...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!
M
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TheMysteriousMr.M | |
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Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_content_3'); })Fritz Lang's 1931 masterpiece about a serial child killer in Weimar Berlin and the people who try to find him: the police, the criminal underworld, and the city's beggars. One of the first examples of Film Noir, M provides not only stark black and white images, but also a haunting leitmotif throughout the film.Hans Beckert (Peter Lorre) whistles "In the Hall of the Mountain King" by Edvard Grieg from Peer Gynt, as he buys a balloon from a blind balloon seller for a little girl named Elsie Beckmann. A scene later, Elsie's mother looks for her and can't find her, shouting her name as the camera shows the balloon drifting in the sky.Police inspector Karl Lohmann, meanwhile, is investigating the serial killings with modern policework, such as fingerprinting and handwriting analysis. The criminal underworld, too, is searching for the killer, since more police on the street is bad business for them and they, too, are disgusted by the killer targeting children.Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_content_2'); })When Hans whistles "In the Hall of the Mountain King" again in front of the blind balloon seller, the seller tells one of the criminals, who marks Hans with a chalk M on his jacket, so they can follow him. The criminal fraternity goes to more ruthless lengths than the police to catch the killer, and cause a great deal of collateral damage to people and private property, before finally closing in on him. The criminals kidnap Beckert and bring him to a Kangaroo Court, where Hans makes an impassioned speech about how he should not be blamed for the murders since he can't help himself, he can't help that he's insane. Despite the nature of the court, the criminal appointed as Beckert's legal representative tries hard to defend him fairly. The 'prosecutor' takes the stance that either for his crimes (if he is not insane) or for his insanity, Beckert has forfeited his right to live and must be exterminated. Beckert desparately tries to he explain that he can't help being this way. The criminals are about to kill Hans when the police bust in and arrest both him and his captors.Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_content_1'); })As Hans is about to be sentenced by five judges, the mothers outside the courtroom say it won't bring back their children. Elsie's mother says they should have kept better watch. "We, too, should keep a closer watch on our children. All of us."Is not to be confused with the head of MI6 and James Bond's boss. | |
M | fetched |
2019-02-18T11:05:55Z | |
M | parsed |
2020-06-24T04:53:27Z | |
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Dropped link to ForeignRemake: Not a Feature - ITEM | |
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Dropped link to IronicNurseryRhyme: Not a Feature - UNKNOWN | |
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IronicNurseryRhyme | |
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DBTropes | |
M / int_1282bf4f | type |
No Celebrities Were Harmed | |
M / int_1282bf4f | comment |
No Celebrities Were Harmed: Lohmann in his bodily build, mannerisms and modus operandi is very closely modeled on Ernst Gennat (1880-1939), the head of Berlin's Mordinspektion (set up in 1926, the world's first police Homicide division), who introduced many innovations to investigation procedures, e.g. becoming the first man to use the new medium of television to ask the public for information relevant to an ongoing investigation. Gennat among other things headed the investigation of the Grossman and Kürten murders and coined the term "serial killer" with reference to the latter. In his day Gennat was internationally famousnote When Charlie Chaplin visited Berlin, he asked to be introduced to Gennat. and was known to Berliners by affectionate nicknames like "the Buddha of the Alex" (i. e. the police headquarters on Alexanderplatz). | |
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M / int_14ee9ce | type |
Dream Melody | |
M / int_14ee9ce | comment |
Dream Melody: "In the Hall of the Mountain King" | |
M / int_14ee9ce | featureApplicability |
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M / int_1645005b | type |
Evil Versus Evil | |
M / int_1645005b | comment |
Evil vs. Evil: Most of the conflict happens between the child killer and the organised criminals, many of whom were killers themselves (just of adults). Inspector Lohmann and the authorities only played a minor role as a third party. | |
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M / int_196ccd94 | type |
NeighborhoodFriendlyGangsters | |
M / int_196ccd94 | comment |
