M就是凶手

HD中字

主演:彼得·洛,艾伦·维德曼,因格·兰德特,奥托·维尔尼克,弗朗茨·斯坦,厄恩斯特·斯塔尔-纳什布拉

类型:电影地区:其它语言:其它年份:1931

欢迎安装高清版[一起看]电影APP

 无尽

缺集或无法播,更换其他线路.

 优质

缺集或无法播,更换其他线路.

 红牛

缺集或无法播,更换其他线路.

 非凡

缺集或无法播,更换其他线路.

 剧照

M就是凶手 剧照 NO.1M就是凶手 剧照 NO.2M就是凶手 剧照 NO.3M就是凶手 剧照 NO.4M就是凶手 剧照 NO.5M就是凶手 剧照 NO.6M就是凶手 剧照 NO.13M就是凶手 剧照 NO.14M就是凶手 剧照 NO.15M就是凶手 剧照 NO.16M就是凶手 剧照 NO.17M就是凶手 剧照 NO.18M就是凶手 剧照 NO.19M就是凶手 剧照 NO.20

 剧情介绍

M就是凶手电影免费高清在线观看全集。
一名针对小女孩作案的连环杀手(Peter Lorre 饰)出没,城中人心惶惶。警察全体出动,频繁突击检查。黑帮首领(Gustaf Gründgens 饰)因生意受到严重影响,决定利用乞丐的隐蔽性布下天罗地网。卖气球的盲丐(Georg John 饰)通过《在妖王宫中》的口哨声辨出了杀手,他的同伙(Carl Balhaus 饰)趁机将“Mörder”的首字母“M”标记在其背上。虽然警方锁定了杀手的住处,但杀手被乞丐围困于商业大厦,成了瓮中之鳖。深夜,在黑帮私设的法庭上,杀手会为自己作出怎样的辩护?高科技少女喵李保国征服1453情如物证动态侦测恶魔山峰你邻居的妻子太白拳火焰山来的鼓手无人驾驶2010机巧少女不会受伤严肃的男人动态漫画·武拳机甲兽神第一部城主大人请试毒里相棒3幸存者(2018)乒乓球奇人奇案美利坚邦联凶手或许就是你实习医生格蕾第七季殖民者川味第一季过失第三季审判日蓝色粉末琦玉歌者3不存在的瑞秋女校召灵明治侠客传:第三代袭名激情燃烧的岁月2纳粹二战工程第四季笨鸟撤退2022找乐我是真的读心人第二季下一站,别离美国女人2019新上海滩黄晓明版硬币问魂涉嫌之人帝王计划:怪兽遗产

 长篇影评

 1 ) Tracing Human Abnormality in Modern Berlin

        Fritz Lang, one of the most celebrated auteurs of Germany's national cinema, lays out a chilling crime story in M(1931). In this provocative motion picture, a search for the cruel child murderer, Beckert, drives the whole city to turmoil. As all members in the city become involved in the search for the criminal, two different forms of human abnormality lurked in the city are exposed: the criminal mentality as well as the conflict between the institutional authority and the general public of which it is in charge. While the search continues, both forms of human abnormality keep growing unchecked; yet, eventually, the citizens identified with such abnormality have to face the catastrophic consequences of their behavior. Through innovative use of sound and provocative editing techniques, Lang points to the city as the foster home of both forms of human abnormality. Furthermore, he invites the audience to question the unforeseen detriments of a city in modernity that all its members eventually have to confront.

        As Lang's first film with sound, Lang ingeniously manipulates this new technology to portray the city as an adoptive home of human abnormality. At the very beginning of the film, before any image appears on screen, the audience first hears a child singing a familiar tune: “Wait, wait just a little while/ then the black man will come after you/ with his little chopper/ he will make mince meat out of you.” According to Todd Herzog, this tune is a homage to the “Haarmann song” that tells the chilling crimes of the notorious serial killer Fritz Haarmann. Herzog believes that this song serves to, “locate M in a specific historical context, the world of the Weimar Republic at the time of the film's release, and to place it in dialogue with that world”(Herzog, “Fritz Lang's M(1931), An Open Case”, P232). Nevertheless, Fritz's use of this song to begin the film allows a different interpretation. As the film begins with the dark screen and the nursery rhyme, an image soon appears in a few seconds. A medium shot locates the source of the sound in the yard of a mietskascerne, where a group of kids are playing and singing. By placing the source of the cruel tune in the mouth of a naïve child, Lang further implies that the modern city has become a sink of iniquity, even for the innocent who have yet to understand the city in which they are situated. The victim of today is just as likely to become the perpetrator in the future.

