The Other | |
---|---|
German | Der Andere |
Directed by | Max Mack |
Written by | Max Mack (screenplay) Hippolyte Taine (play) |
Based on | Der Andere by Paul Lindau |
Produced by | Jules Greenbaum |
Starring | Albert Bassermann Emmerich Hanus Nelly Ridon |
Cinematography | Hermann Boettger |
Production company | |
Release date |
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Country | Germany |
Languages | Silent German intertitles |
The Other (German: Der Andere) is a 1913 German silent thriller film directed by Max Mack and starring Albert Bassermann, Emmerich Hanus and Nelly Ridon. [1]
When talking with friends, Dr. Hallers, a well-known lawyer in Berlin, said he was skeptical about fantasies on the split personality: he could never believe something like that. During a ride, however, he has an accident, after which he often falls into a deep sleep from which he awakens with the feeling of having a dual personality. Later, his double starts to rob his apartment with a thief. During the robbery, the police arrives and arrests the thief. Hallers, having fallen asleep, wakes up without remembering anything of what happened. Eventually, the lawyer recovers and marries his fiancée.
The Iffland-Ring is a diamond-studded ring with a picture of August Wilhelm Iffland, a prominent German actor, dramatist and theatre director of the late 18th and early 19th century. The holder, or bearer, of the Iffland-Ring is considered to be the "most significant and most worthy actor of the German-speaking theatre", in the opinion of the previous holder who has passed it to him by will.
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