Neighborhood Friendly Gangsters: Deconstructed. The vigilante criminals are only interested in ending the manhunt to restore their criminal endeavors. Hans also points out that their crimes have even less justification than his own. | |
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M / int_22cf536c | type |
Chekhov's Gun | |
M / int_22cf536c | comment |
Chekhov's Gun: Beckert's compulsive whistling, which leads to his identification as the child murderer. | |
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M / int_23a06c52 | type |
TheUnReveal | |
M / int_23a06c52 | comment |
The Un Reveal: Beckert's sentence. The judges are just about to announce it when the film cuts to a mourning mother, who says it doesn't matter, because it won't bring back her child. | |
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M / int_2eedb330 | type |
Murderers Are Rapists | |
M / int_2eedb330 | comment |
Murderers Are Rapists: Very, very subtly implied, and all off-screen. One of the police departments on the child-killer case is a sexual crimes division, and one policeman says to another concerning the child-killer's victims "You know what state we find them in after that." Also, everyone was specifically looking for a male perpetrator. | |
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M / int_2f913008 | type |
Insanity Defense | |
M / int_2f913008 | comment |
Insanity Defense: The climax features an analysis of whether it's fair to punish a man for crimes he was compelled by insanity to do. | |
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M / int_319e4a2f | type |
Even Evil Has Standards | |
M / int_319e4a2f | comment |
Even Evil Has Standards: A complicated example. Hans disgusts all the criminal bigwigs because he kills children, but they're primarily after him because the police looking for him interfere with their crimes. The "defense attorney" notes the hypocrisy of wanted murderers standing in judgment of another murderer. Hans' final speech also calls them out on their hypocritical "standards", pointing out that he does what he does because he is insane and cannot help himself, whereas they simply can't be bothered to learn an honest trade. | |
M / int_319e4a2f | featureApplicability |
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M / int_340e75cb | type |
Writing Indentation Clue | |
M / int_340e75cb | comment |
Writing Indentation Clue: The murderer writes a letter to the newspaper, using a single sheet of paper, a red pencil, and a wide windowsill in his apartment as a desk. When the police raid the apartment, they find partial impressions of the letter's words in the sill, as well as bits of red pencil lead. In this case, they already knew what had been written; the indentation and lead bits were, instead, proof that it had been written there specifically. | |
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M | hasFeature |
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M / int_35b429f3 | type |
Weird Trade Union | |
M / int_35b429f3 | comment |
Weird Trade Union: The Beggars' League (taken from Bertolt Brecht's The Threepenny Opera). | |
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M / int_40cc0c7e | type |
Bittersweet Ending | |
M / int_40cc0c7e | comment |
Bittersweet Ending: Beckert is brought to trial, but the climax establishes that neither execution nor medical treatment seem to be a totally fitting sentence, and it won't bring back the kids anyway. Although, by the end of the film a serial murderer/rapist has been brought to justice along with several high ranking mob officials leaving the German public better off for it. | |
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M / int_46118dc5 | type |
Adult Fear | |
M / int_46118dc5 | comment |
Adult Fear: Don't leave your kids alone even for a second. | |
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1.0 | |
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1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
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M / int_479d4e5a | type |
Would Hurt a Child | |
M / int_479d4e5a | comment |
Would Hurt a Child: Hans, a pedophile and murderer of children. | |
M / int_479d4e5a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
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1.0 | |
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M / int_49f20c6a | type |
Gory Discretion Shot | |
M / int_49f20c6a | comment |
Gory Discretion Shot: Interesting version; In one scene, the Thieves are torturing a watchman for information in a glass-windowed room, with a crowd of beggars watching from outside. When the leader signals for the torture to start, the beggars move up against the windows so nothing can be seen. Also, Elsie's death at the beginning. | |
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1.0 | |
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M | hasFeature |
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M / int_5ca80293 | type |
Pragmatic Villainy | |
M / int_5ca80293 | comment |
