F.W. Murnau (born December 28, 1889, Bielefeld, Germany—died March 11, 1931, Hollywood, California, U.S.) was a German film director who revolutionized the art of cinematic expression by using the camera subjectively to interpret the emotional state of a character.
Murnau studied philosophy, art history, and literature at the Universities of Heidelberg and Berlin. In 1908 he joined the company of renowned stage director Max Reinhardt, acting in several plays and serving as Reinhardt’s assistant for the groundbreaking production of the wordless, ritualistic The Miracle (1911). After serving in the German army and air force during World War I, Murnau worked in Switzerland, where he directed short propaganda films for the German embassy. He directed his first feature film, Der Knabe in Blau (The Boy in Blue) in 1919. For the next few years Murnau made films that were Expressionistic or supernatural in nature, such as Der Januskopf (1920; Janus-Faced), a highly praised variation of the Jekyll-and-Hyde story that starred Bela Lugosi and Conrad Veidt. Unfortunately, this and most of Murnau’s early films are lost or exist only in fragmentary form.
Complete prints survive of Murnau’s first major work, Nosferatu (1922), which is regarded by many as the most effective screen adaptation of Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Eschewing psychological overtones, Murnau treated the subject as pure fantasy and, with the aid of noted cinematographer Fritz Arno Wagner, produced appropriately macabre visual effects, such as negative images of white trees against a black sky. Also memorable was the ghastly, cadaverous appearance of actor Max Schreck (whose name is German for “maximum terror”) in the role of the vampire. Though a cinematic landmark, Nosferatu was to be one of Murnau’s final films in the supernatural genre.
Der letzte Mann (1924; “The Last Man”; English title The Last Laugh), starring Emil Jannings in one of his signature roles, was a collaboration between Murnau and the renowned scriptwriter Carl Mayer, and it established Murnau’s reputation as one of the foremost German directors. The film traces the vicissitudes of a proud, aging doorman who is emotionally shattered after his hotel demotes him to the job of washroom attendant. Der letzte Mann’s mobile camera style had an international impact on the cinema. The camera moved through city streets, crowded tenements, and hotel corridors and played an integral role in the film by recording people and incidents through a limited point of view. Bound by the technical restrictions of the time, the noted cinematographer Karl Freund employed such ingenious techniques as cameras mounted on bicycles and overhead wires to create a whirlwind of subjective images; for one memorable sequence, Freund strapped a camera to his waist and stumbled across the set while on roller skates in order to portray the viewpoint of the drunken protagonist. Also impressive is the fact that the story is told completely in pantomime: only one title card is used throughout the 77-minute silent film. The mobile camera and a masterful use of light and shadows—techniques further developed in his subsequent films—earned Murnau the nickname of the Great Impressionist.
Murnau’s final two German films, adaptations of Molière’s Tartuffe (1925) and Goethe’s Faust (1926), were lavish, entertaining films that again featured Murnau’s soaring camera work and atmospheric use of shadows. Both films starred Jannings and enhanced the international prestige of both director and actor. Murnau’s reputation was such at this point that he was offered a Hollywood contract by Fox Film Corporation and was allowed to use the same staff of technicians and craftsmen he used for his German films. His first American production, Sunrise (1927), was another masterpiece that has been hailed by many critics as the finest silent film ever produced by a Hollywood studio; it was also one of three films to earn for Janet Gaynor the first Academy Award for best actress. Unfortunately, it was a box office fiasco, and the studio closely supervised Murnau on his next two productions: Four Devils (1928; now lost) and Our Daily Bread (1929; also released as City Girl). Owing to the advent and popularity of sound, the studio added hastily made dialogue scenes to the latter film without the director’s supervision, and the excellence of Murnau’s silent sequences was thus compromised.
(Read Lillian Gish’s 1929 Britannica essay on silent film.)
In order to better control the content of his films, Murnau joined with the pioneer documentary filmmaker Robert Flaherty to form a production company in 1928. The following year the pair traveled to the South Seas to film Tabu; Flaherty, however, objected to Murnau’s desire to incorporate a fictionalized love story into what was ostensibly an objective documentary of Polynesian life. Though he is credited as codirector, Flaherty withdrew from the production during its early stages, and the film is regarded as Murnau’s. Along with Nosferatu, The Last Laugh, and Sunrise, Tabu (1931) is one of Murnau’s masterpieces and was his biggest popular success. It may have been a portent of further greatness, had it not been for his untimely death in an auto accident a week before Tabu’s premiere.