        Beckert's whistle is a repetition in the film which symbolizes his criminal mentality. Each time when he begins to whistle, the audience witnesses the awakening of the monstrous murderer within him. Thus far, Lang constantly shifts the source of the whistle from on-screen to off-screen; such manipulation of the sound source sheds light on the unlikelihood to locate the specific origin of human abnormality in a modern milieu. In a scene when Beckert stands on the street and looks into a shop-window, the sequence is accompanied with no diegetic sound. All what the audience can see is that Beckert dramatically changes his facial expression when he sees a little girl in the reflection of the shop-window. As the girl walks away, the camera moves out of the shop to the street and captures Beckert staring in the direction that the girl is walking. The audience then hears the diegetic sound of the street traffic, and Beckert's whistle simultaneously joins in as he starts following the girl and walks out of the frame. In the next medium-long shot, the camera tracks the little girl as she walks on the street. The whistle continues in the background; however, Beckert no longer appears on-screen in this tracking shot. While the audience has been led to believe that the whistle comes from Beckert by the previous shot; Lang purposefully leaves the established sound source off-screen in the following shot, which leads the audience to question whether Beckert himself is the source of his abnormality, or if the city is that with which has fostered his brutal crimes.

        Lang further manipulates sound to create off-screen space that contrasts the on-screen image in order to depict another form of human abnormality: the revolt against the political authority. The conflict between the underworld business and the police points to a divergence between the authority and the public, which is previously kept in disguise by a seemingly stable social order. However, as Beckert's crimes disturb the social order and alarm the police, they immediately assume that the criminal must be someone from the underworld, and decide to break the ostensible peace and raid their gathering spots. One night, the police secretly surround one of the underworld's gathering place; in which the entire process is accompanied with no sound. The camera soon moves downstairs into the basement where people in the underworld business gather. As a woman shouts out that the police is here, everyone begins rushing towards the exit to leave the basement. In a medium shot, the camera awaits at the top of the stairs and looks slightly down as everyone starts running towards the camera. Among the frenzied noises, the audience first clearly hears a woman's scream as the policemen yell back at her; yet the entire action takes place upstairs in off-screen space while the shot remains still, featuring the panicking crowds. Soon, the police enter from the lower frame and gradually push the crowds back into the basement for investigation. The image on-screen contrasts the actions taken place in off-screen space; such contrast allows the audience to look beyond the images shown on-screen and picture the entire city, where its underlying instability and human abnormality are close to outbreak due to the police's disruption of a public order that does not solve social problems, but merely hides them unseen.

        Throughout the film, Long constructs several montage sequences which implicitly build cause-and-effect relationships between the modern city and human abnormality. In the beginning of the film, when Elsie's mother becomes worried about Elsie for having not returned home, a medium shot shows Elsie's mother walking towards the window and looking out. When she begins calling out “Elsie”, the image cuts to an aisle shot of the stairwell in the Mietskaserne. As the mother's cry echoes down the stairs, the audience then follows the camera to an empty space where people in the neighbourhood hang their laundry; Elsie is still absent on-screen. The sequence continues as it cuts to a close-up on the lunch table, where Elsie's seat remains empty. The grieving howl of the mother has now ended, yet the sequence did not until the audience are shown with two more shots: Elsie's ball rolling on the grass, and the ballon that the criminal Beckerd bought for Elsie entangled in the electric wires on the city street. In this sequence, Lang juxtaposes the mother's continuous calling for Elsie with discontinuity editing of on-screen images. The audience follows the mother as she searches for Elsie in all public spaces in the city where Elsie can possibly be; yet Elsie's ball and ballon at the end of the sequence tell audience that Elsie must have already been slaughtered by the murderer Beckerd. In this sequence, Lang associates the befalling of Elsie's tragic death with the city itself: the development of the modern metropolis not only enlarges the public space, but also catalyses crime and threat among the citizens.

        In another scene when the minister condemns the police chief on the phone for the police department's incompetence in finding the killer, Lang edits a flashback as the chief explains their difficulty. The editing of this flashback again connotes the unforeseen detriments of a city in modernity. When the chief tells the minister about a white paper bag that they found behind the hedge, a close-up on the paper bag gives the audience a clue that it is a candy wrapper, and the store's name was on the wrapper. Then, the image cuts to a close-up of a map of the city, in which circles and circles are drawn with a pair of compasses in increasing radius. While the search widens, the police interrogates owners of candy stores all over the city. However, all owners shake their heads and cannot remember who had bought the candy for little Elsie. As population increases, the city provides perpetrators the opportunity to disguise their abnormality and let it grow unchecked. The editing of this sequence connects the failure to identify the abnormal with the city itself.

