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The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari
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==Themes and interpretations== ===Authority and conformity=== ''Caligari'', like a number of [[Weimar culture|Weimar films]] that followed it, thematises brutal and irrational authority by making a violent and possibly insane authority figure its antagonist.<ref name="Brockmann64" /><ref name="Budd1">{{Harvnb|Budd|1990a|p=1}}</ref> Kracauer said Caligari was symbolic of the German war government and fatal tendencies inherent in the German system, saying the character "stands for an unlimited authority that idolizes power as such, and, to satisfy its lust for domination, ruthlessly violates all human rights and values".<ref>{{Harvnb|Kracauer|1947|pp=64β65}}</ref> Likewise, John D. Barlow described Caligari as an example of the tyrannical power and authority that had long plagued Germany, while Cesare represents the "common man of [[unconditional obedience]]".<ref name="Barlow32" /><ref name="Brockmann66">{{Harvnb|Brockmann|2010|p=66}}</ref> Janowitz has claimed Cesare represents the common citizen who is conditioned to kill or be killed, just as soldiers are trained during their military service, and that Caligari is symbolic of the German government sending those soldiers off to die in the war.<ref name="Kracauer65" /><ref>{{Harvnb|Janowitz|1941|pp=224β225}}</ref> The control Caligari wields over the minds and actions of others results in chaos and both moral and social perversion.<ref name="Hirsch54-56">{{Harvnb|Hirsch|1981|pp=54β56}}</ref> Cesare lacks any individuality and is simply a tool of his master; Barlow writes that he is so dependent on Caligari that he falls dead when he strays too far from the source of his sustenance, "like a machine that has run out of fuel".<ref name="Barlow43">{{Harvnb|Barlow|1982|p=43}}</ref> In his book ''From Caligari to Hitler'', Kracauer argues the Caligari character is symptomatic of a subconscious need in German society for a tyrant, which he calls the German "collective soul".<ref name="Budd28" /><ref name="Hirsch54-56" /><ref name="Brockmann59">{{Harvnb|Brockmann|2010|p=59}}</ref> Kracauer argues Caligari and Cesare are premonitions of [[Adolf Hitler]] and his rule over Germany, and that his control over the weak-willed, puppet-like somnambulist prefigures aspects of the mentality that allowed the [[Nazi Party]] to rise.<ref name="Peary51" /><ref name="Hirsch54-56" /><ref name="Brockmann59" /> He calls Caligari's use of hypnotism to impose his will foreshadowing of Hitler's "manipulation of the soul".<ref>{{Harvnb|Kracauer|1947|pp=72β73}}</ref> Kracauer described the film as an example of Germany's obedience to authority and failure or unwillingness to rebel against deranged authority,<ref name="Brockmann65-66">{{Harvnb|Brockmann|2010|pp=65β66}}</ref> and reflects a "general retreat" into a shell that occurred in post-war Germany.<ref name="Scheunemann125"/> Cesare symbolises those who have no mind of their own and must follow the paths of others;<ref name="LoBrutto63" /> Kracauer wrote he foreshadows a German future in which "self-appointed Caligaris hypnotized innumerable Cesares into murder".<ref>{{Harvnb|Kracauer|1947|p=272}}</ref> Barlow rejects Kracauer's claims that the film glorifies authority "just because it has not made a preachy statement against it", and said the connection between Caligari and Hitler lies in the mood the film conveys, not an endorsement of such tyrant on the film's part.<ref name="Barlow51">{{Harvnb|Barlow|1982|p=51}}</ref> Everyday reality in ''Caligari'' is dominated by tyrannical aspects. Authorities sit atop high perches above the people they deal with and hold offices out of sight at the end of long, forbidding stairways.<ref>{{Harvnb|Barlow|1982|p=50}}</ref> Most of the film's characters are caricatures who fit neatly into prescribed social roles, such as the outraged citizens chasing a public enemy, the authoritarian police who are deferential to their superiors, the oft-harassed bureaucratic town clerk, and the asylum attendants who act like stereotypical "little men in white suits".<ref name="Barlow43" /> Only Caligari and Cesare are atypical of social roles, instead serving as, in Barlow's words, "abstractions of social fears, the incarnations of demonic forces of a nightmarish world the bourgeoisie was afraid to acknowledge, where self-assertion is pushed to willful and arbitrary power over others".<ref name="Barlow43-45">{{Harvnb|Barlow|1982|pp=43β45}}</ref> Kracauer wrote the film demonstrates a contrast between the rigid control, represented by such characters as Caligari and the town clerk, and chaos, represented by the crowds of people at the fair and the seemingly never-ending spinning of the merry-go-rounds. He said the film leaves no room for middle ground between these two extremes, and that viewers are forced to embrace either insanity or authoritarian rigidity, leaving little space for human freedom.