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Berlin Newspaper: "What is he like? Where is he
hiding? No one knows, still he is one of us, Is he your neighbor?"
Hans Beckert quote: "I can't help what I do. This
evil thing inside me, the fire, the voices, the torment!!"
Friz Lang's black and white masterpiece of suspense,
M starts off showing us a group of children playing in a courtyard
of an apartment building. Standing in a circle, one little girl
stands in the middle singing the following song, as she individually
points at each of the children. "Just you wait a little while,
The nasty man in black will come, with his little chopper, he
will chop you up! You're out!"
With this charming little ditty, the audience
is introduced to what is terrorizing Berlin - the assault and
murder of 7 little girls by an unknown killer. A lady lugging
clean laundry up the stairs sternly tells them to stop, and proceeds
up the stairs to Frau Beckmann's apartment, where the song is
explained further in their conversation.
In Frau Beckmann's apartment, one sees Frau Beckman
(Ellen Widmann) preparing a meal, setting the table and the camera
focuses on her cuckoo clock, which strikes 12:00 noon. The film
cuts to a shot of the school house, where the noon bell is ringing,
sending the children home for lunch. Uh oh!
The film then cuts to young Elsie Beckmann walking
home from school, bouncing her ball. She stops by a large, wide,
round cement post, with a newspaper pasted on it, announcing the
10,000 mark reward for the capture of the killer stalking the
neighborhood. Elsie is oblivious and starts to bounce her ball
up against the post, seeing how high she can get it. Suspense
mounts as the audience then sees the shadowy figure of a man approach
her, befriending her. A trusting child, she walks away with him.
The audience sees the man, who is whistling the ominous theme
from Grieg's "Peer Gynt Suite," buying a balloon for her from
a blind vendor, StraBenhandler (Georg John).
Meanwhile, Elsie's mother, Frau Beckmann, becomes
more and more concerned as it becomes later and later. She asks
the children going up the stairs, a vendor, but no one has seen
her. Finally, she cries her name frantically out the window. The
camera moves to the table and focuses on the unused place setting.
The next shot is in a grassy area with a tree.
Little Elsie's ball rolls down the knoll, and one sees her balloon
floating up, getting caught on the telephone wires, and it fades
to black.
Against a black frame, the audience at first hears
the newspaper sellers yelling Extra, Extra, with the latest news
of this 8th killing. The story resumes, showing people rushing
to buy the paper. The tension begins to build once more. One man
reads for the crowd, the paper posted on the cement post."Candy,
a toy and fruit can be the murderer's weapons. We must remind
you that a mother's first duty is to guard her children."
The audience then sees the murderer from the back,
writing on his window sill, a letter to the newspaper, giving
them information about this man, establishing him as the serial
killer.
Meanwhile, the emotions of the people of Berlin
are over the top, as they start to read innocent behavior of others
and jump to conclusions, resulting in some almost ugly occurrences.
The minister (mayor) of Berlin (Franz Stein) calls
the Chief of Police (Friedrich Gnab) getting the point across
that while the police are putting good effort into the search,
"We must have results!" The Chief of police goes into detail as
to what his men are doing to solve the case, voiced over film
montages of their various searches, checking out over 1500 clues,
such as candy papers found at the scene of the crime, trying to
find the store where the candy was bought, but always hitting
a dead end, only able to go so far.
Even the witnesses who think they saw something,
turned out to be faulty in their memory. A scene is shown how
two men in the detective's office, nearly get into blows over
the color of the little girl's hat.
Not knowing what else to do, the police continue
to follow up every clue, and raid the flop houses, railroad stations,
underground hang-outs checking all for papers, hauling off those
who don't have any every night.
One such raid is shown in a local bar. The lady
bar owner complains to the police that this is bad for business,
and that they are looking in the wrong place at the wrong people,
who will surely wring the neck of the murderer for causing a raid
every night. The camera shows all the loot, tools taken from these
people from the underworld.
The film then takes the audience to an apartment,
where all the leaders from the underground unions are meeting,
waiting for the leader of them all, Schranker (Gustaf Grundgens),
a well-known, mastermind bank robber, who has been on the lam
for 6 years. Schranker arrives, stating that all these nightly
raids, and scrutiny by the police is ruining business. "A non-member
is screwing up! We have to put things right again or we'll all
be ruined. This is ruining our reputation as the cops are looking
for him in our ranks!"They all begin to think, what can they do.
Each has a suggestion.
Meanwhile, the town officials are meeting with
the police department, also discussing how this man must be caught
soon before he kills again, as the people are getting angrier
and angrier because of their fear. Each person there has a suggestion.
When the handwriting expert testifies how the writing shows that
the murderer doesn't have both oars in the water, the film cuts
to a chilling insert of the murderer, Hans Beckert (Peter Lorre)
looking crazily in the mirror illustrating this point. This is
the first time the audience gets a real good, close-up look at
him.
Someone gets the brilliant idea to check with
the mental hospitals and clinics to see who has been released.
A list of new clues is also given to Inspector Lohmann (Otto Wernicke),
who is head of the Murder Squad, and is in charge of finding this
killer.
