Summaries

Featuring one of the era's most beloved male idols, Hans Albers, as the doctor losing control of his dark side, is Viktor Turzanskij's rarely-screened Jekyll-and-Hyde version Vom Teufel gejagt. For added depth and relevance, a colleague who, years before, had assumed the doctor's guilt when an experiment went badly returns to continue their earlier research-besides, his name is tarnished anyway, where else could he go? It's difficult to not see this very elegantly dispassionate piece (a curious predecessor to the soon rising Arztfilm-wave) as an attempt to discuss its star's and auteur's involvement with the Nazi-era film industry: Albers starred in Herbert Selpin's world-weary anti-British epopee Carl Peters (1941), and Turzanskij directed (and co-wrote) the edgy anti-Polish, anti-labor drama Feinde (1940).—Harvard Film Archive

Details

Keywords
  • murder
  • experiment
  • mad doctor
  • human experimentation
  • split personality
Genres
  • Crime
  • Drama
Release date Oct 23, 1950
Countries of origin West Germany
Language German
Filming locations Bavaria Studios, Bavariafilmplatz 7, Geiselgasteig, Grünwald, Bavaria, Germany
Production companies Bavaria Film Albers Tourjansky-Film

Box office

Tech specs

Runtime
Color Black and White
Sound mix Mono
Aspect ratio 1.37 : 1

Synopsis

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