<ref>{{Harvnb|Kracauer|1947|pp=73β74}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Brockmann|2010|p=67}}</ref> Kracauer writes: "''Caligari'' exposes the soul wavering between tyranny and chaos, and facing a desperate situation: any escape from tyranny seems to throw it into a state of utter confusion".<ref name="Kracauer74">{{Harvnb|Kracauer|1947|p=74}}</ref> Caligari is not the only symbol of arrogant authority in the film. In fact, he is a victim of harsh authority himself during the scene with the dismissive town clerk, who brushes him off and ignores him to focus on his paperwork.<ref name="Brockmann64" /><ref name="Elsaesser63" /> Film historian [[Thomas Elsaesser]] argues that Caligari's murderous rampage through Cesare can be seen as a rebellious, anti-authoritarian streak in response to such experiences as these, even in spite of his own authoritarianism.<ref>{{Harvnb|Elsaesser|2003|pp=63β64}}</ref> The Expressionistic set design in this scene further amplifies the power of the official and the weakness of his supplicant; the clerk towers in an excessively high chair over the small and humiliated Caligari.<ref name="Brockmann64" /><ref name="Kracauer72">{{Harvnb|Kracauer|1947|p=72}}</ref> The scene represents class and status differences, and conveys the psychological experience of being simultaneously outraged and powerless in the face of a petty bureaucracy.<ref name="Elsaesser63">{{Harvnb|Elsaesser|2003|p=63}}</ref> Another common visual motif is the use of stairways to illustrate the hierarchy of authority figures, such as the multiple stairs leading up to police headquarters, and three staircases ascending to Caligari in the asylum.<ref name="Kracauer72" /> Franzis expresses resentment of all forms of authority, particularly during the end of the frame story, when he feels he has been institutionalised because of the madness of the authorities, not because there is anything wrong with him.<ref name="Barlow50-51">{{Harvnb|Barlow|1982|pp=50β51}}</ref> Franzis can be seen, at least within the main narrative, as a symbol of reason and enlightenment triumphing over the irrational tyrant and unmasking the absurdity of social authority.<ref name="Barlow32" /><ref name="Eisner18" /> But Kracauer contended the frame story undermines that premise. He argues if not for the frame story, the tale of Franzis's efforts against Caligari would have been a praiseworthy example of independence and rebellion against authority. However, with the addition of the frame story, which places the veracity of Franzis's claims into question, Kracauer argues the film glorifies authority and turns a reactionary story into an authoritarian film:<ref name="Kracauer67" /><ref name="Barlow32" /><ref name="Peary51" /><ref name="Brockmann65-66" /> "The result of these modifications was to falsify the action and to ultimately reduce it to the ravings of a madman."<ref name="Robinson32" /> Kracauer believed these changes were not necessarily intentional, but rather an "instinctive submission to the necessities of the screen" because commercial films had to "answer to mass desires".<ref name="Kracauer67" /> Fritz Lang disagreed with Kracauer's argument, and instead believes the frame story makes the film's revolutionary inclinations more convincing, not less.<ref name="Barlow33" /> David Robinson said, as time passed, filmgoers have been less inclined to interpret the film as a vindication of authority because modern audiences have grown more skeptical of authority in general, and are more inclined to believe Franzis's story and interpret the asylum director as wrongly committing Franzis to silence him.<ref name="Robinson33">{{Harvnb|Robinson|1997|p=33}}</ref> ===Point of view and perception of reality=== Another major theme of ''Caligari'' is, Stephen Brockmann writes, "the destabilized contrast between insanity and sanity and hence the destabilization of the very notion of sanity itself".<ref name="Brockmann64" /> By the end of the film, according to Brockman, viewers realise the story they have been watching has been told from the perspective of an insane narrator, and therefore they cannot accept anything they have seen as reliable. The film's unusual visual abstractions and other stylised elements serve to show the world as one experienced by a madman.<ref name="Brockmann61-62">{{Harvnb|Brockmann|2010|pp=61β62}}</ref> Similarly, the film has been described as portraying the story as a nightmare and the frame story as the real world.