Fairaher
The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.
Lucia Ayala
It's simply great fun, a winsome film and an occasionally over-the-top luxury fantasy that never flags.
Marva-nova
Amazing worth wacthing. So good. Biased but well made with many good points.
Dana
An old-fashioned movie made with new-fashioned finesse.
Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de)
"Die Reise nach Metropolis" or "Voyage to Metropolis" is a 52-minute documentary from 2010, so this one had its 5th anniversary last year. The writer and director is Artem Demenok and this is one of his more known works and actually not his only work that centers on the premise of "film on film". If you love Metropolis, you will probably quite like this one here. I would not call "Metropolis" one of my favorite (German) films of all time, but I still believe this one here was a success. It includes relevant information about a time long gone, namely the days when the movie was made and what cultural and also political impact it had. We see interviews from Fritz Lang and also read some letters he wrote and an interesting page of his original script is shown too. Later on, we find about the film from today's perspective, how film historians have puzzled it together in the last years/decades because every once in a while you heard the news that sequences re-appeared that were actually considered lost, which should give people hope that other lost films may not prove really that lost in the next decades. But back to this one here. The narrator is successful German actor Hanns Zischler. I enjoyed the watch and I feel it was a good documentary. Almost a must-see for "Metropolis" lovers.