        Lang further implies a cause-and-effect relationship between the city and another form of human abnormality, namely, the public and the institutional authority's revolt against each other. As both the leads of the underworld and the chiefs of the political institutions gather for two separate meetings to discuss their objectives on the case of Beckert, Lang uses cross-cutting to juxtapose both meetings. The heads of the underworld complain about the consistent police raids' harm to their business and decide to find the killer by themselves in order to resurrect their business. As the underworld head waves his hand, the shot cuts to the head of police's same action. The police simultaneously decides to continue their search for Beckert without the help of the public, by organizing more police raids and search among public spaces. While the underworld condemns the police for interfering the underworld's business, the police chief Lohmann also refuses to ask the public for help as he states, “Don't talk to me about the public helping, it disgusts me.” The cross-cutting technique invites the audience to contrast the underworld and the police's conflicting attitudes against each other. Such social conflict is another form of human abnormality that is against the democratic ideal of the Weimar republic.

        As the underworld collaborates with the beggars and has seized Beckerd from the building, together they leave the scene in a hurry. Lang then presents the audience with a montage sequence in which he rewinds the crimes that the underworld has just committed. The audience follows the camera into the room where both watchmen have been knocked out and tied up. Then, the sequence continues with still shots of the forcefully broken office door, the compartment's broken fences, and ends with the hole they have dug on the floor in order to make the crime scene look like a result of burglary. This montage sequence is shown with no sound, leaving the audience in contemplation of the underworld's motive and the destructions their abnormal behaviors have caused. The heads of the underworld are provoked to capture Beckerd not because that they find Beckerd's behavior immoral, but because the underworld's business is interrupted by the police's consistent raids. In turn, they decide to look for Beckerd without collaboration with the police, and purposefully commit a series of crimes in order to achieve their goal. The lack of stability in the city's social order has fostered the formation of the underworld, and the underworld's distrust with the political authority. Yet, their abnormal behaviors will lead them to their final conviction.

        The film ends with the final conviction of both the underworld and the child murderer. The audience should not forget that it is the underworld, despite their unrighteous motives, who has asked for help from the beggars and successfully seized Beckert. Nevertheless, both parties have to eventually face the catastrophic consequences of their abnormal behaviors. The first being the underworld's imprudent disruption of the public order for their own economic benefits, and the second being the brutal crimes that Beckert has committed. Throughout the film, Lang manipulates the sound effects and the editing of the sequences to point to the modern city itself as the very cause of all forms of human abnormality preeminent in it. The diegetic world in the film, which is the Weimar Republic in the 1920s, still echoes the modern milieu in which we live. However we try to trace any form of abnormality that hinders the public order, we are always led back to the society as the cause, without identifying the specific origin. Perhaps, the only way of prevention lies in the hands of the people who make up the society, with self-awareness of their behaviors, and positive objectives to make changes.
 
 
                                      Works Cited
 
Herzog, Todd. "Fritz Lang's M(1931): An Open Case." An Essential Guide to Classic Films of the Era Weimar Cinema. Ed. Noah Isenberg. New York: Columbia University Press, 2009. 291-309. Print.
 
M. Dir. Fritz Lang. Perf. Peter Lorre, Ellen Widmann, Inge Landgut. Criterion Collection, 2004, DVD.
 

 2 ) M is for movie

M这部电影主要出现的有三个版本。
最早送德国电影当局审查的版本,是最符合导演用意的版本,117分钟,当时电影的名字叫就Murders are among us,可惜这个版本目前已经找不到了。
最新的版本是109分钟(约110分钟)的,这个是尽最大可能保留原来117分钟的原貌而进行修复整理的版本,也就是CC公司最新出版发行的版本(CC公司之前发行过96分钟的版本)。
第三个版本是96分钟的版本,是当时该片的制片人为了电影能公映,根据送审的版本修改删节之后的版本,这个版本修改了其他两个版本的结局,结局只到了法院开庭审理罪犯的情节,而删了后面三个母亲的场景。而且还对电影中一些导演故意采用默片手法的片段加上了后期配音。也就是这个版本把这部电影改成了现在的名字M。

