of Murnau's arto Robin Wood (12)
One of the reasons that Murnau was summoned to Hollywood was the
aesthetic triumph of his virtuosic camera movement in Da Letzte Mann
(The Last Laugh) , Such extraordinary flourishes (which went beyond
the expositor y requirements of narrative) were a sign of the film's status
as a 'work of art.' Murnau brought the same sensibility to Sunrzse, and
sorne of its most beloved sequences involve a delicate balance between
stasis and motion.
As in Da Letzte Mann, sorne of the movement in Sunrlse is
produced by the camera (to which a Photoplay critic wittily assigned a
'best performance of the month' award [Lipkin, 361]) For The Man's
infamous walk through the marshes, a camera was mounted on a ceiling
track (Desilets, 15) and executed a complex choreography that followed
and lost him (happening on the City Woman and two artificial moons in
54
the process), What is especially of note is the friction created between the
camera's relentless advance and The Man's heavy, lumbering gait, which
seems to frustrate any sense of progress" A similar tension is apparent in
the couple's sailing trip to town" Up until the point when The Man
attempts to murder his wife, his movements are slow and ponderous; it's
as though his body is fighting his dreadful intent.. But when his wife
comprehends his murderous goal, the action freezes - becoming a virtual
tableau of h ~ r r o r a n ~ terror. Then, when he abandons his heinous plans,
the pace radlcally qUlckens as the boat plows swiftly through the water.
The segment ends in a flurry of animation: The Wife runs from the boat
to the shore, The Man desperately chasing after her" This scene is
followed by one of the most memorable instances of camera movement
in the film- the trolley ride from country to town" Again, it is the contrast
between the flowing motion of the camera (mounted on the vehic1e) and
the stilted, leaden quality of the couple 's rapport which gives the scene
resonance.. As Wood comments: 'the feeling of forward movement
counterpoint[s] the .. ". quasi-paralyzed attitudes of the man and the wife'
(14) .. In these various episodes, stasis signifies distress and movement
implies freedom, but the two poies are given an opposite valence
elsewhere.. When the couple isfinally reunited in the city, they calmly
dine together then peacefully sail home on a mirrored lake. Here, it is the
brisk and furious wind that embodies movement and now it is associated
with danger.
In addition to subverting movement through the stationary
blocking of actor s, Murnau also uses other pictorial techniques" As
Eisner remarks: 'Sometimes the art-historian in Murnau chose to arrange
the objects in a shot like a painter composing a stilllife' (74), As evidence
of this, one critic who reviewed Sunrise made the observation that 'Many
of th[e] shots have the art value of etchings' (' Sunrzse', Oct 1927).,
Another writer compared Sunnse to 'Dutch gente painting' (Glassgold,
283). But, as Wood remarks, 'any sense we may have of Murnau as a
dramatic portrait-painter is very quickly qualified by our sense of
movement in his films' (12).,
While, on one level, the issue of stasis versus action can be read in
purely formal terms, on another it invokes the broader question of
essentialism versus historicity., In several reviews, critics use terms like
'universal' or 'archetypal' to refer to Murnau's work - epithets which are
associated with timelessness" Petrie states, explicitly, the view that
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Murnau was 'never particularly interested in exploring the economic or
social contexts within which the human dramas of his stories took place'
(43) .. Similarly, Robert Herring accuses Sunrise of being irrelevant: 'The
cinema should be the means of this age to express what this age feels and
there is nothing of this age in Sunrise' (44)
In one sense, we have already countered this theory by
contextualising the iconic Woman fl:om the City as a flapper of the 1920s.
Also, her status as a figure of erotic trespass (adulteress or same-sex
partner) links her to the influence of Weimar culture, with its 'fascination
with sexual transgression and the violation of traditional taboos through
the exploration of pornography, prastitution, androgyny, [and]
homosexuality' (Doane, 1991: 142-3).. Similarly, AlIen and Gomery's
discussion of Murnau and the German film 'invasion' lends added
historical weight to the text .. Finally, Doane points out how The Man's
adulteraus liaison is firmly rooted within the economic order.. Thus, the
couple 's past happiness (rendered in flashback) is associated with the
man's physicallabour; he must then 'relinquish his material possessions
in order to possess the object of desire' (1977: 72-3)..
Significantly, when Sunrz.se premiered in New York on 23 September
1927 at the Times Square Theatre, it shared the bill with two Movietone
newsreels - one of which was The Man of the Hour, a documentary about
Benito Mussolini (Desilets, 40). The documentary's European setting
invoked the continental background of Sunrse, but it also braught politica!
reality directly into the realm of the film in a manner which emphasised the
trajectory 'From Caligari to Hitler' .. Critic Kenneth White described the
documentary as showing: 'Fascist soldiers on horseback [who] deployed and
shouted and c10mped - c10mped - endlessly over paving stones for very
attentive and astonished eyes' (582)..
Hence, as though vulnerable to permeable borders, the
circumstances of Sunrise's exhibition allowed the social world to
infiltrate the abstract universe of the film.
PAINTINGjCINEMA
Painting is a thundering collision of different worlds, intended to
create a new world in, and from, the struggle with one another.
.... Each work originates just as does the cosmos - thraugh
56
catastrophes which out of the chaotic din of instruments
ultimately create a symphony, the music o the spheres.
Wassily Kandinsky (quoted in Herbert, 35)
1have cited critics who have compared Murnau's mise en scene to stilllife
compositions, and noted the influence of Expressionism on his work.. But
the most important connection between his films and art history has not
yet been braached and seems to be absent fl:om the criticalliterature.
