Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Otto Rippert

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Years active
  
1912-1924

Name
  
Otto Rippert

Role
  
Film director


Otto Rippert httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
22 October 1869 (
1869-10-22
)
Offenbach am Main, Germany

Occupation
  
Actor, film director, film editor

Died
  
January 15, 1940, Berlin, Germany

Movies
  
The Plague of Florence, In Night and Ice, Totentanz

Similar People
  
Erich Pommer, Fritz Lang, Edgar Allan Poe

Die Pest in Florenz (Clip) (1919) Otto Rippert


Otto Rippert (22 October 1869 – 15 January 1940) was a German film director during the silent film era.

Contents

Biography

Rippert was born in Offenbach am Main, Germany, and began his career as a stage actor, working in theatres in Baden-Baden, Forst (Lausitz), Bamberg and in Berlin. In 1906, he acted his first film in Baden-Baden for the French Gaumont Film Company. In 1912 he appeared (complete with stick-on beard) as the millionaire Isidor Straus in In Nacht und Eis, one of the first films about the sinking of the Titanic. The film was made by Continental-Kunstfilm of Berlin, where Rippert continued to work as a director, making some ten motion pictures between 1912 and 1914. However, his reputation as one of the pioneers of German silent film rests on some of his later achievements, for example Homunculus and The Plague of Florence.

Homunculus, produced by Deutsche Bioskop in 1916, is a six-part serial science fiction film involving mad scientists, superhuman androids and sinister technology. The script was written by Robert Reinert, and the film foreshadows various elements of Fritz Lang's 1927 Metropolis, as well as serving as a model for later adaptations of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein rather than the original 1910 version. The subject-matter of Homunculus is similar to an earlier film about a monstrous man-made being, Der Golem (Paul Wegener, 1915).

Fritz Lang wrote the script for Rippert's historical epic The Plague of Florence (1919), the first film (of sixteen, as of 2007) to feature the black plague. The cameraman was Emil Schünemann, who was behind the lens for In Nacht und Eis.

After 1924, Rippert stopped directing films and worked as a film editor. He had a stroke in 1937 and died in Berlin in 1940.

Filmography

Actor
  • In Nacht und Eis, directed by Mime Misu (1912)
  • Director

    References

    Otto Rippert Wikipedia