昨天看了110分钟的版本,可惜了那宝贵的7分钟,否则电影肯定有更独特的味道。
电影拍摄于1931年,正是纳粹主义逐渐要在德国兴起的时代,因此,这部电影当中的一些情节表现往往会被认为是在映射当时的纳粹势力,例如其中的盗贼势力——其实这并不是电影的初衷。这部电影的时代背景正是一战后经济萧条、社会动荡、民不聊生的时代,所以其中的盗贼猖獗可以说是一定程度的客观反映,但电影并没有把这些盗贼作为反面的批判角色,甚至是企图作为一种替代性的权力(替代政府)来描绘,其实这部电影里扮演盗贼的人,很多就是导演弗里兹•朗请来的真正盗贼来参演,而且很多是当时警察通缉的盗贼,可以说这部电影是在和警察打游击的过程中拍摄出来的。电影的起意也在于导演朗的妻子对一个事件的感触——政府在这个动荡社会下的无能。所以,这些抨击政府的无能——司法公权力的严重缺失才是私力救济诞生的土壤(盗贼主持的审判)——才是这部电影明确的主旨。
电影当中警察数月的毫无进展,只会毫无目的的盘问和搜索,以及最后也就是被删节的结尾这些情节都使电影带上了反政府倾向,也使之区别于一般的惊悚片(甚至不适宜归为这类)。结尾处三个母亲面对着镜头哭诉:判决也挽回不了死去的孩子,所以我们还是要依靠自己看好我们的孩子。还有你们……你们。(最后面对观众时说,这里树造了一种人人自危的环境,同时也是对司法无力的谴责)。

电影的一些处理也很令人印象深刻,这是朗的第一部有声电影,也是影史上第一部讲述变态杀手的电影,当凶手第一次现身之前,是一个黑影慢慢呈现在通缉海报上、受害的小女孩面前。这个很写意的恐怖手法不知道使后世多少的恐怖、惊悚片都打上了“影子”的主意。还有女孩遇害时的处理也是非常的简洁——一个皮球滚进画面,一只汽球缠在了电线上。这一手法也是被无数次的效仿。电影还结合了一些默片的处理,罪犯在逃跑和盗贼在追捕的一个阶段完成没有了声音,观众不由自主的把注意力都灌注到了画面上,令人不禁想摒住呼吸(96分钟版给这段配上了配音)。电影采用的1.19:1的特殊比例也使画面产生了很强的束缚感,也使电影的一些场景有非常独特的感觉——仓库、会议室、地下室都显得非常挤压。也许你能从那样的画面里闻到一股烧焦之后烟灰的味道,呵呵。

 3 ) 技术和表现,对于[M]的声音笔记


  这部片子的名声实在不小,当然了,它头顶上的便签个个都是闪闪发光:表现主义大师弗里茨·朗加上“世界上最好的演员”彼得·洛,再加上真实事件改编,加上第一部连环杀手电影,加上IMDB TOP排在#56,最后再加上弗里茨·朗的第一部有声片,没有理由不相信这是一部值得好好玩味的电影。
  但是我错了,以上的所有头衔都不足以概述[M]的根本内核,在最后一场戏到来之前,我一直以为这就是一部讲述30年代变态杀人魔的有声片而已,但是一场来自黑帮的审判生生地把这部110分钟的黑白电影提升到一个绝非任何一部当代电影可以小看的地步,从[大都会]到[M],弗里茨·朗越发走向人的内心。
   但是首先,不可回避的是,这的的确确是弗里茨·朗的第一部有声电影,技术的革新往往是最基础和决定性的。不过严格一点说,很多声音元素还是缺乏的,甚至到大部分情况下,声音只单纯作为画面的解释而存在,弗里茨·朗似乎相当不放心声音的表达作用,在好几处都给声音加上画面来表达,比如警长在看关于抢劫案的口供时,对于现场的再现其实是声画重复的表达。其次,所谓“有声”,更大程度上只是“有对白”,早期有声片最直观地意识到了语言可以直接参与影片,但是还没有加入音效,除了对白,汽车,街道,道具,很难听到环境的音效,当然更不用说表现性的音效和音乐了。再次,音画同步看起来还是一个恪守的原则,一个声音对应一个画面,所有的声音都是当下的写实的,于今看起来还真是难得的感觉。
  当然说回来,这几点仅能作为对今昔电影的声音运用作比较而言,在有声电影仅仅出现4年之后,弗里茨·朗就给出了这样一部音画结合的佳作,已然难以想象,况且[M]中还有一个重要的声音元素,那就是凶手所哼唱的那首[皮尔金特],再次提出,那是在1931年,弗里茨·朗让一个杀手哼着歌去杀人,并且让这个关键性的元素——在情节上和听觉上都同样关键——重复出现,要知道,用哼着歌杀人而给人留下深刻印象的办法来塑造变态杀人魔形象,至今还是屡试不爽的经典。(例子就不用举了吧)
   除去声音之外,最后5分钟的审判,黑帮对于杀人犯的审判,以及那个辩护人所说的,“没有人可以杀了人不负责,一个国家也不能”,这之中所表达的政治司法观念,甚至对于人权的思考,只消联系1931年的德国现实,也不难略知一二。

