Othello (1922) Poster

(1922)

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7/10
Fine Performances
Cineanalyst31 October 2005
I like this adaptation of Shakespeare's play, mostly for the performances by two of Weimar Germany's greatest screen actors, Emil Jannings as Othello and Werner Krauss as Iago. There are many alterations to the original text in addition to the expected truncation. Director Dimitri Buchowetzki achieves a good pacing out of it. Lotte Eisner (author of "The Haunted Screen") says the language is naïve, but I don't consider that very important in a silent film. There are plenty of better ways to get that if one wants. For a silent film especially, visually adapting the play is essential.

Visually, the film has survived well over the years. The photography is crisp. The sets look nice, as well. They're studio built, which is a convenience in controlling lighting, but they're not exceptional, nor used very effectively. One of the better-filmed moments is when the sets are blacked out during the dramatic dénouement. Jannings and Krauss, who both came from the stage, compensate for many of the shortcomings, though. In moor makeup, Jannings again demonstrates his versatility, and he gives a strong performance. But, I think Krauss steals the show; he is thoroughly dastardly, with tights and occasional dance-like movements, and his character directs the plot throughout. This film was worthwhile for me because of those two performances.
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5/10
You could say that they acted not wisely but too well.
Son_of_Mansfield7 May 2006
Warning: Spoilers
The double edged sword of silent movies is keeping track of that line where acting goes from honest to overwrought. Emil Jannings goes from a wooden man in the first half of the film to a convulsing child in the second half, while Werner Krauss plays Iago as a gay man with a see through shirt and tight spandex bottoms. As a matter of fact, everyone is dressed oddly. Cassio wears a metal helmet, Roderigo looks like he is wearing floral curtains, and Iago has a Mongol mustache. The music is all menace all the time, which gets old fast. The high point is that this is one of Shakespeare's best plays, but even that is undercut by the slicing of many depth providing scenes like Emilia and Desdemona's marital talk which gives Desdemona more of a personality and all of the Bianca's scenes as well as scenes between Iago and Emilia. The result is a superficial version of the play with acting, while big and flashy, that doesn't hold up to today's standards.
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9/10
For silent Shakespeare, this is really good stuff
planktonrules23 May 2007
I am not a huge fan of Shakespeare, but I have seen a couple dozen different silent versions of his films and I must say that this film is definitely the best. Unlike some of the earliest versions that only lasted a few minutes (way too short to do any justice to the plays), this one was a lengthy film--allowing for a reasonable treatment. Now you STILL can't compare this to a sound version of the film because since it's a silent, the lyrical quality of the play is missing. Some purists might hate this (after all, they don't recite the play verbatim like many sound versions), but I liked how the play was changed to a pantomime piece with an emphasis on action and characterization.

For someone who doesn't get excited about hearing all the original words of Shakespeare yet loves silent films, this is a wonderful film. The sets for 1922 were exceptional and the acting was fortunately not over the top--which is sometimes a problem with OTHELLO. You do NOT see a crazed caricature of a man, as Emil Jannings plays the lead role very well--with humanity and not relying too much on gesticulations or campiness. He was an amazing silent actor--hence his winning the first Oscar for Best Actor just a few years later. Unfortunately, he was also a devoted Nazi and wasted his talent from the mid-1930s onward!
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An Atmospheric and Very Interesting Adaptation
Snow Leopard6 March 2006
This atmospheric and very interesting adaptation of Shakespeare's "Othello" adds a good dose of German silent film style to the classic story of jealousy and deceit. Although at times the emphasis is placed somewhat differently than in the original, the adaptation shows good judgment in highlighting the themes and sequences that would work the best on the silent screen.

The basic story holds closely to the plot of the play. Emil Jannings makes a fine Othello, since his emotional style fits the volatile character well. Werner Krauss is particularly memorable as Iago. Of the main characters, Iago is the one who comes across most differently from the role in the play - here he is jaunty rather than sullen, an evil genius who shows obvious relish in each step of his malicious plans. The character and Krauss's performance work quite well for a movie adaptation. Another interesting difference is that here Emilia's role is enlarged and given more importance, in comparison with the play.

The emphasis is, as it should be in Shakespeare, on the characters; but the photography, settings, and the rest of the production are all of good quality as well. It's quite a good version of the story for a movie made in the early 1920s.
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3/10
Quite unsatisfactory...
mmipyle28 November 2020
I recently watched the kino-Lorber release of "Variety" (1925). On the same Blu-Ray as an extra is "Othello" (1922) with Emil Jannings, Werner Krauss, Ica von Lenkeffy, Theodor Loos, Ferdinand von Alten, Lya de Putti, Magnus Stifter, and Friedrich Kühne. Although I watched this on VHS years ago, I'd forgotten nearly everything about it. Although many on the IMDb think that this version is outstanding, I found it unsatisfying. The first third of the film is simply pedestrian, and the version on the Blu-Ray has English intertitles that in some instances are absolutely ridiculous, and one in particular is nearly nonsense. The next third of the film picks up in direction and action and begins to be a tad more like its origin, Mr. Shakespeare. The last third plays out the play as it is written, but...and this is what I found most disappointing...at a seventh grade level. The quality of the scenario as compared to the play is third rate. And Emil Jannings...one of the world's greatest actors of the early twentieth century and one of my own favorites to watch in silent film...I thought if he bulged those eyes out any more they'd pop! I'm sitting here eating a salad as I write this, and a couple of jumbo pimento stuffed olives are looking directly at me, and I can't eat them now because all I see is Emil Jannings' bulging eyes. Now I can't finish my salad. Sorry, but I have said before: I think the greatest male performance I've ever watched on film was Laurence Olivier's "Othello" from 1965. He far, far, far surpassed Jannings. Period.
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10/10
Superb example of "big" acting filled to the max!
David-24016 January 2002
My acting teacher, the late great Hayes Gordon, used to say that no acting was too big, as long as it was filled. In other words, if the emotion was real, an actor could chew the scenery and still create empathy from the audience. I have never seen a better example of this than in this superb silent adaptation of Shakespeare's classic.