3
To
pursue the issue, we must recall that the director was born Friedrich
Plumpe and took the name Murnau after a Bavarian town associated
with the famous Blaue Reiter (Blue Rider) movement in Germany of the
early 1900s - a fact that the art student Plumpe would surely have
known.. One version of the story c1aims that Plumpe took an alias to hide
his acting career from his parents (Wakeman, 807) - but whether or not
this is true, his particular choice of name seems significant
The driving force behind the Blaue Reiter group was a Russian
migr to Munich - Wassily Kandinsky - who drew around him such
painters as Gabriele Munter, Alexei von Jawlensky, August Macke, Franz
Marc, Marianne von Werefkin and Paul Klee.. Not formally a
'movement' (in the sense of Futurism or Surrealism), the Blaue Reiter
group formed a loose affiliation to work together on the publication of
an A lmanac (in 1912) and on two major exhibitions.. None the less, the
artists shared a certain philosophy of creation and saw themse1ves as
prime movers in the international drive toward modernism..
According to art historian Hans K. Roethel, the hamlet of Murnau
was 'an oversized village and not quite a town, situated on the Staffelsee,
one of those attractive lakes between Munich and the Alps' (7).. The
connection between the artists and the town arase when Kandinsky and
Munter first visited in 1904, and decided to spend a summer there in 1908.
They were joined by Jawlensky and von Werefkin (Vezin and Vezin, 65) ..
Kandinsky and Munter acquired a house in Murnau in 1909 (Roethel, 20)
and it became their home base - the 'second mythical town of
Kandinsky's inner cosmology after Moscow' (Vezin and Vezin, 65).
Several of the Blaue Reiter artists painted scenes of Murnau - a village
(situated by a lake) not unlike the fictional one in Sunnse .. One painting
which comes to mind is Munter's Vzew of the Murnau Marsh (1908),
evocative of the site of the lovers' tryst in Sunrise; another is
Kandinsky's Razlroad in Murnau (1909), which is reminiscent of the
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farm couple's trip from the village to the eity Finally, Jawlensky's
Summer Evening in Murnau (1908-9), which depicts a vibrant sunset.
In addition to the obvious assoeiations with the landscape, sorne of
the theories propounded by the group seem relevant to Murnau's work"
As the quote from Kandinsky's 'Reminiscences' (1913) reveals, the artist
saw creation in terms of merged oppositions - which is precisely the
notion we have privileged in examining Murnau's work. Primary among
such 'border crossings' was the blurring of lines between abstraction and
realism, which Kandinsky saw as 'two paths which lead in the end to one
and same goal' (quoted in Roethel, 69). Significantly, this tendency is
also found in Sunnse. Kandinsky's quote also reveals his interest in
musical form - not dissimilar to the structure of Sunnse, which Murnau
deemed a 'song,,' Interestingly, one of the artists associated with the
group was the painter/ composer Arnold Schoenberg.
According to Annette and Luc Vezin, the Blaue Reiter group imagined
a 'universal' art that was characterised by 'neither nationality, nor frontiers,
but simply humanity' (9).. This philosophy fits with Murnau's titling of
Sunrise as 'a song of two humans'" The Blaue Reiter artists were firseinated
with folklore (a direction encouraged by Munter [Zweite, 21D. In particular,
Kandinsky was intrigued by Bavarianglass paintings (hunterglasDzlder) which
made objects represented on the surface appear almost melted or liquefied
(Vezin and Vezin, 74). According to Armin Zweite, 'Precisely this
phenomenon - the dissolution of the concrete and the superimposition of
different layers of reality - was the problem with which Kandinsky was
grappling in his own painting at this time' (21-2). Again, both the appeal of
folk art (like the peasant dance in Sunrise) and the notionof images 'dissolved'
and 'superimposed' have resonant implications in relation to the visual style
of Murnau's film.
While the modernist urban scene that appears in the opening of
Sunnse is not directly assoeiated with Blaue Reiter iconography, it is tied
10 one of the painters they championed - Robert Delaunay, a figure
honoured by an article in The Blue RiderAlmanac Two of Delaunay's
paintings which evoke Sunrise are Champ de Mars, The Red Tower
(1911), with its fi:actured Eiffel Tower and superimposed buildings; and
The Wlndow on the City (1912), a picture which accompanied the essay
on Delaunay in the A lmanac.
The final connection has to do with the 'spirituality' one senses in
Sunrise; a spirituality which is omnipresent in Blaue Reiter philosophy.
58
As Kandinsky wrote: 'The Art of today ..... enshrines ... the spirituality
that is ripe to the point of revelation' (quoted in Roethel, 69).
CLASSICAL/MODERNIST
Critics are inclined to belittle them and call them cheap. But
[critics] don't seem to sense the idea that life is made up largely
of melodrama.