 4 ) 第一部成功用声音叙事的电影

虽然第一部有声长片是1927年的《爵士乐歌星》,但电影人对当时才刚出现的声音该怎么运用并没有头绪;他们要么将其用作辅助画面叙事/视觉叙事的从属品,要么将其用作title card的替代品——直到1931年《M就是凶手》的出现。这部电影对于声音的运用毫无疑问是开创性的、革命性的,它第一次教会了人们声音如何在电影里独立的叙事,比如:

——用作sound bridge。开头小孩玩游戏画面未出我们就已经听到声音、后面Elsie在路上行走汽车未入画我们就听到了鸣笛声、后来M从小女孩花店走出来时也是人还没入画先听到店的门铃声、最后抓M进人民公审时那个楼梯那里也是声音先到然后看到M被抓的画面。

——用作人物的letimotif。《在山魔王的宫殿里》是M常哼起的歌曲,当这个声音响起时我们就知道是他来了。影片里有一幕,镜头跟拍小女孩(不是Elsie,是她之后第二个出现的女孩)在一个商店看东西时,我们听到了那个标志性的歌曲,再加上镜头逐渐靠近小女孩,这些加起来让我们知道了M在接近小女孩,制造了一种悬疑感。在这种悬疑感的制造上声音起了不可或缺的作用。

小女孩在商店看东西

——用作描述情绪(这个作用其实不那么创新,但《M》的具体用法还是挺新颖的)。影片中有这么一个scene:M在商店的玻璃前盯着里面的东西。一开始背景音是汽笛声的嘈杂,但当M开始从玻璃上找猎物时(后面通过玻璃反光找到了一个小女孩),背景音就安静了。当他转身准备行动时,背景嘈杂的声音又出现了。这里静音时是代表他已经进入了内心世界,开始专注于找“猎物”;杂音和静音的切换则是他内心在犹豫要不要去杀人。包括M后面到咖啡厅时哼着《在山魔王的宫殿里》,其实也是他内心的挣扎的具象化。(这首歌很欢快,所以本身应该就是M用来逃避杀人的想法用的。)

M在商店前

——用作画外空间(而且画外并非配乐)。人民审判戏那里有很多镜头对准M时的画外声音产生的画外空间,我们听到的人民的各种笑声、嘈杂声、咒骂声等都是。

除了这个最大的亮点之外,影片在打光、阴影和布景等等方面都水平极高。

——打光上沿用德国表现主义电影的low-key lighting,背景很暗人物光影对比度高,营造一种uncanny的气氛

——阴影上比如开头Elsie看通缉令时通缉令上出现的黑影(也是M第一次现身)

——布景则与打光都沿袭德国表现主义,充满了主观情绪。例子比如:开头Elsie的妈妈等她女儿回来时不停大喊女儿名字那个让人不安的空镜头sequence(包括复杂迷离的楼梯、空荡的晾衣屋、皮球、气球等等);结尾的那个M藏身的废弃酿酒厂也是破旧而诡异,呼应了M给人的感觉。

——其他还有很多,比如M刚进人民法庭,狡辩时从屏幕的另一边伸出一只手,有点诡异吓人。

 5 ) Murder?Moral?

尽管观众的视角一开始就被导演悬在了高高位置上,仿佛我们如上帝一般全知全能,但其实我们的内心在受到不断的质问:当社会道德分崩离析,人人自危,谁应该为此负责?谁又应该肩负起重建的责任?

所有人都有可能同时处在指责别人和被指责的位置上,警察和黑帮都只为自己的人利益考虑,弗里茨朗夸张的德国表现主义风格,放大并外化了人心中的原始欲望,包括对恶的报复惩罚也是一种原始冲动。