Pragmatic Villainy: Part of the reason why the criminals want to stop Hans so much? His presence increases the number of police operating, which in turn interferes with their ability to break the law and get away with it. | |
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1.0 | |
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M | hasFeature |
M / int_5ca80293 | |
M / int_5d3e7c6 | type |
KangarooCourt | |
M / int_5d3e7c6 | comment |
Kangaroo Court: The criminal underworld sets up a court to try Beckert, but it's clear from the beginning that they have no intention to do anything but kill him. | |
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M | hasFeature |
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M / int_6220c00d | type |
Pædo Hunt | |
M / int_6220c00d | comment |
Pædo Hunt: The hunt for Hans. | |
M / int_6220c00d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
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1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
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M / int_6b05b601 | type |
Jerkass Has a Point | |
M / int_6b05b601 | comment |
Jerkass Has a Point: Beckert is an insane child murderer, but his condemnation of the hypocrisy of the 'court' standing in judgement of him isn't entirely without merit. The prosecutor of the mob trial may be a criminal but he does have a point that whether or not Hans is crazy he is a threat to the children of Germany regardless and killing him would make them more safe. | |
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M | hasFeature |
M / int_6b05b601 | |
M / int_7301ae04 | type |
Serial Killer | |
M / int_7301ae04 | comment |
Serial Killer: Of little girls. | |
M / int_7301ae04 | featureApplicability |
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M | hasFeature |
M / int_7301ae04 | |
M / int_7335ffa9 | type |
Grey-and-Gray Morality | |
M / int_7335ffa9 | comment |
Grey and Gray Morality: Both sides are black with shades of grey. Even a child murderer is not without his sympathetic side. | |
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M / int_7464705c | type |
Arc Words | |
M / int_7464705c | comment |
Arc Words: "Who is the murderer?" | |
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1.0 | |
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M | hasFeature |
M / int_7464705c | |
M / int_74ee1c2d | type |
Out-of-Genre Experience | |
M / int_74ee1c2d | comment |
Out-of-Genre Experience: For a few minutes, the police procedural part switches into documentary style, complete with voice-over, diagrams, and a giant compass drawing circles on a city map. | |
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1.0 | |
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M / int_7a562500 | type |
German Expressionism | |
M / int_7a562500 | comment |
German Expressionism: A late example. | |
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M / int_7d89315b | type |
"The Reason You Suck" Speech | |
M / int_7d89315b | comment |
"The Reason You Suck" Speech: In his impassioned defense, Hans is quick to note the essential hypocrisy of the court of criminals trying him; he does bad things, but he commits abhorrent acts because he is insane and cannot make himself stop, but they choose to be criminals when they could instead earn an honest living. | |
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M / int_8163e2bb | type |
Dramatic Drop | |
M / int_8163e2bb | comment |
Dramatic Drop: When Franz tells Inspector Lohmann that they broke into the office building to catch the child murderer, the cigar he was smoking falls out of his mouth. | |
M / int_8163e2bb | featureApplicability |
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M | hasFeature |
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M / int_819b6384 | type |
Sympathetic Murderer | |
M / int_819b6384 | comment |
Sympathetic Murderer: Hans turns out to be one in the end, in spite of his horrific crimes. | |
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M / int_81a1960f | type |
Silence Is Golden | |
M / int_81a1960f | comment |
Silence Is Golden: Because a silent film was expected to have accompaniment throughout this film is actually quieter than most silent films. The silence of shots like the slow reveal of the mob backed court, and, later, the police coming to stop the mobsters from killing the serial killer makes them so much tenser. | |
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M | hasFeature |
M / int_81a1960f | |
M / int_85537320 | type |
Police Procedural | |
M / int_85537320 | comment |
Police Procedural: The police part of the movie is possibly the Ur-Example of this trope. | |
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1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
M / int_85537320 | |
M / int_898ff050 | type |
Villain Protagonist | |
M / int_898ff050 | comment |
Villain Protagonist: Hans Beckert, serial child murderer. | |