Franz Borzage (quoted in Wakeman, 46)
The Movietone newsreel shown at the New York premiere of Sunrise
was not the only contemparaneous Fox production to share screen or
publicity space with Murnau's film.. In the same year that Sunrise was
made and on the same studio back lot, the American director Frank
Borzage (1893-1962) shot Seventh Heaven (1927), also starring Janet
Gaynor.. Borzage, in fact, received the first Academy Award for
Directing for the film and Gaynar was awarded the Academy's Best
Actress honour for her cumulative work on Sunnse, Seventh Heaven and
Street Angel (1928). Gaynor went on to make around thirty-six films for
Fox, including Daddy Long Legs (1931), DelicLOus (1931), State Fair
(1933), Paddy the Next Be.st Thing (1933) and The Farmer Takes a Wift
(1935) .. Tired of being typecast by Fox in roles designed to show her
'innocence, vulnerability and sweetness' (Bird, 30), Gaynor left the
studio in 1937 after having been invited by David O. Selznick to appear
inA Star IS Born.. By drawing on the historical and metonymic proximity
between Sunnse and Seventh Heaven - as well as on their shared female
star - we can place the films within a comparative fi:ame, thereby
foregrounding the parallels and differences between Murnau's movie
and the more conventional genre product of Seventh Heaven..
In Sunnse the setting is ambiguous, drifting between Europe and
the States; Seventh Heaven (stylistically a more 'American' film) is,
ironically, set plainly in the slums of Paris in Montmartre.. The precise
chronological moment is lefi: vague in Sunnse (the town seems to be
based in the eighteenth century while the eity is marked by the 1920s);
Seventh Heaven is, however, firmly set in the years leading up 10 World
War L Whereas the moral universe of Sunrise is dubious (The Man is
both sympathetic and dastardly, and The City Woman is equally alluring
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and pernicious), the characters in Seventh Heaven are either good or evil.
The 'good' characters include: Diane (Gaynor), a poor waif who is
preyed on by her drunken, sadistic sister, Nana (Gladys Brockwell);
Chico (Charles Farrell), a kindly street cleaner who takes Diane in when
she is homeless; Pere Chevillion (Emile Chautard), a genial priest; and
sorne ftiendly neighbours. Neither Diane nor Chico show a 'dark' side
comparable to that of Murnau's farmer: Diane is portrayed as saintly,
and the only struggle in which Chico engages is the one to realise his love
for Diane.. In this respect, the film, though melodramatic in tone, adopts
the style of a romantic comedy, whereby one lover (who is initially
resistant) must be won over by the other (who is immediately smitten)-
though the conclusion is never in doubt.
As is often the case with conventional melodrama which tends to
focus on female victimhood and virginity (D..W. Griffith's films being a
prime example), Seventh Heaven sidesteps the erotic.. (As Jean-Pierre
Coursodon wrote: 'much of [Borzage's] creative energy was channeled
toward devising ways of making sexual fulfillment difficult, impossible,
or unthinkable for his protagonists' [Wakeman, 43]..) Although Chico
and Diane become enamoured of each other, their affection seems
60 Janet Gaynor in Seventh Heaven (1927)
passionless and domestic: he grows to love her primarily for her ability
to sew, cook and adjust his cummerbund.. The film avoids the disturbing
erotic thrust of Sunrise, making the crimes of its villainess (Nana) ones
of cruelty and addiction rather than seduction. The film's one and only
sexual1y charged moment happens when Chico passes on the stairs a
partial1y clad woman who is standing suggestively in the doorway to her
flato He continues on his way.. Had he not, he might have found himself
in the dangerous realm of Sunnse.
In keeping with its high moral tone, Seventh Heaven has both a
patriotic and religious bias, something which Sunnse lacks. Chico happily
goes off to fight for France in the war, and tel1s his neighbours: 'We m u ~ t
defend our homes and our women.' Murnau, though a former milirary
pilot, was a pacifist. If he had any inter est in making a war film, it was not
to 'treat .... the glorification of gore and wholesale slaughter, but rather
[to] disclos[e] its perniciousness .... convincing people of the utter futility
of physical combat' (Murnau, 'The Ideal Picture', 41).
A religious theme is, of course, implicit in the title of Seventh
Heaven, a reference to celestial spheres and to the rewards of good
earthly behaviour.. Throughout, Chico talks of his relationship to the
'Bon Dieu' .. Pere Chevillion is a stand-in for the Maker; he intervenes in
the lives of Chico and Diane as proof that 'God's in his heaven, and all's
right with the world'.
The symbolism of the title permeates the drama on various
registers.. I1's a reference to Chico's seventh floor residence, to which the
couple climbs when Diane first moves in (he tel1s her: '1 work in the
sewer but live near the stars') .. The story also charts Chico's professional
rise ftom underground worker to street sweeper, another ascendancy on
the high/low scale of existence that rewards those who are virtuous and
who persevere. Finally, at the end of the film, a suspenseful moment is
created by an association between the couple's attic love nest and the
afterlife.. Chico is reported killed in action, but he surprises Diane by
suddenly returning to their apartment - blind but alive, fil1ed with divine
visiono The film closes on a shot showing a shaft of sunlight striking the
floor, symbolic of the couple's rekindling of their faith and love..
While Sunnse plays on metaphors of light and dark, day and
night, the sun and the moon, ir relieves them of their religious overtones
(which are implicit in Sudermann's short story), and draws on a more
primal and natural iconography. Though Murnau's Man and Wife are
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'remarried' in a church, it is less a religious act than a psychic and
metaphysical encounter. If Chico moves from the sewer to the stars, The
Man forever stuck in the marsh. But it is its moral 'pollution' that
makes Sunrise so intriguing. As Pauline Kael has written (in regard to
cinema in general), 'What draws us to movies in the first place, the
opening into other, forbidden or surprising, kinds of e.xperience, the
vitality and corruption and irreverence of that expenence are so dHect
and immediate and have so little connection with what we have been
taught is art' (105). . .
