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dc.contributor.authorKorfmann, Michaelpt_BR
dc.date.accessioned2011-06-07T06:00:20Zpt_BR
dc.date.issued2010pt_BR
dc.identifier.issn1980-7589pt_BR
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10183/29394pt_BR
dc.description.abstractThis article discusses the influence of electric illumination on theatre and the so called expressionist film. It starts with a short historical overview and will then argue that the only film with a narrative as well as a visual design in expressionist tradition is From Morn to Midnight, based on a play written in 1912 by Georg Kaiser and released in same year (1920) as its legend counterpart The Cabinet of Caligari. But different then Caligari or many other famous German silent movies from the 1920s it is not located in a romantic shadow world, syntactically created by lightning effects, but renounces the dark and spooky irrational in favor of an urban environment in the early twentieth century: a story of money, erotic seduction, escapist fantasies, eccentric bohemian life, crime and rapid alteration of scenes.en
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.language.isoporpt_BR
dc.relation.ispartofContingentia. Porto Alegre. Vol. 5, n. 2 (nov. 2010), p. 13-22pt_BR
dc.rightsOpen Accessen
dc.subjectLightningen
dc.subjectExpressionismopt_BR
dc.subjectCinemapt_BR
dc.subjectTheatreen
dc.subjectExpressionismen
dc.subjectIluminaçãopt_BR
dc.subjectFrom Morn to Midnighten
dc.titleLiteratura e luz : iluminação elétrica, teatro e o filme expressionistapt_BR
dc.typeArtigo de periódicopt_BR
dc.identifier.nrb000763448pt_BR
dc.type.originNacionalpt_BR


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