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Word: murnau (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Usage:

...first wife Anja, decamped to Munich to become an artist and art teacher. His early paintings were folkloric, storybook scenes of an imaginary medieval Russia rendered like mosaics in bright lozenges of color. It wasn't until the summer of 1908, when he discovered the little town of Murnau in the Bavarian Alps, that he began to uncouple his pictures from any sources in the visible world. In Blue Mountain, which he began the following winter, he assigned the mountain an unearthly shade of indigo and turned the flanking trees into almost free-floating pools of pigment. With...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Worlds Within | 10/19/2009 | See Source »

...mute cinema is now mostly confined to a Sunday-midnight niche - a glorious grotto, whose saints are Lon Chaney, Lillian Gish, John Gilbert, Marion Davies and other stars of MGM silents. The slot also is home to early masterworks from France (Jacques Feyder's Queen of Atlantis), Germany (F.W. Murnau's The Last Laugh) and Sweden (Victor Sjostrom's Phantom Carriage). The country doesn't matter; all these films speak an eloquent visual language...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 15 Reasons to Love Turner Classic Movies | 5/2/2009 | See Source »

...definitely suffered a lot from this," says Anke Wilkening, a movie restorer at the Friedrich-Wilhelm-Murnau Foundation, which owns the right to the picture. "A great deal of the plot remained mysterious in the abridged version ... the relationships between the different characters, for example...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Lost Footage of Metropolis Emerges | 7/7/2008 | See Source »

...because it was then that film became a language and media in its own right. Before that you are looking at the origins of film. In the ’20s, the language of film that we know now was really born, particularly in the F.W. Murnau films, like “Nosferatu” and “Sunrise.” The other era is right now. As a result of the digital tools, whether it’s computer graphics or films being made on digital video, it feels like the silent era again in the process...

Author: By Scoop A. Wasserstein, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Holding a Mirror to McKean | 9/30/2005 | See Source »

...Murnau, one of the greatest silent-film directors, went to Tahiti (with documentary pioneer Robert Flaherty) to make this ethnographic idyll spiked with Hollywood-style melodrama. A boy who has fallen in love with a local princess dives for pearls in a deep-sea grotto that is guarded by a possessive shark. The simple story is told with rapturous visual poetry that captures both nature's beauty and its threat. Murnau, 42, had his own rendezvous with tragedy: he died in a car crash shortly before Tabu's release...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 6 Best Sea Monster DVDs Ever | 6/19/2005 | See Source »

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