BERLIN: SYMPHONY OF A GREAT CITY
1927
Walter Ruttmann

SYNOPSIS
Without a traditional plot or actors, this documentary captures the rhythmic pulse of Berlin from dawn until midnight. Trains arrive, factories hum, and nightlife erupts in a montage of kinetic urban energy. Walter Ruttmann uses rhythmic editing and abstract visual patterns to create a 'city symphony' that treats the metropolis as a living organism. It stands as a pinnacle of the Neue Sachlichkeit movement, influencing how cities are depicted in film.
CRITIQUE
Walter Ruttmann’s film defined the 'city symphony' genre. Abandoning narrative characters, it stars Berlin itself, capturing the rhythmic pulse of industrial life through kinetic editing and abstract patterns. Influenced by Soviet montage, it treats machinery, crowds, and architecture as musical notes in a visual score. It reflects the Neue Sachlichkeit movement’s focus on objective reality while maintaining an artistic flow. It remains a vital historical document and a masterclass in editing, showing how cinema can capture the soul of a modern metropolis.
SCREENING AVAILABILITY
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Theatrical screenings
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Non-theatrical screenings
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Festivals and cinematheques
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Educational screenings
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Television broadcasting
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Digital platforms and streaming
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Promotional and editorial use
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Licensing of graphic and visual materials
AVAILABLE FORMATS
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DCP
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DCP with subtitles
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Apple ProRes
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MP4 Screening File
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MP4 Rehearsal Copy for Musicians (silent films)
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Blu-ray
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High-resolution archival masters
PROMOTIONAL MATERIALS
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Posters
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Press stills
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Promotional assets
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Screening support materials
AVAILABLE SUBTITLES
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English
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Spanish
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French
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Portuguese
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Italian
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German