<ref name="LoBrutto62" /> John D. Barlow said the film exemplifies a common Expressionist theme that "the ultimate perception of reality will appear distorted and insane to the healthy and practical mind".<ref>{{Harvnb|Barlow|1982|p=35}}</ref> The film serves as a reminder that any story told through a flashback subjectivises the story from the perspective of the narrator.<ref name="Kaes54" /> At the film's conclusion, the asylum director shows no indication of ill will toward Franzis; in fact, he appears to genuinely care for his patients, at least from Barlow's perspective. But Franzis still believes he is being persecuted, and thus, in his version of the story, Caligari assumes the role of persecutor.<ref name="Barlow50-51" /> However, the Expressionistic visual elements of the film are present not only in the main narrative, but also in the epilogue and prologue scenes of the frame story, which are supposed to be an objective account of reality.<ref name="LoBrutto62" /><ref name="Peary50" /><ref name="Kracauer70" /><ref name="Brockmann61-62" /><ref>{{Harvnb|Budd|1990b|p=29}}</ref> For example, the frame story scenes still have trees with tentacle-like branches and a high, foreboding wall in the background. Strange leaf and line patterns are seen on the bench Franzis sits upon, flame-like geometric designs can be seen on the walls, and his asylum cell has the same distorted shape as in the main narrative.<ref name="Barlow45-46">{{Harvnb|Barlow|1982|pp=45β46}}</ref> If the primary story were strictly the delusions of a madman, the frame story would be completely devoid of those elements, but the fact they are present makes it unclear whether that perspective can be taken as reliable either.<ref name="LoBrutto62" /><ref name="Brockmann62" /><ref name="Barlow45-46" /> Instead, the film offers no true or normal world to oppose to that of the twisted and nightmarish world as described by Franzis.<ref name="Hirsch54">{{Harvnb|Hirsch|1981|p=54}}</ref> As a result, after the film's closing scene, it can be seen as ambiguous whether Franzis or the asylum director is truly the insane one, or whether both are insane.<ref name="Brockmann62" /><ref>{{Harvnb|Barlow|1982|pp=52β53}}</ref><ref name="Budd30">{{Harvnb|Budd|1990b|p=30}}</ref> Likewise, the final shot of the film, with an iris that fades to a close-up on the asylum director's face, further creates doubt over whether the character is actually sane and trustworthy.<ref name="Budd30" /><ref>{{Harvnb|Brockmann|2010|pp=63β64}}</ref> In Brockman's words, "In the end, the film is not just about one unfortunate madman; it is about an entire world that is possibly out of balance".<ref name="Brockmann62" /> Mike Budd notes that, during the scene in which asylum doctors restrain Franzis, his movements closely mimic those of Caligari from a similar scene during the main story. Budd says this suggests a "dream logic of repetition" that throws further confusion on which perspective is reality.<ref name="Budd30" /> Beyond Franzis's individual circumstances, the use of the narrator's perspective in ''Dr. Caligari'' can be seen as reflective of a [[worldview]] of the screenwriters. Mayer and Janowitz were pacifists opposed to what Eisner described as the willingness of Germans to commit themselves to the dark forces, such as demoniac magic and supernatural powers, that led to death on the battlefield.<ref name="Eisner9">{{Harvnb|Eisner|1974|p=9}}</ref> Although he does not think it possible to reduce the narrative or the film to the beliefs of its makers, Eisner claims Franzis can be seen as embodying the politics of Expressionism's anti-naturalism, through which a protagonist does not see the world objectively, but has "visions" that are abstracted from individuality and psychology.<ref name="Eisner11β12">{{Harvnb|Eisner|1974|pp=11β12}}</ref> The framing device of an insane asylum, for Eisner, has a broader connotation as a statement on social reality in the context of the "[[state of exception]]". Here, Eisner claims, the militarist and imperialist tendency of [[monopoly capitalism]] is combined with what [[Sigmund Freud]] would later refer to as the longing for protection by a tyrannical father figure, or what Kracauer characterised as "asocial authority".<ref name="Eisner19"/> ===Double life=== Duality is another common theme in ''Caligari''. Caligari is portrayed in the main narrative as an insane tyrant, and in the frame story as a respected authority and director of a mental institution. As a result of this duality, it is possible for the viewer to suspect a malevolent aspect of him at the conclusion of the film, even despite evidence indicating he is a kind and caring man.<ref name="Barlow49" /> Even within the main narrative alone, Caligari lives a double life: holding a respectable position as the asylum director, but becoming a hypnotist and murderer at night.