Similar to its narrative, the style of Seventh Heaven 1S more
conventional than that of Sunrise .. With the exception of the tour defrce
sequence in which the couple first climbs their 'stairway to heaven' (an.d
the escalating camera reveals, through a missing fourth wall, theH
ascent), Borzage uses fairly standard camera positions and
as well as established mlse en scene (for example, a low angle when Dlane
is beaten by her sister; a travelling shot as Diane runs out into the street;
realistic painted backdrops of Paris) .. This is in marked contrast to the
modernist visual excesses of Sunrlse, whose technique many critics
faulted fo: 'overwhe1m[ing] a basically impoverished story, resulting in
confusing and pointless overstatement' (Lipkin, 360).
Seventh Heaven, however, was described in very different terms,
ones which were tinged by gritty American imagery and slang. Varzety
called it 'a big romantic, gripping and red-blooded story 10ld in a
straight to the shoulder way'. Not surprisingly, the. reviewer
Borzage 's style as liberating the film's wholesome emotlOnal potenual:
'when the last foot of some 11,000 or so feet is unwound, if there is a
dry eyelash on either man, woman or child, they just have no red blood'
('7th Heaven') ..
Far more complex and ambivalent was the critical and specta10rial
response 10 Sunrzse, a film which - to draw on metaphors of blood and
bloodlessness - casts the threat 10 God and the Family in perverse,
female, vampiristic terms.
SURVEYORjSURVEYED
Murnau's cinema, [is] so much ... about mediated desire, desire
of an image for an image: the open secret of film-making itself,
62
eroticising the very act of looking, but also every
obJect looked at by a camera.. .
Thomas Elsaesser (39)
It should be clear that Sunnse is a highly se1f-conscious text which invok
the cinema and the act of spectatorship upon which the mediu:
thnves; Sorr:e,examples of this have already been noted, in particular, the
ersatz mov1.e that The Man and the City Woman 'watch' during their
III the,marshes. is sure1y means when he
wntes of Murnau s work as lllvolvlllg med1ated desire' or the 'desire of
image for an image'. Doane agrees, finding that the 'desire of the text
1S to remove desire from direct sensory experience' - presumably, to the
of art (1977: 74) .. For this reason, vision and the gaze are central to
d1scourse of Sunrzse Sensing this, Louise Bogan, writing poeticall
III 1927, sees Murnau's camera as 'an eye for motion-beside-withi2
motion, a retina ref1ecting an intricate1y f10wing world..... [It] moves as
the eye and the eye, with the camera, makes journeys' (408) ..
Clearly, the theme of vision is pivotal to the narrative.. When the
Woman from the City lusts after The Man, she walks to his cottage and
The Wife tends to her adulterous husband
(")
r-
UJ
UJ
(")
UJ
63
(')
(J)
65
BFI FILM
take the place of the cinema audience as the in t ' (')
who are substitutes for themselves" bnde and ;:
The film here signals the mode of ' d y n rew states: (J)
. lf response 1t emands fro . 1 (J)
ltse as ritual, the very observing of h' h h h m .us, slgna s
viewer' (51)..' w 1C as t e power to ltberate the
Given the self-referentiality of thi . ,
?n lea.ving church, the couplepass a
m Wh1Ch mantal portr aits are displayed 'T' 1 h .P g a,phy StUdlO
h d .. sea t eH symbol '
t ey ecide to have their picture taken and thr h h 1C
of a print, become spectator's of o;n mC1an s
ave een of theirs" Their picture is taken a ' . ce, as we
background (not unlike a fil ) d gamst ajaux arbour
h m set an we are' h
otograP
l
her': view the couple's inverted image as e
ens - a c ear slgn of lts artifice" e
S
Herhe, have a concise and brilliant emblem of what k
unnse t at lS th ' ' , f 'fil mar s
Molly Haskell's o mover reality' (Haskell, 406). In
s, unnse serves 'as a defi ' , f' h .
itself (404).. mtlOn o t e cmema'
The Man and The Wife in church watch a wedding
peers through his window, thus occupying the traditional position of the
male voyeur.. Significantly, The Man's gaze is not highly active or sexual..
Apparently more tortured by the City Woman than aroused, he barely
looks at her.. At other times, his gaze seems equally impotent, as, for
instance, when he stares piteously at his wife as she feeds the chickens.
She later returns his pathetic gaze, regarding him asleep in bed after his
tryst with his lover This choreography of looks reaches a crescendo
when the couple ventures to town, their relation is charted according
to who stares and who averts their eyes,
But there are other scenes within the film that have a resonant
relation to the film medium.. It's significant that as part of their night
on the town the couple visits Luna Park - a site whose name not only
continues the sun and the moon metaphor of the film - but which
invokes a locale central to the prehistory of cinema, the amusement
park.4 Films were first exhibited in amusement parks, and it was at
these venues that what Tom Gunning calls the early 'cinema of
attractions' was formulated.. Like the lines of people crushing to get
into Luna Park in Sunrise, crowds eventually queued up for the
movies,
The amusement park in Sunrise, like the city in which it is located,
seems European.. In its visual configuration, the park is reminiscent of
the sideshow setting of Das Cabznet des Dr" Caligari. And in an
Expressionistic touch, shadows of the funfair crowd are seen silhouetted
on a wall..
