Thanks, Fritz!

Amen!Doctor Robo wrote:In case you missed it, today (1/7/07) marks the 80th anniversary of the debut of Fritz Lang's Metropolis in Germany. I don't need to remind anyone that if not for this movie, ASFR - and science fiction in general - might not exist as we know it. If there was a Mount Rushmore of ASFR, Hel/Maria/Futura would be on it, that's for sure.
Thanks, Fritz!
Does make you wonder if anyone was! Yes big thanks to the man, and of course to Brigitte Helm as well for bringing the vision of robots to life in such a way. And considering when it was made that amazing scene in the lab is absolutely stunning. When you think nowadays they'd probably do all that by CG, oh how dull lol!kman1 wrote:Hear, hear. Reminds you how relatively young this fetish is. Just one unintended consequence of the Industrial Revolution. I wonder what it must have been like 80 years ago to watch Metropolis and find oneself mysteriously turned-on?
Unless you roll into ASFR the concept of women as statues, which goes back a few thousand years at least. But as somebody who doesn't get into statues at all, I know what you mean.kman1 wrote:Hear, hear. Reminds you how relatively young this fetish is.
It's a fascinating question. Though back then, it probably didn't take much to turn a guy on. We are so bombarded with images of naked and half-naked women, not to mention the clothes ordinary women wear in public, that we have no way of relating to a time when revealing a woman's ankle was scandalously titillating.kman1 wrote:I wonder what it must have been like 80 years ago to watch Metropolis and find oneself mysteriously turned-on?