

If you have a thing for black-and-white silent movies that don't take themselves too seriously, you might actually like Arme, kleine Eva. It’s not for people who need constant action or CGI, and honestly, if you find old German cinema a bit dusty, you’ll probably find this boring. But for the rest of us? It’s a nice wa...

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Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Edmund Heuberger

Edmund Heuberger
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"If you have a thing for black-and-white silent movies that don't take themselves too seriously, you might actually like Arme, kleine Eva. It’s not for people who need constant action or CGI, and honestly, if you find old German cinema a bit dusty, you’ll probably find this boring. But for the rest of us? It’s a nice way to kill an hour. Grete Mosheim is just magnetic here. Every time she’s on screen, she’s doing something small—a twitch of the eye or a nervous hand gesture—that makes you forget..."
Paul Langenscheidt, Walter Schlee, Walter Wassermann
Germany