<ref>{{Harvnb|Kracauer|1947|p=248}}</ref> Additionally, the character is actually a double of the "real" Caligari, an 18th-century mystic whom the film character becomes so obsessed with that he desires to penetrate his innermost secrets and "become Caligari".<ref name="Kaes52">{{Harvnb|Kaes|2006|p=52}}</ref> Franzis also takes on a double life of sorts, serving as the heroic protagonist in the main narrative and a patient in a mental institution in the frame story. Anton Kaes described the story Franzis tells as an act of [[transference]] with his psychiatrist, as well as a [[Psychological projection|projection]] of his feelings that he is a victim under the spell of the all-powerful asylum director, just as Cesare is the hypnotised victim of Caligari.<ref name="Kaes52" /> The Cesare character serves as both a persecutor and a victim, as he is both a murderer and the unwilling slave of an oppressive master.<ref name="Barlow49" /><ref name="Elsaesser63" /> Siegfried Kracauer said by coupling a fantasy in which Franzis overthrows a tyrannical authority with a reality in which authority triumphs over Franzis, ''Caligari'' reflects a double aspect of German life, suggesting they reconsider their traditional belief in authority even as they embrace it.<ref name="Kracauer67" /> A contrast between levels of reality exists not only in the characterisations, but in the presentation of some of the scenes as well.<ref name="Barlow48-49">{{Harvnb|Barlow|1982|pp=48β49}}</ref> This, Barlow writes, "reveals a contrast between external calm and internal chaos".<ref name="Barlow48-49" /> For example, flashback scenes when Franzis reads Caligari's diary, in which the doctor is shown growing obsessed with learning hypnotic powers, take place as Caligari is sleeping peacefully in the present. Another example is the fair, which on the surface appears to represent fun and escapism, but reveals a lurking sense of chaos and disaster in the form of Caligari and Cesare.<ref name="Barlow48-49" /> The visual elements of the film also convey a sense of duality, particularly in the contrasts between black and white. This is especially prevalent in the sets, where black shadows are set against white walls, but also in other elements like the costumes and make-up. For instance, Caligari wears mostly black, but white streaks are present in his hair and on his gloves. Cesare's face is a ghostly white, but the darks of his eyes are heavily outlined in black. Likewise, Jane's white face contrasts with her deep, dark eyes.<ref name="Barlow49" /> ===Reflection on post-World War I Germany=== Critics have suggested that ''Caligari'' highlights some of the neuroses prevalent in Germany and the Weimar Republic when the film was made,<ref name="Barlow51" /><ref name="Brockmann63">{{Harvnb|Brockmann|2010|p=63}}</ref> particularly in the shadow of World War I,<ref>{{Harvnb|Towlson|2014|p=7}}</ref> at a time when extremism was rampant, reactionaries still controlled German institutions, and citizens feared the harm the [[Treaty of Versailles]] would have on the economy.<ref name="Barlow51" /> Siegfried Kracauer wrote that the paranoia and fear portrayed in the film were signs of things to come in Germany,<ref name="Kracauer67" /><ref name="Brockmann63" /> and that the film reflected a tendency in Germans to "retreat into themselves" and away from political engagement following the war.<ref name="Kracauer67" /><ref name="LoBrutto63" /> Vincent LoBrutto wrote that the film can be seen as a social or political analogy of "the moral and physical breakdown of Germany at the time, with a madman on the loose wreaking havoc on a distorted and off-balanced society, a metaphor for a country in chaos".<ref name="LoBrutto63" /> Anton Kaes, who called ''Caligari'' "an aggressive statement about war psychiatry, murder and deception", wrote that Alan's question to Cesare, "How long have I to live?" reflected the trauma German citizens experienced during the war, as that question was often on the minds of soldiers and of family members back home concerned about their loved ones in the military. Franzis's despair after Alan's murder can likewise be compared to that of the many soldiers who survived the war but saw their friends die on the battlefield. Kaes noted other parallels between the film and war experiences, noting that Cesare attacked Alan at dawn, a common time for attacks during the war.<ref>{{Harvnb|Kaes|2006|pp=52β53}}</ref> Thomas Elsaesser called Caligari an "outstanding example of how 'fantastic' representations in German films from the early 1920s seem to bear the imprint of pressures from external events, to which they refer only through the violence with which they disguise and disfigure them".<ref name="Elsaesser63" />
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