Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow (2004)

Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow (2004) poster
Rating: ★★★★
Retro SF Adventure/Flying Ace Hero

Superlative film that recreates an imagined world of 1930s retro sf filled with flyer heroes, giant robots and stunning Art Deco designs.

Shadow of the Vampire (2000)

Shadow of the Vampire (2000) poster
Rating: ★★★★
Making Nosferatu with a Real Vampire

This comes with the clever and uniquely original premise that asks what would happen if during the making of the 1922 Nosferatu actor Max Schreck turned out to be a real vampire

Shadows and Fog (1991)

Shadows and Fog (1992) poster
Rating: ★★
Kafka and German Expressionism Homage

One of the not-quite-rans in Woody Allen’s oeuvre, a homage to Franz Kafka and German Expressionism with Allen as a mousy clerk caught up in the hunt for a strangler

Kafka (1991)

Kafka (1991) poster
Rating: ★★½
Fictionalised Author Biopic/Mad Scientists

Steven Soderbergh’s second film was this flop pseudo-biopic that places Franz Kafka (Jeremy Irons) alongside mad scientist elements and German Expressionist homages but fails to find much of Kafka’s paranoid mood

Archangel (1990)

Archangel (1990) poster
Rating: ★★★
Kitsch Surrealism

The second film from Guy Maddin, which comes with all of his familiar homages to German Expressionism and silent cinema, wrapped up in a surrealist plot of hilarious melodrama and side-splittingly deadpan dialogue

Dr Petiot (1990)

Dr Petiot (1990) poster
Rating: ★★
True Life French Serial Killer

French film about true-life serial killer Marcel Petiot, a respectable doctor who operated a lifeline for Jewish refugees during WWII only to kill them

Son of Frankenstein (1939)

Son of Frankenstein (1939) poster
Rating: ★★★½
Universal Frankenstein Sequel

The third of Universal’s Frankenstein films, the last to feature Boris Karloff as the monster and the last good entry before the sequels became formulaic. Shot with the clear influence of German Expressionism, this is filled with memorable characters and some great performances

Woman in the Moon (1929)

Woman in the Moon (1929) poster
Rating: ★★★★
Expedition to the Moon

A silent film from Fritz Lang where he sets out to depict a realistic attempt (at least in terms of what was known in the era) to build and launch a rocket to The Moon. Lang directs with an epic grandeur that still takes back today.

Alraune (1928)

Alraune (1928) poster
Rating: ★★
Evil Artificially-Birthed Woman

A classic German Expressionist film where Metropolis‘s Brigitte Helm gives a sizzlingly seductive performance as a woman born via artificial insemination who grows up as an emotionless man-eater

Metropolis (1927)

Metropolis (1927) poster
Rating: ★★★★
Dystopia/Social Revolution/Mad Scientist/Android Temptress

Fritz Lang’s visionary work was something way ahead of it time and is one of the few silent films still screened today. The film’s politics are naive but Lang’s visions of the city of the future and the first screen robot are vivid.

The Student of Prague (1926)

The Student of Prague (1926) poster
Rating: ★★★½
Pact with the Devil/Malevolent Doppelganger

A classic of the German Expressionist era about a poor student who sells his shadow to The Devil, only to have it become a malevolent doppelganger. As with much of the work to emerge from this era, the film manages directorial effects that still look amazing today

Faust (1926)

Faust (1926) poster
Rating: ★★★★★
Pact with the Devil

F.W. Murnau’s version of the classic tale of an aging scholar selling his soul to the Devil is one of the most fabulous pieces of pure cinema to come out of the German Expressionist era

The Hands of Orlac (1924)

The Hands of Orlac (1924) poster
Rating: ★★★★
Possessed Hands/Silent German Classic

Classic German silent film about a pianist who receives hand transplants and believes they are possessed. Superbly stylised direction from The Cabinet of Dr Caligari director Robert Wiene and with Conrad Veidt putting his all into the contorted mime work

Waxworks (1924)

Waxworks (1924) dvd cover
Rating: ★★★★
Historical Anthology/German Expressionism

A classic of the silent German Expressionist era, telling three tales throughout history – about the Caliph of Baghdad, Ivan the Terrible and Jack the Ripper – all set around the locale of a wax museum

Nosferatu (1922)

Nosferatu (1922) poster
Rating: ★★★★★
Silent Dracula Adaptation

The first screen adaptation of Dracula and one of the most amazing of all vampire films, a German Expressionist fairytale that exists in haunted netherworld through which stalks the crepuscular figure of Max Schreck

Dr Mabuse, The Gambler (1922)

Rating: ★★★★
Mind-Controlling Criminal Mastermind

Dr Mabuse is one of the great villains of cinema, a creation of Fritz Lang of Metropolis fame. Lang was one of the greatest directors of the silent era and this, the first Mabuse film, is extraordinary. Lang indulges in purely visual tricks that still look sensational today

The Golem (1920)

The Golem (1920) poster
Rating: ★★★½
Artificial Creature of Clay

Classic silent film from the German Expressionist period in which a rabbi brings to life a creature made of clay (played by Paul Wegener), which then proceeds to go amok

Genuine (1920)

Genuine (1920) poster
Rating: ★★
German Expressionism/Femme Fatale

One of the lesser films made by the director of The Cabinet of Dr Caligari, Robert Wiene. Wiene employs the same stark angular sets and exaggerated shadows in the tale of a predatory femme fatale

The Cabinet of Dr Caligari (1919)

The Cabinet of Dr Caligari (1919) poster
Rating: ★★★★
Sinister Hypnotist/German Expressionism

Classic film that was groundbreaking for its designs – all distorted and angular sets, exaggerated shadows – that became defined as German Expressionism and its tale of a sinister hypnotist