There is another episode which happens in the city that is relevant
to themes of vision and the cinema: the church scene. The couple,
having struggled with the recognition of infidelity and violence, is
finally reunited, and they walk dazedly through town.. As they embrace,
bells are heard, and a church comes into view with a wedding in
progress.. The couple exchange poignant glances and head toward the
chapeL Once inside, they become the speetators; as they watch, the
minister asks the groom whether he will protect his bride ftom harm..
Touched, The Man says 'yes' (in unison with the groom), and then falls
sobbing into his wife' s lap,
What is shown here is a demonstration of the power of
spectatorship - the very kind on which Sunrzse depends an
acknowledgment of the capacity of drama to force the viewer to
with its personae and to be moved to catharsis. It is as if the farm
64
SUNRISE
BFI FILM
SUNRISE
LOSTjFOUND
The effect oE elevated language upon an audience is not
persuasion but transpon.. At every time and in every way
imposing speech, with the spell it throws over us, prevails over
that which aims at persuasion and gratification, Our persuasions
we can usually control, but the inBuences of the sublime bring
power and irresistible might to bear.
Longinus (Smith and Parks, 65; my italics)
At its most profund and basic level, Sunrise is a drama of the 'Lost and
Found', Even the title refers to the return oE the sun after its nightly
disappearance. This dynamic oE the lost and the found applies to The
Man's love for his wife, as it does to hers for him.. lt pertains, as well, to
the City Woman's loss oE The Man's affections and to her bereft status
at the end of the tale.. Finally, it relates to the apparent death of The
Wife, who is ultimately found alive. While on the surface the story is one
of quotidian melodrama, beneath ir reveals more momentous
implications, For although the film is devoid of religious pontificating,
the narrative has an almost biblical sense of Paradise Lost and Regained,
complete with the banishment of the Devil. Aptly, Collier refers to its
denouement as restoring the farm couple's 'edenic state' of existence
(107)"
Beyond the drama of domestic romance, there are other levels at
which the tension between lost and found reverberates, and these are
linked to the flk elements within the film. Here, it is worth considering
Mark Sandberg's research on the European flk museum, an institution
which developed in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.
Sandberg remarks:
folk museums were founded in order to preserve a concentrated,
fi:ozen, tableau-like image of traditional culture at the very
moment that culture seemed most threatened by [the] changing
conditions [of] ... modernity., ... " The function of these national
ethnographic collections ... , seems . . . primarily nostalgic,
prompted by a longing for simpler, more coherent cultural forms
in a time of rapid urbanization, industrialization and
commodification" (320-1)
66
It is this that shadows the fOlk dance and pig-chasing scene in
Sunnse, as 1t do:s the Lake Arrowhead set, which bears a resemblance to
one of Europe s reconstructed open-air flk museums. Interestingl
n?tes that in Copenhagen, the director of the city's
park, TlVOh, was the same man who funded the fOlk museum an ed'fi
h
. h ' 1 ce
w 1C eventually occupied a place across the boulevard from the park
(322)., In Sunrzse elements of the 'flk museum' literally enter the fair
ground - as t.h?ugh engaging both sides of the cultural street - city and
country, tradltlon and modernity.,
, !n thislight, one might read The Man's ambivalence about leaving
h1S .w1fe the City Woman as an emblem of early modernity's
eqUlvOCatlOn about the Old and the New" Hence, it seems no accident
that, when The Man saves his spouse from drowning in the storm he
does so with bull rushes, a symbol of the agrarian realm. Perhaps he'has
also chosen to save (not murder) the Past; to let it 'Boat' to the surface
of the Present and Future" Interestingly, one of Marshall Berman's first
characterisations of the modern experience is to liken it to drowning to
being 'poured' into a 'maelstrom' (15)., '
o
(fJ
(fJ
o
(fJ
67
BFI FILM
SUNRISE
A d namic of absence and restitution is also inscribed in the style
y , '11 com e11ing about the famous scene of The
of Sunrise .. What lS h
Y
p h 'the way in which the camera
M
d Cit Woman m t e mars es lS .
