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Variety

Original title: Varieté
  • 1925
  • Passed
  • 1h 12m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
Josef Fenneker in Variety (1925)
Trailer for Varieté
Play trailer1:01
2 Videos
22 Photos
GermanCrimeDramaRomance

Prologue: The murderer "Boss" Huller - after having spent ten years in prison - breaks his silence to tell the warden his story. "Boss", a former trapeze artist, and his wife own a cheap sid... Read allPrologue: The murderer "Boss" Huller - after having spent ten years in prison - breaks his silence to tell the warden his story. "Boss", a former trapeze artist, and his wife own a cheap side-show that displays ''erotic sensations''. But he longs for his former glamorous life in ... Read allPrologue: The murderer "Boss" Huller - after having spent ten years in prison - breaks his silence to tell the warden his story. "Boss", a former trapeze artist, and his wife own a cheap side-show that displays ''erotic sensations''. But he longs for his former glamorous life in the circus. When he meets the orphan Berta-Marie, he falls under her spell and leaves his ... Read all

  • Director
    • Ewald André Dupont
  • Writers
    • Felix Hollaender
    • Ewald André Dupont
  • Stars
    • Emil Jannings
    • Maly Delschaft
    • Lya De Putti
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    1.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ewald André Dupont
    • Writers
      • Felix Hollaender
      • Ewald André Dupont
    • Stars
      • Emil Jannings
      • Maly Delschaft
      • Lya De Putti
    • 15User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins total

    Videos2

    Varieté
    Trailer 1:01
    Varieté
    VARIETÉ (Masters of Cinema) Trailer
    Trailer 1:00
    VARIETÉ (Masters of Cinema) Trailer
    VARIETÉ (Masters of Cinema) Trailer
    Trailer 1:00
    VARIETÉ (Masters of Cinema) Trailer

    Photos22

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    Top Cast17

    Edit
    Emil Jannings
    Emil Jannings
    • Boss Huller
    Maly Delschaft
    Maly Delschaft
    • Frau Huller
    Lya De Putti
    Lya De Putti
    • Bertha-Marie
    Warwick Ward
    Warwick Ward
    • Artinelli
    Alice Hechy
    Alice Hechy
    Georg John
    Georg John
    • Seeman
    Kurt Gerron
    Kurt Gerron
    • Hafenarbeiter
    Paul Rehkopf
    • Zuschauer auf dem Jahrmarkt
    Charles Lincoln
    • Spanischer Artist
    Georg Baselt
    Trude Hesterberg
    Trude Hesterberg
    • Zuschauerin imm Varieté
    Werner Krauss
    Werner Krauss
      The Flying Codonas
      • Acrobatic Ensemble
      • (as Die Drei Codonas)
      Alex Hyde and his Original New York Jazz Orchestra
      • Alex Hyde and His Original New York Jazz Orchestra
      Enrico Rastelli
      • Jongleur
      Gerhard Bienert
      Gerhard Bienert
      Etelka Maquita
      • Dancer
      • Director
        • Ewald André Dupont
      • Writers
        • Felix Hollaender
        • Ewald André Dupont
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews15

      7.41.5K
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      Featured reviews

      6psteier

      An influential film in its day

      Wonderful cinematagraphy and cutting influenced other films of the day. The story is old, but made interesting by the acting, sets and location shooting. The trapeze act shots are well worth seeing, though vaudeville and circus fans will be unhappy that there are few other acts shown. However, a 30 or 45 second summary of the variety (vaudeville) show is clever.

      The print I saw at New York's Museum of Modern Art did not have the 'prolog' either. Perhaps it was omitted when the film was released in the US.
      6wes-connors

      It Isn't Over Until the Fat Man Swings

      In 1915 Germany, burly trapeze artist Emil Jannings (as Stephan "Boss" Huller) leaves his wife and partner for sultry young Lya de Putti (as Berta-Marie). Soon, the carnival performing pair are hired by famed trapezist Warwick Ward (as Artinelli), after his flying brother is derailed by a fall. The high swinging threesome is an immediate success. But, after his trimmer partners begin to take care of their mutual attraction, Mr. Jannings must commit the crime for which he serves ten years in prison - as revealed in the present-day prologue. No doubt, it's going to get nasty…

      Appearing decidedly middle-aged, and with his overweight figure impossible to disguise, Jannings is miscast to the point of ridiculous. But, he was so popular most viewers accepted Jannings as the trim athletic "catcher" flying high. For American consumption, Paramount left out Jannings' adulterous first act (and trimmed the remainder of the film). This softens Jannings' character, of course. The film cutters did leave in some flashes of female nipple. That, Jannings, and some great camera-work from Karl Freud made "Varieté" a critical and commercial success in the US.

      ****** Varieté (11/16/25) E.A. Dupont ~ Emil Jannings, Lya de Putti, Warwick Ward, Maly Delschaft
      8FerdinandVonGalitzien

      Expressionism Intertwined With Social Comment

      Among silent film conneisseurs Herr Ewald André Dupont is well-known for a trilogy of films; "Varieté" (1925), "Moulin Rouge" (1928) und "Piccadilly" (1929); they all explore troubled relationships against a background of twenties popular entertainment (music-hall, cabarets, vaudeville). Of these, "Varieté" is certainly the best and Herr Dupont's masterpiece, an excellent film that maintains intact its virtues and cinematic merits after so many years, This Herr Graf revisited it recently and found that it had lost none of its power.

      The love story involves Herr "Boss" Huller ( Herr Emil Jannings ) and the seductive orphan Frau Berta-Marie ( Fay Lya de Putti ) Once a famous trapeze artist, "Boss" has been reduced to managing a sordid fairground attraction together with his wife ( Frau Maly Delschaft ). He falls madly in love with Berta-Marie and seeks to start a new life with his lover, leaving his wife and child behind.

