Fritz Lang(1890-1976)
- Dirección
- Guion
- Producción
Reproducir trailer1:59
Von Caligari zu Hitler: Das deutsche Kino im Zeitalter der Massen (2014)
Fritz Lang nació el 5 de diciembre de 1890 en Viena, Austria-Hungría (ahora Austria). Fue un director y escritor, conocido por El desprecio (1963), M el Maldito (1931) y Metrópolis (1927). Estuvo casado con Lily Latte, Thea von Harbou y Lisa Rosenthal. Murió el 2 de agosto de 1976 en Beverly Hills, Los Ángeles, California, EE.UU..
- Premios
- 5 premios ganados y 7 nominaciones en total
Dirección
- Metropolis Retrofit
- Dirección
- 2023
- 2018
- 1960
- 1960
- 1959
- 1959
- 1956
- 1956
- 1955
- 1954
- 1953
- 1953
- 1952
- 1952
- 1950
Guion
Producción
- Nombre alternativo
- Lang
- Altura
- 1.80 m
- Nacimiento
- Defunción
- CónyugesLily Latte1971 - 2 de agosto de 1976 (su muerte)
- PadresAnton Lang
- FamiliaresAdolf Lang(Sibling)
- Otros trabajosFeatured in the BBC Home Service series "On Films" with Paul Mayersberg.
- Listados publicitarios
- TriviaAccording to Lang himself, on 25 March 1933, two days after Das Testament des Dr. Mabuse (1933) had been banned, he was summoned to the Nazi Ministry of Propaganda to meet with Joseph Goebbels himself. Goebbels explained the reason for the ban (the Nazi party slogans are fed into the mouth of the villain at the film's conclusion) and apologized to Lang. He then shocked Lang by offering him the position of production supervisor at the UFA studios, where his first film would be a biography of Wilhelm Tell. Lang claims he suspected a trap and attempted to throw off Goebbels by telling him, "My mother had Jewish parents," to which Goebbels responded, "We'll decide who's Jewish!" Lang then expressed interest in the position and said he needed some time to think it over. He describes how he looked at a clock and how during the entire meeting all he could think about was leaving as soon as possible so he could get to the bank and flee with all of his money. Lang says he didn't get there in time so he sold his wife's jewelry, boarded a train to Paris that same evening, leaving most of his money and personal possessions behind, along with his wife, Thea von Harbou, who divorced him later that year and went on to write and direct films for the Nazi propaganda machine. This story is possibly exaggerated by Lang for dramatic effect because there is evidence he left weeks after that.
- Citas[about CinemaScope] It's only good for funerals and snakes.
- Marcas comercialesAll his films feature a shot of his hand
Preguntas Frecuentes15
Con tecnología de Alexa
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