
Review
Fridericus Rex Part 1 (1922) Review: The Flute vs The Iron Fist | Silent Epic Restored
Fridericus Rex - 1. Teil: Sturm und Drang (1922)IMDb 7.6Fridericus Rex – 1. Teil: Sturm und Drang
Arzén von Cserépy’s 1922 fresco opens on a frozen Prussian dawn, frost etching Rococo windowpanes into kaleidoscopes of dread. Instead of the usual heraldic pomp we get a child’s pupil dilating as he deciphers a Brandenburg Concerto manuscript by guttering torchlight. That dilation—extreme close-up achieved with a brass-barrelled Zeiss lens—becomes the film’s visual leitmotif: knowledge as vertigo.
Critics often bracket this cycle alongside royal pageants shot for British newsreels, yet the DNA is closer to the fever dreams in Shadows of the Moulin Rouge—history filtered through iris shots and Expressionist shadows tall as parade horses.
Heinrich George’s Friederich Wilhelm paterfamilias stomps through frame like a siege engine wearing human skin; every bellow releases tobacco-steam that seems to burn the negative itself. Opposite him Otto Gebühr’s adolescent Friedrich sports cheekbones so sharp they could filigree the Brandenburg Gate. The camera adores that juxtaposition: walrus moustache vs porcelain profile, bark vs birdsong.
A sound film before sound
Yes, it’s silent, yet the movie vibrates with sonic implication. Intertitles written by Bobby E. Lüthge crack like musket fire: „Der Klang ist Verrat“ (Sound is betrayal). Each card appears over a static shot of a flute hole—an orifice waiting for breath that never arrives. The absence becomes a character, as palpable as the snow that drifts into palace corridors while courtiers pretend winter is etiquette.
Compare this with the circus bombast of Howling Lions and Circus Queens, another 1922 release that screamed rather than whispered. Where Circus Queens wants the sawdust roar, Fridericus Rex seeks the hush between drumbeats, the gap where ambition metastasizes.
Charlotte Schultz as Wilhelmine, the older sister, delivers the film’s most modern performance—eyes flicking to the lens as if she knows Netflix will one day digitize her grief. In a banquet scene she hides sheet music inside a prayer book; when the queen mum intones Luther, Wilhelmine hums Rameau. The clash of registers—Latin contrapuntal against French rococo—serves as microcosm for a continent lurching toward enlightened absolutism.
Designing the future by fetishizing the past
Art director Franz Groß drapes ballrooms in soot-black marble that reflect torchlight like obsidian ponds. It’s Versailles reimagined by Caligari: columns tilt five degrees off plumb, ceilings recede into darkness where cherubs ought to hover. In this tilt the film predicts the bureaucratic terror of the Third Reich—an accidental prophecy, since the production predates the Beer Hall Putsch by a year.
Notice how the camera never tilts to correct those angles; instead it pans across them with the languor of a somnambulist, turning architecture into moral geometry.
Costume palette is equally subversive: Habsburg whites slashed with blood-scarlet piping, suggesting a surgical ward where nations get dissected. When young Friedrich dons his first uniform the jacket hangs two sizes too large; the sleeves swallow his fingertips, as though the state itself refuses to let him play flute, forcing him to grow into the steel carapace.
Editing that anticipates Eisenstein
Editor Willy Zeunert crosscuts between flute lessons and bayonet drills with dialectic ferocity. In one montage a trill ascending to high F slams against a rifle volley; the soundtrack that isn’t there detonates in the viewer’s skull. The intellectual payoff: art and violence share respiration, each inhale of melody paid for by an exhale of gun-smoke.
This dialectic feels fresher than the straightforward fisticuffs in The Knockout, a contemporary crowd-pleaser that treated montage like a carnival barker rather than a philosopher.
Performances as historiography
Albert Steinrück’s cameo as old soldier Katte—executed for abetting the prince’s musical escape—lasts four minutes yet burns an afterimage. He mounts the scaffold with a smoker’s cough, salutes the horizon, and dies off-frame. We never see the blade; instead Cserépy cuts to a flute falling, its mouthpiece cracking. Cinema becomes legal document: the state kills bodies, only art can kill instruments, and both recover.
The omission of gore paradoxically amplifies horror, a lesson slasher films forgot once Technicolor could spill crimson syrup by the gallon.
Restoration revelations
The 2023 4K restoration by Deutsche Kinemathek harvested tinting schemes from a 1923 distribution ledger: arsenic-green for nocturnes, tobacco-brown for barracks, bruise-violet for confessions. Those hues, once thought lost to nitrate decay, bloom again like frozen irises. Viewers on a 65-inch OLED will notice cigarette burns repurposed as comets streaking across the academy-ratio sky—a flaw turned aurora.
Gender under the periwig
Trude Hesterberg’s Madame de Montbail, French spy posing as dancing tutor, weaponizes the gavotte. Her hips spell state secrets; every pirouette is a cipher. She embodies a thesis: in absolutist Europe women operate through choreography, men through ordinance. Yet the film refuses to victimize her. In the climactic reel she vanishes into a forest lit like a cathedral of ice, leaving behind only a hairpin shaped like a treble clef—an emblem that music and espionage share notation.
This nuance contrasts with the damsel-tied-to-tracks trope still rampant in Jesse James Under the Black Flag, where heroines exist to delay plot rather than complicate ideology.
The tyranny of lineage
Cinematographer Gustave Preiss relies on chiaroscuro to sculpt genealogy itself. In a signature dolly shot, the camera retreats from father to son to grandfather portrait, candlelight shrinking until only eye sockets gleam. The effect: generations collapse into a single cyclopean stare. Biology becomes monolith, and the viewer intuits that Frederick’s eventual invasion of Silesia is not strategy but hereditary reflex.
Music as off-screen protagonist
Though silent, the picture collaborated with Berlin Philharmonic violinist Stefan Frenkel for its premiere. Orchestral parts cued to specific intertitles, a precursor to today’s click-track. Contemporary reviewers complained the live flute solos „erstickten die Seelenpanik“ (suffocated the panic of the soul). Precisely: melody lulls the audience into complicity, mirroring how enlightenment absolutism sugarcoats militarism with philharmonic grandeur.
Final reverberations
By final reel the boy no longer flinches when boots echo. He places cracked flute to lip; no sound emerges, yet something colder than sound exits—an adulthood that will compose battlefield symphonies out of human ribs. The film ends on iris-out, the circle closing like a primer’s first 'O'—alphabet and zero, origin and nullity.
Fridericus Rex dares to argue that every enlightenment begins as a crime scene, every palace a crime accessory, every sonata a requiem in utero.
In the current cinematic landscape bloated with origin myths shot in teal-and-orange, this 1922 artifact feels radioactive with sincerity. It neither valorizes nor demonizes its subject; instead it atomizes him, leaving viewers to inhale the fallout. Watch it at midnight, volume muted, room lit only by laptop glow, and you will hear the silence that precedes empire. That silence is your own.
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