Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. Robert Reinert (born 22 April 1872 in Vienna; died 30 August 1928 in Berlin) was a German film director and screenwriter. Born in Vienna, he moved to Munich around 1900. He wrote several novels, including "Der Weg zur Sonne" (1906) and "Krieg" (1907).

  2. Apr 29, 2017 · Often considered the first German Expressionist film, Robert Reinert's largely unknown Nerven is notable for its role in recording the frenzy of illness following the First World War.

  3. Virtually unmentioned in the standard histories of German cinema, Robert Reinert represented the right-wing avant-garde in Weimar Germany. His extravagant visual style and over the top narratives represented a different form of Expressionism from

  4. Nerves (German:Nerven) is a 1919 German silent film directed by Robert Reinert and starring Eduard von Winterstein, Lia Borré and Erna Morena. Full film

  5. Sep 5, 2016 · Robert Reinert's frenetic film Nerven was conceived as World War I ended and revolutions broke out throughout Germany in November 1918. Spearheaded in large part by Karl Liebknecht, Rosa Luxemburg, and the communist Spartacist League, the uprisings consisted of exploited workers, unwilling sailors, pacifist soldiers, and other war-weary Germans ...

  6. Robert Reinert was born near Vienna on 22 April 1872. (3) His early life is shrouded in mystery, but he apparently became a successful novelist and playwright, publishing “Die geheimnisvolle Frau”, and two novels, “Der Weg zur Sonne” (1906) and “Krieg” (1907) (4).

  7. Robert Reinert. Writer: Der Herr der Welt. Born near Vienna in 1872, Reinert's early life is shrouded in mystery. He apparently became a successful novelist, publishing "Der Weg zur Sonne" (1906) and "Krieg" (1907). After 1900 he moved to Munich, where he joined Frank Wedekind's cabaret, "Die Elf Scharfrichter".