Classics Tip
Metropolis R2 (Uk Import) - Lang, FritzReleasedatum: 22 november 2010
With its dizzying depiction of a futuristic cityscape and alluring  female robot, Metropolis is among the most famous of all German films  and the mother of sci-fi cinema (an influence on Blade Runner and Star  Wars, among countless other films). Directed by the legendary Fritz Lang  (M, Das Testament des Dr. Mabuse,The Big Heat, etc.), its jaw-dropping  production values, iconic imagery, and modernist grandeur it was  described by Luis Buñuel as 'a captivating symphony of movement' remain  as powerful as ever. 
 Drawing on and defining classic sci-fi  themes, Metropolis depicts a dystopian future in which society is  thoroughly divided in two: while anonymous workers conduct their endless  drudgery below ground their rulers enjoy a decadent life of leisure and  luxury. When Freder (Gustav Fröhlich) ventures into the depths in  search of the beautiful Maria (Brigitte Helm in her debut role), plans  of rebellion are revealed and a Maria-replica robot is programmed by mad  inventor Rotwang (Rudolf Klein-Rogge) and master of Metropolis Joh  Fredersen (Alfred Abel) to incite the workers into a self-destructive  riot. 
 A'Holy Grail' among film finds, Metropolis is  presented here in a newly reconstructed and restored version, as lavish  and spectacular as ever thanks to the painstaking archival work of the  Friedrich-Wilhelm-Murnau-Stiftung and the discovery of 25 minutes of  footage previously thought lost to the world. Lang's enduring epic can  finally be seen for the first time in 83 years as the director  originally intended, and as seen by German cinema-goers in 1927. 
 SPECIAL FEATURES:
 150-minute reconstructed and restored 2010 version (including 25 minutes of footage previously thought lost to the world)
 - Wraparound embossed sleeve
 - Pristine new HD transfer (1080p on Blu-ray)
 - New 2010 symphony orchestra studio recording of the original 1927 Gottfried Huppertz score in 5.1
 - Newly translated optional English subtitles as well as the original German intertitles
 - Full-length audio commentary by David Kalat and Jonathan Rosenbaum
 - Die Reise nach Metropolis (2010, 53 minutes), a documentary about the film
 - 2010 re-release trailer
 - 56-page booklet featuring archival interviews with Fritz Lang, a  1927 review by Luis Buñuel, articles by Jonathan Rosenbaum and Karen  Naundorf, and restoration notes by Martin Koerber.
 and more!
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