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This silent movie horror from 1924 inspired several remakes and stars the great Conrad Veidt in the title role of Paul Orlac, a revered concert pianist who – after losing both hands in a train crash – find himself with a newly transplanted pair of hands, namely those of a recently executed murderer…
THE HANDS OF ORLAC (ORLAC’S HÄNDE) once again features the combined talents of director Robert Wiene and its star Conny Veidt four years after their collaboration on the ground-breaking German expressionist horror THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI. Based on the novel Les Mains d’Orlac by French writer Maurice Renard the plot concerns concert pianist Paul Orlac (C. Veidt) looking forward to being united with his beloved wife Yvonne (Alexandra Sorina) after an exhausting tour. Alas, fate has something altogether different in store! On the journey home the train is derailed and although Orlac’s life can be saved, his hands – his most important ‘tool’ – cannot. A
The German director Robert Wiene is best known for The Cabinet of Dr Caligari, perhaps the most influential piece of expressionist cinema. He's not as well known as Murnau or Lang, but the quality of his work is on the same level. The Hands of Orlac is a very fine example of a cinema haunted by the violence and death of the First World War, and containing within it both seeds of fascist aesthetics and the darkness that characterises film noir.