凶手贝克特是一个饱受精神病折磨的杀人犯,但这也不会让观众产生对其的怜悯心理,因为在这座幽暗冷漠、烟雾缭绕的病态城市,所有人随时都可能作恶。

 6 ) 《M[凶手M]》表现主义

http://axinlove.com/2010/04/m/

《M[凶手M]》表现主义
by @xinl.ve 100406

杰作,推荐一看,但不能理解为什么能位列Top 250: #56。

在艺术的表现力和电影理应具有的戏剧性与趣味性来看,《M[凶手M]》臻至极致。数十年后,Guy Ritchie的极具风格化的摄影、叙事等技法,本片导演Fritz Lang[弗里茨·朗]和拍摄《Sunrise:A Song Of Two Humans[日出:二人之歌]》的茂瑙早已为之,特别是Fritz Lang拍摄的本片,“没有”过分玄乎的宏大主题,《M》单凭表现主义的风格登上了荣誉之巅。

借一段文字:
表现主义电影折射了当时的德国,同时也超越了当时的德国。他们思考的驱动力来自于战败后德国破败的现实,工业社会的冷漠资本膨胀对人的异化塑造了他们思考的姿态——面向共同的人类精神世界发问。在表现暴力、谋杀和死亡的主题时,表现主义电影导演们无不倾向于在影片中制造出一种迷幻、扭曲和阴冷的世界。对于这样一个世界心怀恐惧是全人类的共性,在这样一个世界中逃亡出去寻找精神的安慰之地也是全人类的愿望。当时的德国中产阶级对现实不满,带有自由意志论的时代精神和社会反叛助长了表现主义的发展。参加表现主义运动的人,在政治信仰和哲学观点上存在着很大的差异。其中有无政府主义者、虚无主义者,也有社会主义者。因此,表现主义运动从来不是一个完全统一协调的运动,也很少有始终如一的“纯粹”的表现主义者。但他们也有一些共同的思想倾向和艺术特点,即不满社会现状,要求改革,要求“革命”。

按照上一段文字,《M》已经隐喻着因第一次世界大战的失败而陷入萧条的德国社会有迎来纳粹极权的可能,加上《Das weiße Band[白丝带]》的推波助澜,《M》的题旨好像真是如此。按照部分电影介绍的说法,柏林的警察历经数月抓不住诱拐小孩子并杀害之的罪犯,无奈的普通人(电影中实际是黑帮组织乞丐、小偷和混混等违法之徒,真实世界里少数演员还有被逮进去的情况发生)只好自己组织起来行使正义,“In the name of the law/people”。政府无能,老百姓有力,革命来改朝换代是可以的,《M》因此暗示了德国纳粹的登台。并且导演Fritz Lang为了警示这种危险,在最后结局时,让某个悲伤的母亲说,“看好自己的孩子!”为什么要看好自己的孩子?既怕被拐走(被杀),也是怕被诱骗(成为纳粹)。

过分的解读莫过于此,多少人真看出了晦涩的《Das weiße Band》背后幼年纳粹的成长,抱着自己创造的幻觉可能误读了《M》。

忽视警察为抓捕变态凶手M付出的努力,并把抓获罪犯的功劳归功于黑帮代表的普通人,从而强化“人民行使正义”的电影主题,一厢情愿地厉害。黑帮分子要找出凶手的动机是因为警察的扫荡和宵禁政策极大地影响了他们的生意,并不是真要为民伸张正义。独立于黑帮分子找寻线索的警察并非想象中无能,在嫌犯的住处搜寻到香烟、铅笔屑,并在其家中设伏等待其回家后抓住之。在黑帮分子抢先一步带走凶手后,两个警察一个白脸一个红脸地唬骗被落在办公室的倒霉蛋,从而获悉“普通人”一伙审判罪犯的场所。等等诸如此类,描写政府、警察一方的情节,说明他们的效率其实还是蛮高的,并非电影的反面人物或者参照物。

召集法庭并为嫌犯指定辩护律师的最后一场是电影的高潮。“民意汹汹”的“小偷小摸们”在地下世界一本正经地采用了世俗里的法官、辩护、控方和评审团的形式,要以师出有名的方式判处宣告嫌犯有罪。如此的安排,的确会让人误以为导演站在了人民的一边,然而联想表现主义电影中黑色、夸张、荒诞和颠覆性。正常的“形式”与风格化的电影格格不入,黑帮审判凶人的场景才是异常里的正常。

截两张图,顺便参考表现主义的特点:





1.影像:表现主义的导演注重具有象征意味的造型,倾向认为电影的影像应该成为平面艺术。在构图和布景上下足了功夫。往往在一个构图中用相似的形状并列而形成相当具有表现力的镜头。表现主义电影经常摒弃常规的影像形态,采用倾斜、颠倒的影像,采用常规电影很少使用的特殊拍摄角度,画面的明暗反差一般会很大。表现主义电影常用人物特写和富有象征意义的空镜头,使用特写可以看作是在“放大”表演,增强戏剧性;而对环境的渲染可以看作是对人物行为和灵魂的“解释”,力图揭示人物行为背后的社会诱因。此外,主观镜头也是表现主义常用的手法,表现主义艺术家轻视局限于客观的写实,强调表现“主观的现实”。

