- Robert Reinert
Robert Reinert (1872-1928) was a German film director and novelist. Born in
Vienna , he moved toMunich around 1900. He wrote several novels, including "Der Weg zur Sonne" (1906) and "Krieg" (1907). [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1720536/bio IMDB biography] His successful script for the film Homunculus (1916) led him to direct several films, most notably Opium and Nerven. Nerven opened in Munich in 1919. People were hospitalized after watching the movie and one woman, after seeing it, woke up one night, went out on the street in her nightshirt and screamed "Now I am going to die! Now I amgoing to die!" [ http://www.sueddeutsche.de/muenchen/842/303822/text/ Munich Sueddeutsche article] About Nerven, one recent critic wrote "Nerven is a disorienting, highly experimental work. Released in 1919, beforeThe Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (early 1920), it might have become a prototype of German Expressionist cinema if it had been widely seen." [ http://www.davidbordwell.net/blog/?p=170David Bordwell website] Reinert's films were not a commercial success, and in 1925 he got a job with Ufa, where he worked until his death. [ http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1720536/bio IMDB biography]References
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