Emil Jannings and Werner Krauss, probably the two best German actors of their generation, give HUGE performances as Othello and Iago - but both are completely believable, and utterly compelling, because every emotion is felt, not indicated. As a result, this could be the best of all the film "Othellos".

Strikingly shot, on brilliantly realised sets, the director also makes sure that nothing distracts from the magnificent performances of the actors. Every performance in this film is brilliant - but Jannings and Krauss climb to the pinacle of silent film acting.

See this film, and see two of the greatest actors of all time convey the essence of Shakespeare without uttering a single word!
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4/10
Did not get me interested
Horst_In_Translation17 June 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"Othello" is a German 80-minute movie (in the 2001 version) written and directed by Russian-born filmmaker Dimitri Buchowetzki. It is probably the most known work of his career. And it falls into the category of German silent black-and-white film from the 1920 where we have so so many. Unfortunately, this one does not stand out whatsoever compared to the majority of other films and sinks in the pool of mediocrity. I guess it is only still somewhat known today because the film is based on a work of a man somebody consider the greatest writer in history: William Shakespeare. Then again, the new generation who hears "otelo" (or "Othello") will maybe think of the phone company instead. But that's what it is. But this also makes me especially sad as this film, even looking at how old it is, may have been a nice way of depicting a Shakespeare story in motion picture form and making the material accessible through film. But it did not work out. I was not entertained watching this. Then again, thinking about it, also in new films, there has not been an Othello version for a long time, at least not a popular one, so may be it is time. Or the material just is not relevant enough anymore. I hope I am wrong with the latter. I do not recommend this 1922 film. Thumbs down.
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8/10
Venetian Blind
richardchatten1 February 2021
Emil Jannings and Werner Krauss are both almost unrecognisable in this enjoyable breeze through Shakespeare's play. Jannings is fairly restrained and cuts an impressive figure in the title role; but a portly, moon-faced Krauss (looking like Zero Mostel wearing an earring and a silly little moustache) remains overshadowed by Micheal Macliammoir's poisonously definitive Iago in Orson Welles's version thirty years later.
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Great Version
Michael_Elliott29 February 2008
Othello (1922)

*** 1/2 (out of 4)

German version of the classic Shakespeare play has Iago (Werner Krauss) making Othello (Emil Jannings) jealous of his wife so that revenge can be played out. Director Dimitri Buchowetzki does a very good job at the film's pacing and keeps the film moving very well. The 80-minute running time comes and goes very quickly, which is always a benefit when we're talking Shakespeare. The sets look very good as well but the big highlight are the performances by Krauss and Jannings. Both men do superb work here, especially Jannings who gives one of the best performances of Othello that I've seen.
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5/10
Art Thou Drunk?
wes-connors17 April 2009
"German expressionism" is not so much in the film as it is as on the faces of Emil Jannings (Othello) and Werner Krauss (Iago), in this silent version of "Othello". The production is nicely staged, with everyone finding their marks. Its costumes and sets are very well designed. The adaptation is faithful enough to Shakespeare's envious storyline. But, watching two overly grand old actors is the film's main calling card, presently. Mugging uproariously in a fat-clinging black outfit, Mr. Krauss renders darkly-skinned Mr. Jannings positively subtle, in comparison. The most sensual scene has Krauss delivering Jannings' handkerchief while arranging the pillows for his head.

***** Othello (2/22) Dimitri Buchowetzki ~ Emil Jannings, Werner Krauss, Ica von Lenkeffy
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9/10
Done Very Well
silentmoviefan8 August 2012
Warning: Spoilers
This was a faithful production of "Othello". The only reason I don't give it a "10" is because it's so dark and depressing, which I imagine is how Shakespeare intended it. All the acting is done well, by everybody. There seem to be no slip-ups anywhere. One question is do have is in the casting. How come Lya De Putti, a rather famous actress even then, didn't play Desdemona. She plays Iago's wife (love is blind to be sure!) Also, I wonder what they used to make Emil Jannings look like a Moor. I don't imagine black actors were very much in supply in Germany in those days. Watching it, I feel like I learned something, what the play was about and the characters. That in itself is reason enough to get your hands on a copy. To sum up the story, Othello comes back from the war and names Cassio his lieutenant, which really ticks off Iago and Rodrigo. Cassio is true to Othello's cause (which puts him in the minority). Iago, ugly to the bone, does him in and then lies to Othello about Desdemona. Othello kills her without learning the truth. Depressing.... Still, it was faithful to the play, so I would recommend it to anyone.
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