The Wildcat


1h 40m 1921
The Wildcat

Brief Synopsis

A womanizing lieutenant can¿t choose between his commanding officer¿s daughter and a beautiful bandit.

Film Details

Also Known As
Bergkatze, Mountain Cat, Wild Cat, The
Genre
Silent
Comedy
Foreign
Romance
Romantic Comedy
Release Date
1921

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 40m
Sound
Silent
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.33 : 1

Synopsis

A womanizing lieutenant can¿t choose between his commanding officer¿s daughter and a beautiful bandit.

Videos

Movie Clip

Wildcat, The (1921) -- (Movie Clip) Not Far From Piffkaneiro Something like the fantastical opening imagined by Ernst Lubitsch (the original inter-titles are lost), with the fictional location and the immediate broad spoof of the popular matte-iris technique, Viktor Janson introduced as commander of a plenty-absurd looking fortress, from The Wildcat, or Die Bergkatze, 1921, starring Pola Negri.
Wildcat, The (1921) -- (Movie Clip) I Did What I Could Introduction of the heartthrob officer Alexis (Paul Heidemann) being banished to a remote frontier outpost in Ernst Lubitsch’s fantasy winterland, loaded with more matte technique and design gags, still before the introduction of Pola Negri, the title character, in the outlandish German silent comedy The Wildcat, 1921.
Wildcat, The (1921) -- (Movie Clip) She Beat Me! Just introduced as the leader of an outlaw band on some fictional Alpine frontier, Wilhelm Diegelmann is being set upon by his own charges so he summons his daughter Rischka (Pola Negri, the title character, her first scene) who cracks heads as needed then notices Paul Heidemann as Alexis, the just-transferred army Lothario, on the move, in Ernst Lubitsch’s The Wildcat, 1921.
Wildcat, The (1921) -- (Movie Clip) You Would Have Split Them Thinking she’s made a killing by robbing a dandified military officer of his clothes, Rischka (Pola Negri), daughter of the Alpine bandit chieftan, is baffled by seeing her first photograph, then smitten, then berated by her dad (Wilhelm Diegelmann) for not taking his underwear as well, in Ernst Lubitsch’s absurd comedy The Wildcat, 1921.

Hosted Intro

Film Details

Also Known As
Bergkatze, Mountain Cat, Wild Cat, The
Genre
Silent
Comedy
Foreign
Romance
Romantic Comedy
Release Date
1921

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 40m
Sound
Silent
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.33 : 1

Articles

The Wildcat (1921) - The Wildcat


In September of 1922, Polish actress Pola Negri, who had become a star of German cinema, arrived in New York with much fanfare, headed for Hollywood. That same year, her favorite director Ernst Lubitsch also left Germany for Hollywood, thanks to the success of historical epics like The Loves of Pharaoh (1921). Together, they had made several German films that had become international hits, including Carmen (1918) and Madame DuBarry (1919).

The Wildcat (1921), one of their last German collaborations, was an anomaly in both their careers. It was a rollicking comedy, and Lubitsch's own favorite of his German films, but it was a failure in Germany, and was never released in the U.S., so it is little known. At the time it was made, Negri was one of Germany's top dramatic actresses, and Lubitsch was one of its leading directors. They met in 1917, when both were actors in the stage production of Max Reinhardt's Arabian Nights tale Sumurun. Lubitsch, who had begun his career as a stage comic (playing what his biographer Scott Eyen described as "lovable schlemiels,") was by then also directing and acting in film comedies. He helped Negri get a contract with Ufa, Germany's largest and most important film studio, and starred her in his first dramatic film, The Eyes of the Mummy (1918), a lurid melodrama costarring Emil Jannings. It was a huge hit, and over the next three years, Lubitsch and Negri worked together on several big-budget costume dramas. But The Wildcat was like nothing either had done before.

The subtitle at the beginning of The Wildcat calls it "A Grotesque in Four Acts," and that's appropriate, but doesn't go far enough in describing the anarchic Ruritanian comic opera that ensues. Negri plays Rischka, the rowdy daughter of the leader of a band of outlaws in the Bavarian Alps that preys upon soldiers at a nearby fort. Alexis, a womanizing officer who has been exiled to the fort, apparently for neglecting his duties, is set upon by the bandits on his way there, and Rischka falls for him. There isn't much story beyond that, but there's a lot of style, wit, satire, and visual inventiveness.

Lubitsch insisted on shooting on location in the snowy mountains in the winter, and the film's exteriors are breathtaking, and unusual for the time. But they are the only thing that's realistic about The Wildcat. Some critics have called the movie a parody of Expressionist films (such as The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari), with its outrageous and surreal sets and decor--a loopy combination of art deco, art nouveau, and stylized rococo--and exaggerated acting.

Lubitsch also spoofs the then-popular iris, or matte technique, in which a scene begins or ends with a tight circle around a section of the frame for emphasis, blacking out the rest of the frame. Instead of just circles, though, Lubitsch goes wild with mattes, using rectangles, octagons, diagonals, wavy ovals, and a jagged one that looks like shark's teeth.

The acting in The Wildcat is as stylized as the sets. Negri, who had mostly played intensely dramatic or tragic roles (and played the temperamental diva to the hilt off screen as well), is remarkably at ease in the comic role, flinging herself about, using all the physicality she had learned as a student at the Russian Imperial Ballet, running, climbing, fighting, and apparently enjoying herself enormously. Unfortunately, the German public did not enjoy her antics, and The Wildcat was a box office flop.

