Der Graf von Cagliostro explained

Der Graf von Cagliostro
Director:Reinhold Schünzel
Screenplay:
  • Robert Liebmann
  • Reinhold Schünzel
Producer:
  • Victor Micheluzzi
Starring:
Cinematography:
Production Companies:
  • Lichtbild-Fabrikation Schünzel-Film
  • Vereinigte Filmindustrie Micheluzzi & Co
Distributors:-->
Country:
  • Austria
  • Germany[1]

Der Graf von Cagliostro is a 1920 silent film directed and co-written by Reinhold Schünzel and starring Schünzel, Anita Berber and Conrad Veidt. It depicts the life of the eighteenth century Italian mesmerist and occultist Alessandro Cagliostro, who called himself Cagliostro. The film is considered a lost film.

Release and reception

Der Graf von Cagliostro has its world premiere on December 21, 1920, at Busch-Kino, Vienna. It was later shown in Germany on Februaryt 17, 192 at the Marmorhaus in Berlin.

Der Kinematograph declared the film as "marvelously effective cinema" while the script is "the weakest element in the entire production." The review also praised Carl Goetz who "gives the best performance of all" and Conrad Veidt as "very effective in his opulent costumes".A review in Film-Kurier stated that the film "could have been a masterpiece", blaming Robert Liebmann's script which "didn't expend any extra energy and what he did manage doesn't come close to the demands of this subject." The review echoed Der Kinematographs review stating "Carl Goetz and Conrad Veidt are the only actors whose every gesture is perfect."

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Der Graf von Cagliostro. Filmportal.de. December 14, 2022.