9
60 min
Martin Berger’s 'Menschen' serves as a harrowing socio-cinematic autopsy of the human spirit, adrift in the wreckage of a post-war landscape. Far from the escapist fantasies that often dominated early Weimar screens, this 1921 opus delves into the penumbral existence of the disenfranchised. The narrative follows a fatalistic trajectory, where the characters—portrayed with a raw, almost primitive intensity—grapple with the crushing weight of systemic indifference and personal moral decay.
| Name | Character | Team | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grete Ly | Unowned | ||
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Eugen Klöpfer | Unowned | |
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Ilka Grüning | Unowned | |
| Alexander Ekert | Unowned | ||
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Bernhard Goetzke | Unowned | |
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Charles Willy Kayser | Unowned | |
| A.L. Porttier | Unowned | ||
| Waldemar Pottier | Unowned | ||
| Marie von Bülow | Unowned |