an an y '1 1 'fi d' him again (after unexpectedly,
'1 ' h' t mparan y on y to n , , h
oses 1m e . , h' "f' d' is suspect since she lS not t e
'fi d' , h' lover). Here w at lS oun '" h
(J)
(J)
o
(J)
extra.s
and uncredited
Gino Corrado
barber:shop manager
Gibson Gowland
angry driver
Sidney Bracy
dancehall manager
Phillips Smalley
head walter
Barry Norton
danca
F.W. Murnau
vacationer on Doat
Sally Eilers
Herman Bing
Bob Kortman
Robert Parrish
Leo White
Credits eompiled by Markku
Salmi
Sumisa
A Song of Two Humans
Assistant Art Directors
Edgar G Ulmer, Alfred
Metscher
Make-up
Charles Dudley
Musical Score
Hugo Riesenfeld
Musical Score for Los
Angeles Premiere
Carli Elinor
CREDITS
George O'Brien
the man
Janet Gaynor
the wife
Margaret Livingston
the womnfiom the city
Bodil Rosing
the maid
J" Farrell MacDonald
the photographer
Ralph Sipperly
the halrdresser
Jane Winton
the manicure gul
Arthur Housman
the oDtruslve gentleman
Eddie Boland
the Obllgzng genzleman
USA
1927
Production Company
Fox Film Corporation
A William Fox Presentation
Producer
WilliamFox
Studio Head
Winfield R Sheehan
Director
FW Mumau
Assistant Director
HermanBing
Scenario
Carl Mayer
based on the novel Die Reise
nach Tzlsit by Hermann
Sudermann
Titles
Katherine Hilliker, HH
Caldwell
Comedy Consultant
William Conselman
Directors of Photography
Charles Rosher, Karl Struss
Assistant Cameramen
Stuart Ihompson, Hal
Camey
Stills
Frank Powolny
Special Effects
FrankD. Williams
Editor
Harold Schuster
Art Director
Roehus Cliese
Art Department
Cordon Wiles
3 It is absent, at least, from the English-
language eriticalliterature
4 There were amusement parks named Luna
Park in a variety of cities, so that it almos;
became a generic name Mrchael Aronson s
'reseatch into early cinema venues In
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania reveals that there was
a park with that name there dunng the first
part of the 1900s and up until the 205 Ihere
was also one in Coney Island (New York)
1 See also Jean-Andr Fieschi (718), and Molly
Haskell (405) for similar charactensatlOns of
Sunre in terffiS of notions of dlalectlcs 01
oppositions
2 Ihis programme is in the files of the
Margaret Herrick Library of the Academy of
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Ihe rmage
is reproduced in 'L'Aurare' (41)
72
73
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en
en
BFI FILM
WORKS CITED ()
UNRISE
74
'The Alarming Inerease in Divorce', Literary
DrgestXCV, no 10,3 December 1927,p 34
Allen, Frederick Lewis, Only Yesterday An
Informal History oI the Nineteen- Twentie> (New
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Allen, Robert C and Donglas Gomery,
Frlm History Theory and Practrce (NewYork:
Knopf, 1985)
Almendros, Nestor, 'Sunrise', American
Cinematographer LXV, no 4, April 1984,
pp 28-32
Andrew, Dudley, Frlm in the Aura oI Art
(Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press,
1984), pp 27-57
AstIlle, Alexander, 'Fire and Ice', Cahrers
du <nma (English version) no. 1, January
1966, pp 69-73
'1'Autore', 1 'Avant-scene, no, 148, .Tune
1974, pp 3-65 (Sunrise issue of journal)
Belton, John,American Cmema/American
Culture (New York: McGraw Hill, 1994),
pp 131-2
Bergstrom, Janet, 'Sexuality at a Loss: The
Films of FW Murnau', in Susan Rubin Suleiman
(ed.) The Female Body in lJlstern Culture
Contemporary Per:spectives (Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1996), pp 243-61
Berman, Marshall,All That 5 Solrd Melts
mtoAir The Experience oI Modernity (New
York, Victoria, Toronto, Auckland, Middlesex:
Penguin Books, 1988)
Bird, David, 'Janet Gaynor is Dead at 77;
First "Best Aetress" Winner', The New York
Time>, 15 September 1984, Section 1, p 30
Bogan, Louise, 'Sunrise', The New Republit
52, no 673,26 Oetober 1927, pp 263--4
(Reprinted in Don Whittemore and Philip
Alan Cecehettini, Passport to Hollywood,
pp 408-10.)
Calverton, VF, lhe Bankruptey oI
Marriage (New York: Macaulay, 1928)
Collier, Jo Leslie, From Wagner to Murnau
The Transposition vf Romanticism ftom State to
Sereen (Ann Arbor and London: UMI Research
Press, 1988)
Daniel, Robert L,American WOmen m the
20th Century The Festival oI Lije (New York:
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1987)
Desilets, Elliott 'FW Murnau's Sunrrse:
A Critical Study' Dissertation, Columbia
University Teachers College, EdD, 1979
Doane, Mary Ann, 'Desire in Sunrise', .Film
Reader 2,1977, pp 7\-7
". 'Femmes Patale,s: Femini5m,
Film Theory, Psyehoanalysis (New York and
London: Routledge, 1991)
Eisner, Lotte H. M urnau (Berkeley and Los
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1973)
EIsaesser, Thomas, 'Seeret Affinities: F W
Murnau', Sightand Sound, Winter 1988-9,
pp 33-9
Everson, William K.,Amencan Silent
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Farber, Jim, 'Restored Sunrise Opens Pops
Season', Variety, 31 January 1992, p 48
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Richard Roud (ed.) Cinema A Critical
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pp 704-20
Glassgold, e Adolph, 'Sunnse', The Art,
12, no 5, November 1927, pp 282-3
Gunning, Tom, 'The World as Object
Lesson: Cinema Audiences, Visual Culture and
the SI Louis World's Fair', Film Hrstory 6, no
4, Winter 1994, pp 422--44
Hall, Mordaunt, 'The Sereen: A Film
Masterpiece', The New York Trme" 24
September 1927, p 15
Haskell, Molly, 'Sunrrse' , Frlm Comment,
Summer 197\, pp 16-19 (Reprinted in
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Flappers' The American Silent Mone Heroine
(Montreal: Eden Press, 1978)
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Morality', in Freda Kirehwey (ed..) Our
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Masterpieee', Quarterly Revrew oI Frlm
RadlO, and TelevlSlon 9, no. 3, Spring 1955
pp 238-62 '
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James Smnh and Edd Winfield Parks (eds) The
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-----'TheIdeal Picture Needs No
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Literary DIge.st XCV, no. 10,3 December 1917
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Sudermann Tale Offers Gorgeous PlOduction
01 Simple Plot', Movmg Plcture WOrld
I Oetober 1927. '
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Wilson Co, 1987), pp 807-19
()
en
75
UNRISE
BFI FILM
BIBLlOGRAPHY
U!