      The virtuosity in the dramatic use of the camera-work together with film narrative by Herr Dupont is simply great. Through the eyes of "Boss'", Dupont skilfully compares the young and vital Berta-Marie and the faded and worn wife. Later the camera shoots from behind Huller's back to depict a desperate man utterly defeated and broken. The expressive close-ups wherein hidden feelings are made transparent are also superb as is the portrait of the people of Berlin, inhabitants of a decadent but thrilling city. The frenzied nightlife of Weimar Berlin (Wintergarten, Vaudeville Theater, fairgrounds) is vividly captured by the camera-work of Herr Karl Freund und Herr Carl Hoffmann.

      The camera-work is especially impressive during the trapeze sequences wherein Herr Dupont, with the aid of optical special effects by Herr Ernst Kunstmann, employs many different camera angles to emphasize the riskiness of the trapeze act and the riskiness of the relationship between "Boss", Berta-Marie and their partner, the famous artist Herr Artinelli ( Herr Warwick Ward ) . The tension builds during the performance because we know that Herr "Boss" has discovered that Berte-Marie and Artinelli have become lovers.

      The actors are splendid, specially Herr Jannings who, when properly directed , can express powerfully the most inner and divergent human feelings, Frau Lya de Putti, is no femme fatale type at all but that certainly is the point; she's attractive enough but common, someone easily charmed by a stylish man like Herr Artinelli.

      "Varieté" is an exemplary work wherein all the achievements and virtuosity of German cinema of that time are on display. You have Expressionism intertwined with social comment, a fascinating portrait of the times. Dupont's wavers a bit at the end and allows a minor concession which is forgivable and by no means fatal to the film as a whole.

      And now, if you'll allow me, I must temporarily take my leave because this German Count must refuse a splendid offer to be a fairground attraction.
      10Ziggy5446

      A German sexual triangle set backstage at the circus

      The male flyer initially appears in cinema as a flawed hero. The prototypes are characters found in Variety (1925), directed by Ewald Dupont and based on Felix Hollaender's novel, The Oath of Stephen Huller.

      This is a semi-expressionist film about a heavy-bodied catcher-husband, Boss Huller (Emil Jannings), whose wife, Bertha-Marie (Lya de Putti), is seduced from domestic bliss by the trio's lighter-bodied star flyer, Artinelli (Warwick Ward). The cather-husband imagines dropping his rival, the flyer, but murders him instead in a fight, and goes to prison. The seducing male flyer is the provocateur of extreme passion, a position subsumed by female aerialist characters in later films. But the male aerialist as a criminal, even murderer, intermittently reappears in representation because he epitomizes a capacity for extreme risk-taking, which is translated into socially risky immoral behavior. But it is the male flyer who becomes especially vulnerable to depiction as a fallen hero, literally and for losing emotional control.

      Although little-known today, Variety is one of the major works of German Expressionism. It's an immorality of emotion drama with a fine performance by (the always great) Jannings and the wonderful visual film-making that is the hallmark of the Expressionist movement (extraordinary cinematography by Karl Freund). Variety was heavily censored for its American release; how it was changed makes it almost as interesting as a case study in film censorship as it is enjoyable as a movie.

      In its original version, the film begins with a drawn-out portion showing how Emil Jannings falls in love with Lya De Putti, left his wife for her, and created a trapeze act with his lover. This part of the story was excised completely by the American censors, and title cards added to redefine Jannings and De Putti as the married couple of the U.S. release version. The censors' intent was to erase the plot point of casting adulterous lovers as the established couple in a love triangle. The effect was to far more radically transform the story. The unfaithful husband who is in his turn betrayed by his unfaithful lover is transformed into a sympathetic cuckold. The opportunistic temptress who catches two men only to end up with none is transformed into a young wife who succumbs to temptation. From unsparing morality play to conventional melodrama, courtesy of censorship.
      8frankde-jong

      Breathtaking cinematography

      As the name already indicates "Variety" is situated in a vaudeville setting. It is about trapeze artists who regularly change partners (both in business and in love). Emil Jannings plays a man who leaves his wife for a younger woman but gets very jealous when he is at risk of receiving the same treatment.

      The film portrays the decadence of the roaring twenties in Germany. See for example the scene in which the artists have their own afterparty after the show.

      The story however is somewhat flawed. The Emil Jannings character has the possibility to take revenge in a way that looks like an accident. Why he does not choose to do so remains unclear.

      Above all "Variety" has earned his place in film history due to the dynamic camera movements during the trapeze scenes. In this way the film is more a cinematographer's film than a director's film. Especially Karl Freund would remain a leading cinematographer in decades to come.

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      Related interests

      Peter Lorre in M (1931)
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      Drama
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      Romance

      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        Because the film was produced in Germany, it was not made with the intent to pass the newly established MPPDA's "Hays Code" which had been introduced the year before with hopes of mollifying the more than 100 local and state censorship boards around the United States. These boards quickly took an ax to the film, cutting, on average, enough footage to fill two film reels. New York made the fewest cuts, removing slightly less than one reel of footage.
      • Connections
        Edited into Prisoner of Paradise (2002)
      • Soundtracks
        Vaudeville
        Theme song for British release

        Music by Vivian Ellis

        Lyrics by William Helmore

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • January 27, 1926 (Hungary)
      • Country of origin
        • Germany
      • Languages
        • German
        • English
      • Also known as
        • Jealousy
      • Production company
        • Universum Film (UFA)
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

      Edit
      • Gross US & Canada
        • $709,613
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

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      • Runtime
        • 1h 12m(72 min)
      • Sound mix
        • Silent
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.33 : 1

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