2.表演:表现主义的表演一般比较夸张,基本放弃了写实主义的表演方式取而代之的是展示迅速的变动、舞蹈般的动作、变形或扭曲的表情。

3.题材和类型:在表现主义的代表作品中,题材的特征是显而易见的,恐怖、灾难、犯罪题材是最常见的,表现主义电影艺术家们往往从被扭曲的、阴暗的世界中去寻找素材,在那似乎与现实隔绝的、封闭的世界中,去挖掘人物内心深处的孤独、残暴、恐怖、狂乱的精神状态。内容荒诞离奇,有时结构散乱,情节变化突兀,故事人物类型化,往往鬼魂与活人同时出现(《吸血鬼》等),生与死、梦幻与现实之间没有明确的界线。表现主义电影导演们关注畸形社会中的心理非常态,关注那些焦虑与紧张的情绪,力图透视那些狂乱行为背后的深层动机和原因,用主观化的影像风格来反证社会事实,作品因此具有社会意义和社会价值。

56的排位,有了些许答案。

M.1931.720p.BluRay.x264-SiNNERS

 短评

8论底层人民群众社会活动的重要性人民法庭所代表的民声与法庭所代表的正义 情感与理智的对决 谁才是真正的正义30年代就拍出如此前卫的社会题材作品 完爆如今各种院线商业流水线粗制滥造品结尾人民法庭的大法官与激起的群众又或是集体主义兴起的预言与写照

6分钟前
  • 東郷柏
  • 推荐

每次看德国电影都忍不住往政治隐喻上想,德国真是一个牛逼的国家啊。影史上第一部讲连环杀人的电影,却比后来的那些要高明得多。黑社会审犯人那一段是我觉得电影最好看的一段,“难道把你交给警察送进监狱,让国家养你一辈子?”,警察搜寻许久无果最后由盲人找到了线索,这真是个无比讽刺的故事。

10分钟前
  • 凉水
  • 力荐

除对白和口哨声外其他声音基本无,更别提扣人心魄的配乐了,但作为一部1931的有声片,如此足矣。有趣的地方在民众对警察(政府威权)的不信任(妓女朝警察啐口水),以及黑道擒获凶手的设定,加上最后私设法庭和真正的法庭审判对比,如此种种真是大胆的讽刺。口哨声很瘆人。

14分钟前
  • Derridager
  • 推荐

近乎完美,扣一星最后的伪庭审,当民粹已然发展到人人相疑,社会不安时,是无法产生如此模式化的场景的。东方快车式也许更加契合

15分钟前
  • Ada的B计划
  • 推荐

群众大会真牛啊

17分钟前
  • 小米=qdmimi
  • 推荐

原来,他只是个卖萌大师。中间有一段很惊艳的平行硬切剪辑,瞬间明朗了两个势力、一个目标的局势;想不到在全民哄笑那一刻燃了;最后的辩论虽然升华了高度,但也同时削弱了快感;那支口哨的旋律,忘不得。配乐贫乏、完全依靠影像推进的原味悬疑片,这是黑色艺术品。

19分钟前
  • Ocap
  • 推荐

开场利用影子铺设惊悚氛围、人人自危的紧张空气,与明暗双线并行的抓捕过程构成高反差对比,制造出不少萌点;空无一人的街道,M惊恐的表情,口哨的运用,堪称经典;对连环杀手的心理描摹,以及对法律制度的揶揄,都具有前瞻性。

21分钟前
  • 欢乐分裂
  • 推荐

传说中的德国表现主义力作。这种片子放在现在的天朝完胜那些大片。最后的辩论进入了人权、制度和法律的思辨,而他们的概念完全是基于人性的角度,这是人权的思考。前半部的悬疑解惑,后面的基层社会的私设法庭,凶手的经典口哨还有夸张的表情和肢体。经典!8.6

23分钟前
  • 巴喆
  • 推荐

看到底下那么多装逼的评论,心情就像M突然发现身后被标记了白字时那样,好惊悚好害怕!!!!!瞪!!!!!

26分钟前
  • Irgendwann
  • 力荐

淘到DVD了哈哈

28分钟前
  • 亵渎电影
  • 推荐

观感很奇怪的一部电影,就像无声和有声的结合,无配乐仅有图像来烘托情节,前段闷的要死,中段的剪辑很棒,结尾升华主题的对峙是点睛之笔,全片的悬疑点布置出众(说的就是那个口哨!), 对杀手的人物刻画很深刻(选角!)。(问题:那封信是谁写的?)