M / int_898ff050 | featureApplicability |
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M / int_8a986cc7 | type |
The Great Depression | |
M / int_8a986cc7 | comment |
The Great Depression: A rare European example. | |
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M / int_8acdad69 | type |
Character Signature Song | |
M / int_8acdad69 | comment |
Character Signature Song: Hans Beckert always eerily whistles Edvard Grieg's "In the Hall of the Mountain King" when he goes somewhere. | |
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1.0 | |
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M / int_8acdad69 | |
M / int_8f612013 | type |
Token Good Teammate | |
M / int_8f612013 | comment |
Token Good Teammate: To Beckert's surprise, his "defense counsel" at the Criminals' trial actually tries to defend him, and makes a powerful argument at the trial as to why Beckert should be handed over to the police instead of being lynched by the mob. | |
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M / int_8fcb5843 | type |
The Hunter Becomes the Hunted | |
M / int_8fcb5843 | comment |
The Hunter Becomes the Hunted: You can pinpoint when Hans Beckert discovers he is being watched and is about to be caught to the moment when he discovers the chalk "M" on his shoulder. Ironically, this is because his intended victim points it out to him. | |
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M / int_941896b | type |
Shaming the Mob | |
M / int_941896b | comment |
Shaming the Mob: This is what Hans tries to do. It doesn't work. Except on some audience members. | |
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M | hasFeature |
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M / int_97fa0a10 | type |
Mass "Oh, Crap!" | |
M / int_97fa0a10 | comment |
See also Mass "Oh, Crap!" above. | |
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1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
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M / int_9a68179 | type |
HoldingTheFloor | |
M / int_9a68179 | comment |
Holding the Floor: Beckert's long speech at his trial. | |
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1.0 | |
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M / int_9d12bbc1 | type |
Foreshadowing | |
M / int_9d12bbc1 | comment |
Foreshadowing: The game the children play with the ball at the start of the film. | |
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M | hasFeature |
M / int_9d12bbc1 | |
M / int_9e31f0b1 | type |
One-Letter Title | |
M / int_9e31f0b1 | comment |
One-Letter Title: The "M" stands for ''Mörder", aka murderer. | |
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M | hasFeature |
M / int_9e31f0b1 | |
M / int_9f6fb586 | type |
Leitmotif | |
M / int_9f6fb586 | comment |
Leitmotif: "In the Hall of the Mountain King" used for creepy effect. In fact, M practically created the cinematic leitmotif. | |
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M | hasFeature |
M / int_9f6fb586 | |
M / int_a2b998a0 | type |
Wouldn't Hurt a Child | |
M / int_a2b998a0 | comment |
Wouldn't Hurt a Child: The criminal underworld may be scum who, as Hans accurately points out, can't be bothered to learn an honest trade, but they draw the line at hurting children and are appalled by Hans' actions. | |
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M | hasFeature |
M / int_a2b998a0 | |
M / int_a64359d5 | type |
Organ Grinder | |
M / int_a64359d5 | comment |
Organ Grinder: One is among the beggars tasked with keeping their eyes out for the murderer. | |
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M / int_a64359d5 | |
M / int_a74e8ba4 | type |
Thieves' Guild | |
M / int_a74e8ba4 | comment |
Thieves' Guild: Several of them, it seems, one for each major division of the trade. | |
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M / int_a74e8ba4 | |
M / int_a91a3b48 | type |
Gollum Made Me Do It | |
M / int_a91a3b48 | comment |
Gollum Made Me Do It: Beckert's defense. He's driven by a compulsion that he can't resist. | |
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M | hasFeature |
M / int_a91a3b48 | |
M / int_ad1db87c | type |
Oh, Crap! | |
M / int_ad1db87c | comment |
Oh, Crap!: The very slow pan around the room after Hans is shoved down the stairs, showing the Joker Jury staring at him in unmoving complete silence. And, of course, the famous scene where he realizes his coat has been marked and that he's being followed. In fact, this is mostly Beckert's reaction throughout the entire second half of the film. See also Mass "Oh, Crap!" above. | |
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M | hasFeature |
M / int_ad1db87c | |
M / int_b5171e10 | type |
Tragic Villain | |
M / int_b5171e10 | comment |
Tragic Villain: Hans can't help the fact that he's a child murderer. | |
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1.0 | |
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M | hasFeature |
M / int_b5171e10 | |