U!
The bibliography is an extensive listing of work which deals with
Murnau and Sunnse; it includes those works cited which bear directly on
Sunnse ..
White, Kenneth, 'Film: On Mmnau',
Hound and Horn 4, no 4, July-Septemher
1931, pp 581-4
Whittemore, Don and Philip Alan
Cecchettini, Passport to Hollywood Film
lmmigrants Ant!wlogy (New York: McGraw-
Hil!,1976)
76
Williams, Raymond, The Country and the
City (New York: Oxlord University Press,
1973)
Wood, Robin, 'Murnau's Midnight and
Sumise', Film Commem 12, no 3, May-June
pp.. 4-19
Zweite Armin Ihe Blue Rider In the
(Munich: Prestel-Verlag,
1989).
Books, Dissertations and Monographs
Berriatua, luciano, 105 Proverbios Chino,5 de
FW Murnau Etapa Americana (Madrid:
Filmoteca Espanola, 1990-2).
Collier, Jo Leslie, From Wagner to Murnau
Ihe TranspoJition of Romantlei'smfrom 5tage ro
Sereen (Ann Arbor and London: UMI Research
Pr ess, 1988)
Desilets, Elliot, 'F W Mmnau's Sunrzse: A
Critical Study' (Dissertation, Columbia
University Teachers College, 1979)
Domarchi, Jean, Murnau (Paris:
Anthologie du Cinma, 1965)
Eisner, Lotte, Murnau (Berkeley and
Los Angeles: University 01 California Press,
1973).
Gehier, Fred and Ullrich Kasten, Fnedruh
Wzlhelm Murnau (Augsburg: AV-Verlag Franz
Fischer, 1990)
Huff, Theodore, An lndex to the Eilml 01
FWMurnau (London: BFI, 1948)
Jameux, Charles, E W Murnau (Paris:
Editions Universitaires, 1965)
Sections within Books
Allen, Rohert C and Douglas Gomery,
Film H15tory Theory and Pracuce (New York:
Knopf, 1985), pp 91-108
Andrew, Dudley, 'The l urn and Retmn 01
Sunrise', in Fllm in the Aura of Art (Ptinceton,
NJ: Princeton University Press, 1984),
pp 27-57
Baxter, John, The Hollywood Exzles (New
York: laplinger, 1976), pp 67-72
Belton, John, American CmeJna/Amencan
Culture (New York: McGraw Hil!, 1994),
pp 131-2
Bergstrom, Janet, 'Sexuality at a Loss: lhe
Films 01 FW Mmnau', in Susan Rubin
Suleiman (ed ) The Female Body In Western
Culture. Contemporary Per.spewves (Cambridge,
MA: Harvard University Press, 1996),
pp 243-61
Brownlow, Kevin, The Parade', Gone By
(Berkeley, Los Angeles, London: University 01
California Press, 1968), pp. 223-36
Domarchi, Jean, 'La Periode Americaine et
son c:euvre: 1 'Aurore', in Anthologle du
Clnma (Paris: L'Avant-scene, 1966),
pp 369-73
Everson, Wil!iam K ,Amerzcan Silent EIlm
(New York: Oxlord, 1978), pp. 317-33
Fieschi, Jean-Andr, 'FW Murnau', in
Richard Roud (ed.) Cinema A Criucal
Dlaionary/The Major Film-Makers/Volume
Two ([ondon: MaItin Seeker and Warburg,
1980), pp. 704-20
Garhicz, Adam and Jaee, Klinowski,
Cinema, Ihe Magzc Vehzcle. A Guide to ltl
Achlevements (Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press,
pp 128-9
Jacobs, [ewis, The Rzse 01 the A metican
Film (New YOIk: Teachers College Press,
1969), pp 361-5
Johnson, limothy, 'Sunnse', in Frank N
Magil! (ed.) Survey 01 Cznema/
Szlent Films, volume 3 (Englewood ChUs, NJ:
Salem Press, 1982), pp.. 1081-3
Lyon, Christopher and Susan Doll (eds),
The lnternatlonal Dzctionary oI Fzlm,s and
Ezlmmakw' Volume 1 (Chicago: SI. James,
1984), pp 459-61
PelIie, Graham, Hollywood Destlnzes
European Drreeton znAmerica, 1922-1931
(London, Boston, Melboull1e, Henley:
Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1985), pp 26-61
Pratt, George e, Spellbound in Darkness A
Hzstory 01 the Szlem Film (Greenwich, Conn:
New YOIk Graphic Society, 1973), pp. 461-3
Sadoul, Georges, DletlOnary of Films
(translated by Peter Monis; Berkeley and Los
Angeles: University of Califoll1ia Press, 1972),
pp. 361-2
Siide, Anthony, Seleaed Film Crztlasm/Vol
3, 1921-30 (Metuchen, NJ: ScarecIOw Press,
1982), pp.. 282-5
("")
U!