The film then jumps back to the meeting with Schranker,
who comes up with their solution."We'll have to catch him ourselves."
They decide that if they watch every square foot, they will be
able to catch him. They assign this task to the beggars union,
as they can watch children and people, without notice from others.
In this union, not only were there those who just ask for money,
but also others who sold items on the street or played musical
instruments for a donation.
The film then cleverly switches back and forth
between the progress police investigation and the enormous stake-out
by the beggars and their progress, intertwined with showing the
actions and emotional state of the tormented killer, Hans Beckert,
who at one point nearly walks off with another little girl, whistling
his theme song, but luckily the mother shows up just in time to
save her daughter, who had come to surprise her.
While the beggars' stake out brings results, so
does a list of recent patient releases, along with clues picked
up by a detective on a routine search bears fruit as well for
the police. The clever forerunner of detective Periot, Inspector
Lohmann puts two and two together, and after further investigation,
Lohmann and his detective figure out the truth. Both parties are
soon on the trail of Hans Beckert.
The whistling of Beckert identifies him as the
murderer, and the beggars intervene just in time to save another
little girl,which is another suspenseful scene, that keeps the
audience on the edge of their seats. One beggar pretends to trip,
and slaps a M in chalk on Beckert's back, as he stands in front
of a fruit stand, using the knife he kills children with, to cut
an orange for another potential victim.
However, the beggars chase him into an office
building, where Beckert hides in the attic. He is inadvertently
locked in by a building guard at closing time. Schranker and company
show up in the middle of the night, knock out and tie up the guards,
and start searching for Beckert. After an exciting, suspenseful
search, Beckert is caught and dragged away, just minutes before
the police arrive.
However, a man was left behind, Franz the burglar,
(Friedrich Gnab), who proves to be the big break needed for Lohmann.
Thinking that this was an attempted robbery by a large gang, Franz
is handed over to Inspector Groeber (Theodor Loos), head of the
Burglary division. Though Franz claims to know nothing, Groeber
on a cop's hunch thinks that something else may be the cause of
the break-in, as nothing was taken. So, he gets together with
Lohmann, and hatches a plan to frighten Franz into telling what
they were after, saying that one of the night watchmen had died.
Meanwhile, Beckert finds himself in front of the
whole assembly of underground union members, officiated by the
hardened leader, Schranker, who is in control of this kangaroo
court. Beckert is given a rather unenthusiastic defense counselor,
who does offer a vigorous defense after Beckert tries to explain
his horrendous actions.
The last 20 minutes gives the audience a powerful,
dramatic, suspenseful experience, where both sides of the question,
whether mercy or death is in order for the accused is debated.
Does his vile actions condemn him to death, despite the fact that
he can't help himself? Should a mentally unbalanced person who
kills out of obsession causing pain and terror be killed because
the mental health hospitals are incompetent and not foolproof?
The audience is kept in suspense as to whether
the police will arrive in time to save Berkert.
M has been described as a film of "tremendous
suspense and heightened drama," that was directed and put together
by the gifted German expressionistic master, Fritz Lang, who really
knew how to put a suspenseful crime thriller together. M has held
up beautifully over the years because of Lang's creative genius.
Lang believed that a picture is worth a thousand
words. M is very visually oriented, which supports and brings
the written script powerfully to life. There are several favorite
scenes where this technique is effectively used.
1) One knows that Elsie has been murdered when
her ball rolls down the grassy knoll, and her balloon floats up
unattended into the telephone lines.
2) Lang introduces the criminal meeting at the
apartment scene by showing a man taking out one by one a total
of 6 pocket watches, while another man practices his card technique,
and another is copying money.
3) Nothing makes the mental sickness of Hans Beckert
more chillingly clear, than the mirror scene mentioned above.
4) The sequence of scenes showing Beckert trying
to fight his impulses, when he sees a young girl looking at the
shop windows, next to where he is standing. As he stands in front
of a knife shop, he suddenly sees the reflection of this young
girl in the mirror which is in the middle of the knife display.
Slowly but surely Beckert succumbs to his inner devils, as his
eyes become glazed, and he begins to whistle his psychotic tune,
he methodically turns to follow the girl mentioned above, giving
the audience a sense of dread, knowing what he is up to.
This gripping screenplay was the result of a collaboration
of Fritz Lang and his wife, Thea Von Harbou. This writing team
was very successful in creating successful films, the most famous
one being THE TESTAMENT OF DR. MABUSE, the last film they wrote
together, which some say was Lang's prediction of what was to
come with the Nazi in power. The Nazis banned it from release
in Germany, because the main nemesis was an evil genius that is
defeated by a sharp detective, and winds up in a mental ward,
writing down his future plans. This character resembled Hitler
too closely, and may remind the public that Hitler wrote Mine
Komfe in jail.
While pretending to think about Goebel's offer
to head the Nazi's UFA Films, Lang skips the country and makes
his way to America. His feelings about the Nazis broke up his
marriage, as Thea supported the Nazis.
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