M / int_b82017fa | type |
Not-So-Innocent Whistle | |
M / int_b82017fa | comment |
Not-So-Innocent Whistle: The killer has a super-creepy whistle. | |
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1.0 | |
M / int_b82017fa | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
M / int_b82017fa | |
M / int_bb18a227 | type |
It's All About Me | |
M / int_bb18a227 | comment |
It's All About Me: Hans's impassioned speech in his own defense pretty much ignores the pain and suffering he caused and would have continued to cause if allowed to roam free in favor of complaining about how unfair it was for people to blame him for his actions. Especially bad when you realize that even if Hans is mentally ill he never once sought treatment for his supposedly unwanted impulses and instead attempted to remain at large despite knowing what that would result in. Then again seeking treatment for being a pedophile in those days are even worse than today so while being a Dirty Coward it's not like it's an easy choice. | |
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M | hasFeature |
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M / int_bcba27a1 | type |
Putting on the Reich | |
M / int_bcba27a1 | comment |
Putting on the Reich: What may be seen as a "prophetic" example, since the Nazis weren't in power yet: Der Schränker's long leather coat may be seen as foreshadowing The Gestapo; more plausibly his leather-coat and rhetoric have been seen as alluding to Joseph Goebbels, then chief of propaganda of the Nazi party and their Gauleiter (regional head of the party organisation) in Berlin. Although neither the Gestapo nor Goebbels were known for sporting bowler hats or walking-canes. The Schränker was portrayed by Gustaf Gründgens, who later continued to rise to fame and fortune under the Nazis (partly because Hermann Goering was a fan of his), which became the subject of Klaus Mann's Roman à Clef Mephisto. The story that the film was originally entitled Mörder unter uns ("Murderer(s) Among Us") and had to be given a different title due to pressure from the Nazis is a legend which Fritz Lang at different times confirmed and denied. | |
M / int_bcba27a1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
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M | hasFeature |
M / int_bcba27a1 | |
M / int_c75df49a | type |
Shout-Out | |
M / int_c75df49a | comment |
Shout-Out: The M used to mark Beckert inspired the plot of the Blake and Mortimer album The Yellow "M" and also the 13th Franka album, De dertiende letter ("The thirteenth letter") by Henk Kuijpers. | |
M / int_c75df49a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
M / int_c75df49a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
M / int_c75df49a | |
M / int_cd0637d2 | type |
Extra! Extra! Read All About It! | |
M / int_cd0637d2 | comment |
Extra! Extra! Read All About It!: "Extra! Extra!", shout all the paperboys carrying news of the Beckmann murder. | |
M / int_cd0637d2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
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1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
M / int_cd0637d2 | |
M / int_cdfe12c3 | type |
Nothing Is Scarier | |
M / int_cdfe12c3 | comment |
Nothing Is Scarier: We never find out exactly what the murderer did to his victims; suffice it to say that the state of the girls' bodies horrified even hardened police officers. | |
M / int_cdfe12c3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
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1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
M / int_cdfe12c3 | |
M / int_d01cffbc | type |
Badass Longcoat | |
M / int_d01cffbc | comment |
Badass Longcoat: Der Schränker's leather overcoat. Although see Putting on the Reich below; he's not a very likable character. | |
M / int_d01cffbc | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
M / int_d01cffbc | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
M / int_d01cffbc | |
M / int_d61c0620 | type |
Joker Jury | |
M / int_d61c0620 | comment |
Joker Jury: The criminals' court at the end (although Hans is far from a hero). | |
M / int_d61c0620 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
M / int_d61c0620 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
M / int_d61c0620 | |
M / int_d7b34c31 | type |
Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep" | |
M / int_d7b34c31 | comment |
Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep": Der Schränker ("The Safecracker"). | |
M / int_d7b34c31 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
M / int_d7b34c31 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
M / int_d7b34c31 | |
M / int_dcbe8a6e | type |
Chekhov's Gunman | |
M / int_dcbe8a6e | comment |
Chekhov's Gunman: The blind balloon seller. | |
M / int_dcbe8a6e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
M / int_dcbe8a6e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
M / int_dcbe8a6e | |