32分钟前
  • TWY
  • 推荐

M逃进阁楼那一段特别精彩!彼得·洛长得果然猥琐!演个绑架小姑娘的变态杀手太合适了!1931年的这部电影现在看来还是有些琐碎冗长!翻拍的话应该不错!

34分钟前
  • 隐遁
  • 还行

【B+】第一次看德国表现主义电影,不负盛名。在许多方面的想法都远远领先于同时代其他影片(尤其是对声音和光的运用),只是毕竟是先行者,已如今眼光再看有些地方还是显得生涩,比如那个平行剪辑,很生硬。

38分钟前
  • 掉线
  • 推荐

德国表现主义电影向美国黑色电影转变时期的牛逼片子,而且就我目前的阅历来说,它好过所有的德国表现主义电影以及八成的(另两成我没看而已)美国黑色电影,这当中的差距,是巨大的

40分钟前
  • 左胸上的吸盘
  • 力荐

黑白构图的张力,无声与画面的急速运作的对比,轻快口哨和极端反人性行径的并行不悖,空镜头与人物戏剧性夸张表演的穿插。电影在那个有声片刚诞生不久的年代,可以承载太多的艺术手法和社会诘问。如同富士康员工跳楼事件,个体背负社会病是流行于每一个年代的瘟疫。

42分钟前
  • 小岩菽
  • 推荐

B+/ 大半部散点透视无主角剧本,结尾审判似黑化生之欲;超低仰角俯角,移魂般长镜空镜,阴影与光的博弈; 心理音效恐惧感仿佛真空。无论文本还是影像都有新的尝试,昭示着尼伯龙根大都会的默片时代之后似乎稚嫩却更有生命力的弗里茨 · 朗。万万没想到喜剧效果这么出众。可作最近网络话题镜鉴。

46分钟前
  • 寒枝雀静
  • 推荐

印象最深的是 他说“你们要是杀了我 你们就是冷血谋杀!” 群众听到后笑了起来;他说“我要求把自己交给警察!” 群众也笑了起来;他说“我要求把自己交给民主陪审团!” 群众还是笑了起来。群众没有兴趣也觉得没有必要听他说些什么 这不重要 “让他死”就是大家坐在这里的目的。M是凶手 而乱审判的群众也是凶手——从个人观点来看 某些罪犯——就如M 单单交给法律来处理是难解自己的心头恨 就应该让他受折磨——但民主审判又不能当主流 如何让法律和民主完美结合这才是国家最最重要的治国之道 最后在法律和人情里留了一个做选择的悬念 大概就是这个意思吧。

50分钟前
  • 黄悦_
  • 还行

弗里茨·朗十分大胆地让一位罪恶滔天的凶犯在大银幕前为自己辩解,凶犯与群众的关系变得十分微妙;朗用一个社会新闻进行了一次政治反思,这是1931年的魏玛德国;按照克拉考尔的观点,M同样预示了纳粹德国的崛起。马克·费罗更认为结局中女人的警告表明朗和他当时的女友Thea von Harbou(后加入纳粹)对魏玛共和国民主的不信任,流露出两人的意识形态(cf.Cinéma et Histoire, 1977)。从以微观的社会事件对社会制度进行宏观的分析角度来看,朗无疑是影史的先驱。

55分钟前
  • 阿茶
  • 推荐

解读一部经典电影就要联系当时的环境,读过福柯的《规训与惩罚》《癫狂与文明》可能对电影中欧洲的法律体系有所了解。其实就剧情来说这部电影很是粗糙,不过最后的审判意味伸长。人权,自由,权利,精神病一系列中世纪的产物柔和起来,这才是这部戏的精髓。

58分钟前
  • 乔大路
  • 推荐

黑社会对杀人犯的人道和法律审判是很有意思的。真正的执法机构是无能的,但是一个罪犯又有什么权利来说另外一个罪犯是不可饶恕的?尤其是,这个杀人犯在倾述自己的心理病态时,听众席上的若干观众还默默的点着头。终究,这个社会的罪恶似乎是没有出路的,因此才有最后一幕的,父母们应该看好自己的孩子。虽然这最后一句台词真的出现得很突兀和莫名其妙,像是匆忙之间添上去用来过关的。如果没有执法机构的审判和最后母亲的画面,我想这部片子要好得多。

1小时前
  • 思阳
  • 还行