77
SUNRISE
Vermilye, Jerry, The Fzlms of the Twenties
(Seeaueus, NJ: Citadel Press, 1985), pp 177-81
Wakeman, John, World Film Director,s,
Volume 1, 1890-1945 (NewYork: HW
Wilson, 1987), pp 807-19
Whittemore, Don and Phi1ip Alan
Ceeehettini, Possport lO Hollywood Fzlm
fmmrgrants Anthology (New York: MeGraw-
Hill, 1976), pp 387-423
Film Journal Articles
AlIen, Robert e, 'William Fox Presents
Sunre', Quarterly Review of Film Studies 2,
August 1977, pp 327-38
Almendros, Nestor, 'Sunre', American
CmemalOgrapher LXV, no 4, April1984,
pp 28-32
Amengual, B., 'Murnau Revisite: L'Aurore',
eune Cinema, no 193, February/Mareh 1989,
pp 26-9
AstIue, Alexander, 'Fire and Ice', Cahien
du cin'ma (Eng1ish version), no 1, JanualY
1966, pp 69-73
'L 'Aurore' , L'Avant-.5cene, no" 148, June
1974, pp 3-65 (Sumise issue of journa1)
Blin, RogeI, 'Murnau - ses fi1ms', Revue du
ein'ma, Ju1y 1931
Brown, GeoH, 'Sunme -A Song of Two
Humans', Monthly Film Bulletin XLII, no 495,
Apri11975, PP 92-3
Doane, Mary Ann, 'Desire in Sunrise', Film
Reader 2,1977, PP 71-7
Domalchi, Jean, 'Presenee de F W
Murnau', Cahier.s du cinma, no" 21, Match
1955, PP 3-\1
Eisner, lotte, 'Murnau et L 'Aurore', Cinma
62, no. 84, Mareh 1964, PP 42-72
EIsaesser, Ihomas, 'Secret Affinities: FW
Murnau', 5rght and Sound, Winter 1988-9,
PP 32-9
Haskell, Molly, 'Sumise', Fzlm Comment,
Summer 1971, PP 16-19 (Reprinted in
Whittemore and Ceechettini, pp, 402-8.)
Huff, Theodole, 'An Index to the Films of
FW Murnau', Sight and Sound, no 15,
PP 11-12
Jones, DOIOthy, 'Sunme: A Murnau
Masterpieee', Quarterly Review oi Film,
78
and TelevislOn 9, no 3, Spring 1955,
238-62
Lipkin, Steven, 'Sunrise: A Film Meets its
Public', Quarterly Revrew of Film Studres 2,
August 1977, pp 339-55
"" Marias, M" 'Sunrise\ Cawblanca, 10
Oetober 1981, p 22
Rayns, Tony, 'Sunme:A Songof Two
Humans', Monthly Film Bulletin XLII, no 495,
April1975,pp 92-3
Wood, Robin, 'L'Atalante: Ihe Limits of
Liberation', CmActlOn, no, 10, October 1987,
pp 27-34
Midnight and
Sumise', Film Comment 12, no 3, May-June
1976, pp 4---19
_____' Sumise: A Reappraisal',
CinAetwn, no 17, SummeI 1989, pp 66-71
Struss, Karl, 'Karl Struss: Man With a
Camera', American CmemalOgtapher LVIII,
no 3, March 1977, pp 278-9
Newspaper, Trade Paper and Magazine
Articles and Reviews
Adilman, Sid, 'Resurreeted Murnau Classic
Headed fOI Tellmide Festival', Vanety 304,
26 August 1981, pp 5,36
Bogan, Louise, 'Sumise', Ihe New Republie,
52, no 673,26 Oetober 1927, pp 263-4
(Reprinted in Whittemore and Ceeehettini,
pp 408-10..)
Falber, Jim, 'Restored Sum15e Opens
Pops Season', Variety, 31 January 1992, p 48
G1assgold, e Ado1ph, 'Sum15e', IheArts
12, no 5, November 1927, pp
Hall, MOIdaunt, 'The Sereen: A Film
Masterpiece', The New York Trmes, 24
September 1927, p 15
Hening, Robert, 'Synthetie Dawn',
Clo.5e-Up 2, no 3, March 1928, pp 38-45
Josephson, Matthew, 'F W Murnau: The
German Genius of the Fi1ms', Motwn Preture
Clas"" Oetober 1926
Kann, 'Sunrrse and Movietone', The Film
Daily, 25 September 1927
Murnau, F.W ,'Fi1ms of the Future',
MeCalts Maga,me, September 1928,
pp 27,90
Ideal Pietme Needs No
IitIes', Theatre Maga:ine January 1928 pp
41,72 '.'
'MI Mmnau, The Screen Artist', The New
York Trm;s, 16 Oetober 1927, seetion 8, p 7
Rush, Sunme', Vanety, 28 September 192 7
p.21. '
Sanis, Andrew, 'Ihe Signs of Self-
Consciousness', The Vdlage Voree
8 February 1983, p. 39.. '
'rhe Shadow Stage: A Review of the
Newest Pietures', Photoplay 33, no 1,
Deeember 1927, P 52
Shelwood, Robert R, 'The Film of the
M,Cal!', Maga:ine, February 1928,
B F I F I
'SunriseBrings a New Day to the Movies'
Lrterary Drgest XCV no 10 3 D mb "
pp 28-9 "eee el 1927,
'Sunrise: Murnau in Fax Production of
Sudelmann Ta!e Off"rs Gorgeous Produetion
of SImple P10t , Movrng Picture World I
October 1927 '
White, Kenneth, 'Film: On Murnau'
Hound and Rom 4, no, 4,
1931, pp. 581-4.
Literary Source
Sudermann, Hermann, 'The Excursion to
Ti1sit', in Lrthuaman Tales, (Litauisehe
Ge"hrehten), translated by Lewis Galantiere
(New YOIk: Horaee Liveright, 1930)
79
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