M / int_dfa71e43 | type |
Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain | |
M / int_dfa71e43 | comment |
Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain: Hans again. In fact, Peter Lorre was typecast as this role for years afterward. Subverted in that Hans Beckert managed to kill several children and successfully evade the police in the first part of the film and the time before and is only this because of his patheticness and guilt after being caught. | |
M / int_dfa71e43 | featureApplicability |
-0.3 | |
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1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
M / int_dfa71e43 | |
M / int_e277967 | type |
What Is Evil? | |
M / int_e277967 | comment |
What Is Evil?: Beckert is pursued by the city's criminal underworld, because the intensive police manhunt is interfering with their business and because they resent police inquiries that imply that they might be associated with a child murderer. When they conduct a mock trial of Beckert, he attacks their sense of moral superiority, declaring that he does what he does because he's haunted by unwanted compulsions he can't resist, while they do what they do because they freely chose crime instead of honest work. | |
M / int_e277967 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
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M | hasFeature |
M / int_e277967 | |
M / int_e4b69188 | type |
Very Loosely Based on a True Story | |
M / int_e4b69188 | comment |
Very Loosely Based on a True Story: Fritz Lang based the story on several serial killers who had plagued Germany in recent years, including Fritz Haarmann, Karl Grossmann, and Peter Kürten, the "Vampire of Düsseldorf." Haarman and Grossmann are mentioned by name, and Haarmann is the real subject of the children's rhyhme at the beginning. It should be noted that Fritz denied it because it was seen as being tastelessly (for presenting him as sympathetic) Ripped from the Headlines. | |
M / int_e4b69188 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
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1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
M / int_e4b69188 | |
M / int_e5700c89 | type |
Reluctant Psycho | |
M / int_e5700c89 | comment |
Reluctant Psycho: Hans, as encapsulated in his defense speech seen under Tragic Villain. | |
M / int_e5700c89 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
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1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
M / int_e5700c89 | |
M / int_ea2e9f2d | type |
No Ending | |
M / int_ea2e9f2d | comment |
No Ending: Probably a Logical Extreme example. Not only does the movie come to a close right before Hans is given a verdict, there aren't even any credits, not even a "The End" card like most every film had even in those days. The film cuts to black as the grieving mother whispers "all of us" (see the introduction above), and then it suddenly stops. | |
M / int_ea2e9f2d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
M / int_ea2e9f2d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
M / int_ea2e9f2d | |
M / int_ed503b22 | type |
Match Cut | |
M / int_ed503b22 | comment |
Match Cut: A crime boss talks to his fellow crime bosses about the problems the child murderer is causing, due to the increased police presence. With a sweep of his arm, he says "I invite—". Cut to another person at a different meeting, sweeping his arm and saying "—your views, gentlemen." The second meeting is a different group of men — this time detectives — discussing the same subject. The rest of the scene continues to cut between the different meetings in a similar way. | |
M / int_ed503b22 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
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1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
M / int_ed503b22 | |
M / int_f67171cc | type |
Empathy Doll Shot | |
M / int_f67171cc | comment |
Empathy Doll Shot: One of the oldest examples: Elsie's ball and balloon in the opening scene. | |
M / int_f67171cc | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
M / int_f67171cc | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
M / int_f67171cc | |
M / int_f6c36157 | type |
Stab the Salad | |
M / int_f6c36157 | comment |
Stab the Salad: After luring in his next victim, Hans pulls out a switchblade, which he uses to cut an orange. | |
M / int_f6c36157 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
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1.0 | |
M | hasFeature |
M / int_f6c36157 | |
M / int_fe5dda42 | type |
Talent Double | |
M / int_fe5dda42 | comment |
Talent Double: Peter Lorre couldn't actually whistle, so Lang provided it in a hidden Creator Cameo. | |
M / int_fe5dda42 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
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M / int_fe5dda42 | |
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