| Werner Krauss | Dr. Caligari |
| Conrad Veidt | Cesare |
| Friedrich Feher | Francis |
| Lil Dagover | Jane |
| Hans Heinrich von Twardowski | Alan |
| Fredrich Feher | |
| Rudolf Lettinger | Dr. Olson |
| Rudolf Klein-Rogge | A Criminal |
| Hans Lanser-Rudolf | |
| Henri Peters-Arnolds | |
| Ludwig Rex | Murderer |
| Director | Robert Wiene |
| Producer | Rudolf Meinert; Erich Pommer |
| Writer | Hans Janowitz; Carl Mayer |
The film begins with two men trading horror stories. One promises the other a terrifying true tale--the harrowing story of his fiancée's narrow escape from death. Here's the story: an amoral asylum director wants to see if he can order somnambulist patient Cesare to commit murder. To this end, the nefarious doctor masquerades as a traveling showman and picks victims from the gawking carnival crowds. He sends his sleepwalker out to execute bloody deeds by night--crimes of which Cesare is barely aware. Soon, Cesare abducts the narrator's girl and is caught ... which is only the beginning of the surprises.
Caligari's world became the textbook example of 1920s German Expressionist cinema--a cockeyed dreamscape, where black-clad actors feverishly chase each other across moody, barely-realistic sets. Think of films such as Dark City or the Nightmare Before Christmas or Saturday Night Live's "Sprockets" sketches. Here's where it all began. --Grant Balfour
| Edition Details | |
| Distributor | Kino Video |
| Edition | Restored Authorized Edition |
| Barcode | 738329025427 |
| Region | Region 1 |
| Chapters | 24 |
| Release Date | 9/24/2002 |
| Packaging | Snap Case |
| Screen Ratio | 1.33:1 |
| Audio Tracks | ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Stereo |
| Layers | Single Side, Single Layer |
| No. of Disks/Tapes | 1 |
| Personal Details | |
| Purchase Price | $19.95 |
| Links |
Amazon US
DVD Empire IMDB |
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Storage Device |
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| Digitally remastered in Visually Correct Speed Audio Essay by Scholar Mike Budd |