Lubitsch and Negri made one more film together before leaving Germany. They finally reunited for Forbidden Paradise (1924), her best American film and their only American collaboration. Negri's career faded with the coming of talking films, but Lubitsch's career soared as he found his style as a master of sophisticated comedy. And he always remained proud of The Wildcat, writing shortly before his death in 1947, "This picture had more inventiveness and satirical pictorial wit than many of my other pictures...[but] I found the German audiences in no mood to accept a picture which satirized militarism and war."

Director: Ernst Lubitsch
Screenplay: Hanns Kraly, Ernst Lubitsch
Cinematography: Theodor Sparkuhl
Editor: Nina Goslar
Art Direction: Max Gronert, Ernst Stern
Principal Cast: Pola Negri (Rischka), Paul Heidemann (Lieutenant Alexis), Victor Janson (Fortress Commander), Marga Köhler (Fortress Commander's wife), Edith Meller (Lilli), Wilhelm Diegelmann (Claudius), Hermann Thimig (Pepo)
82 minutes

by Margarita Landazuri
The Wildcat (1921) - The Wildcat

The Wildcat (1921) - The Wildcat

In September of 1922, Polish actress Pola Negri, who had become a star of German cinema, arrived in New York with much fanfare, headed for Hollywood. That same year, her favorite director Ernst Lubitsch also left Germany for Hollywood, thanks to the success of historical epics like The Loves of Pharaoh (1921). Together, they had made several German films that had become international hits, including Carmen (1918) and Madame DuBarry (1919). The Wildcat (1921), one of their last German collaborations, was an anomaly in both their careers. It was a rollicking comedy, and Lubitsch's own favorite of his German films, but it was a failure in Germany, and was never released in the U.S., so it is little known. At the time it was made, Negri was one of Germany's top dramatic actresses, and Lubitsch was one of its leading directors. They met in 1917, when both were actors in the stage production of Max Reinhardt's Arabian Nights tale Sumurun. Lubitsch, who had begun his career as a stage comic (playing what his biographer Scott Eyen described as "lovable schlemiels,") was by then also directing and acting in film comedies. He helped Negri get a contract with Ufa, Germany's largest and most important film studio, and starred her in his first dramatic film, The Eyes of the Mummy (1918), a lurid melodrama costarring Emil Jannings. It was a huge hit, and over the next three years, Lubitsch and Negri worked together on several big-budget costume dramas. But The Wildcat was like nothing either had done before. The subtitle at the beginning of The Wildcat calls it "A Grotesque in Four Acts," and that's appropriate, but doesn't go far enough in describing the anarchic Ruritanian comic opera that ensues. Negri plays Rischka, the rowdy daughter of the leader of a band of outlaws in the Bavarian Alps that preys upon soldiers at a nearby fort. Alexis, a womanizing officer who has been exiled to the fort, apparently for neglecting his duties, is set upon by the bandits on his way there, and Rischka falls for him. There isn't much story beyond that, but there's a lot of style, wit, satire, and visual inventiveness. Lubitsch insisted on shooting on location in the snowy mountains in the winter, and the film's exteriors are breathtaking, and unusual for the time. But they are the only thing that's realistic about The Wildcat. Some critics have called the movie a parody of Expressionist films (such as The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari), with its outrageous and surreal sets and decor--a loopy combination of art deco, art nouveau, and stylized rococo--and exaggerated acting. Lubitsch also spoofs the then-popular iris, or matte technique, in which a scene begins or ends with a tight circle around a section of the frame for emphasis, blacking out the rest of the frame. Instead of just circles, though, Lubitsch goes wild with mattes, using rectangles, octagons, diagonals, wavy ovals, and a jagged one that looks like shark's teeth. The acting in The Wildcat is as stylized as the sets. Negri, who had mostly played intensely dramatic or tragic roles (and played the temperamental diva to the hilt off screen as well), is remarkably at ease in the comic role, flinging herself about, using all the physicality she had learned as a student at the Russian Imperial Ballet, running, climbing, fighting, and apparently enjoying herself enormously. Unfortunately, the German public did not enjoy her antics, and The Wildcat was a box office flop. Lubitsch and Negri made one more film together before leaving Germany. They finally reunited for Forbidden Paradise (1924), her best American film and their only American collaboration. Negri's career faded with the coming of talking films, but Lubitsch's career soared as he found his style as a master of sophisticated comedy. And he always remained proud of The Wildcat, writing shortly before his death in 1947, "This picture had more inventiveness and satirical pictorial wit than many of my other pictures...[but] I found the German audiences in no mood to accept a picture which satirized militarism and war." Director: Ernst Lubitsch Screenplay: Hanns Kraly, Ernst Lubitsch Cinematography: Theodor Sparkuhl Editor: Nina Goslar Art Direction: Max Gronert, Ernst Stern Principal Cast: Pola Negri (Rischka), Paul Heidemann (Lieutenant Alexis), Victor Janson (Fortress Commander), Marga Köhler (Fortress Commander's wife), Edith Meller (Lilli), Wilhelm Diegelmann (Claudius), Hermann Thimig (Pepo) 82 minutes by Margarita Landazuri

Quotes

Trivia

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States 1921

Released in United States 1983

Released in United States 1921

Released in United States 1983 (Shown at FILMEX: Los Angeles International Film Exposition (The German Lubitsch 1914-1922: From Slapstick to Subtlety) April 13 - May 1, 1983.)