Film: Metropolis (1927)

Film: Metropolis (1927) Director: Fritz Lang | Runtime: 148 minutes (2010 restored version) | Origin: Germany (UFA)

CategoryDetails
MPAA RatingNot Rated (effectively PG)
Common Sense MediaAge 12+
IMDB Parents GuideMild throughout
FormatSilent film with intertitles; various musical scores available
Versions2010 Complete Restoration (recommended); Giorgio Moroder 1984 version (rock soundtrack)

 

The year is 2026. Metropolis is a gleaming city of towers and aerial highways where the wealthy live in gardens and pleasure palaces above the clouds. But the city runs on human fuel: far below ground, thousands of workers operate massive machines in ten-hour shifts, their movements synchronized, their individuality erased, their lives expendable. Freder, son of the city’s master Joh Fredersen, has never seen this world—until he follows a beautiful woman named Maria into the depths and witnesses a machine explosion that kills workers while their replacements march forward without pause. Transformed by horror, Freder determines to bridge the two worlds. But his father has other plans: he commissions the inventor Rotwang to create a robot duplicate of Maria—a false prophet who will incite the workers to violence, justifying their destruction. The real Maria preaches patience and a coming “mediator”; the robot Maria preaches rage and annihilation. The fate of the city depends on which Maria the workers follow, and whether Freder can become the “heart” that unites “head” and “hands.”

Content Breakdown: By modern standards, the content is remarkably mild—the concerns are about format and engagement, not objectionable material. Language is essentially nonexistent (silent film with German intertitles, translated in subtitles). Violence is stylized and expressionistic—machine explosions, fistfights, riot scenes, workers attacking machines, children nearly drowning in flood—but nothing graphic by contemporary standards; the silent format creates distance. Sexual content consists primarily of the robot Maria’s “erotic dance” performed for wealthy men: she appears nearly topless (with pasties covering nipples) and writhes provocatively while leering men watch. This sequence is integral to the plot (demonstrating her power to manipulate through desire) but requires preparation for younger viewers. No substance use. Frightening imagery includes expressionistic nightmare sequences featuring Death, the Seven Deadly Sins as skeletal figures, the uncanny robot creation scene, and a flood threatening trapped children—all visually stylized rather than realistic but potentially intense for sensitive viewers.

Why This Film Works for Not Being Controlled by Others

Nearly a century old, Metropolis remains the definitive cinematic statement on control systems—and startlingly relevant to 2025/2026. The film depicts multiple mechanisms of control, each with contemporary parallels:

Class structure as control: Workers are literally kept underground, separated from daylight and the “real” city above. They don’t rebel because they can’t imagine alternatives—they’ve never seen the gardens, the stadiums, the pleasure palaces. Contemporary parallel: How does economic segregation limit imagination? How does living in information bubbles prevent people from seeing alternatives to their circumstances?

Technology as control: The machines don’t just exploit workers; they pace them. The workers’ movements are synchronized to the machine rhythm—they become extensions of the apparatus. The Moloch sequence shows the machine literally consuming human bodies. Contemporary parallel: How do our devices pace us? How does algorithmic content delivery synchronize our attention? When do we serve technology rather than technology serving us?

Manufactured leaders as control: The robot Maria is history’s first cinematic deepfake—a manufactured person created to manipulate mass behavior. She looks exactly like the trusted leader; she speaks with the same face; but her message serves the controllers. The workers can’t tell the difference between authentic leadership and manufactured manipulation. Contemporary parallel: How do we verify who we’re listening to? What are today’s “robot Marias”—deepfakes, AI-generated content, manufactured influencers, compromised movements?

Misdirected rage as control: The false Maria doesn’t simply pacify the workers—she incites them to destroy the very machines that keep their children alive, channeling legitimate grievance into self-destructive action. The master class wants the workers to riot destructively because it justifies crushing them. Contemporary parallel: How is legitimate anger sometimes channeled toward self-defeating targets? Who benefits when protest becomes destruction?

The film’s proposed solution—the “heart” mediating between “head” and “hands”—has been criticized as naively sentimental. But this too provides discussion material: Is mediation between classes sufficient? What structural changes might actually address the conditions shown?

Characters to Discuss

  • Freder: Born to privilege, he’s transformed by witnessing suffering he’d been protected from seeing. His privilege enabled his ignorance—but also enables his access to power. How does he use his position? Is his mediation heroic or inadequate?
  • Maria (the real one): She preaches patience and prophesies a coming “mediator” rather than leading direct action. Is she wise or complicit? Does telling workers to wait perpetuate their exploitation?
  • The Robot Maria: Identical in appearance, opposite in message. She demonstrates that who speaks matters less than what systems control the speaking. How do you identify the authentic voice when the false one looks and sounds identical?
  • Joh Fredersen (the father/master): He builds the robot Maria not to help workers but to justify crushing them. He manufactures the crisis he then “solves.” What contemporary examples exist of manufacturing crises to justify control?
  • Rotwang (the inventor): He creates the technology of control but has his own agenda—revenge against Fredersen. The tools of manipulation can escape their creators’ intentions. What happens when control technologies develop beyond their makers’ plans?
  • The Workers: A collective character—anonymous, synchronized, manipulated. They follow both Marias without distinguishing between them. What makes mass manipulation possible? What would have helped them recognize the deception?

Parent Tips for This Film

The silent film challenge: Most young viewers have never watched a silent film. The absence of dialogue, the different acting style (broader, more theatrical), and the pacing require adjustment. Frame this as an opportunity: “Movies used to tell stories without words—everything had to be communicated through images, faces, and movement. Watch for how they show emotion without dialogue.”

Engagement strategies:

  1. Start with context: Spend 5-10 minutes before viewing explaining 1927 Germany—post-WWI economic devastation, the rise of expressionism, the technological optimism and anxiety of the era.
  2. Choose your version wisely:
    • 2010 Complete Restoration: Most historically accurate, traditional orchestral score, 148 minutes—best for serious study
    • Giorgio Moroder 1984 version: Rock/pop soundtrack (Pat Benatar, Freddie Mercury), 80 minutes, tinted color—more accessible for reluctant viewers but significantly cut
    • Modern live accompaniment: Some screenings feature live orchestras or electronic musicians—check local venues
  3. Watch in segments: The full restoration is nearly 2.5 hours. Consider splitting: First session through the robot creation (~75 minutes); second session through the conclusion.
  4. Pause for processing: Unlike modern films, silent cinema benefits from occasional pauses to discuss what’s happening. Don’t force continuous viewing.

The erotic dance scene: Robot Maria performs a provocative dance for wealthy men, appearing nearly topless with strategic covering. The scene demonstrates her power to manipulate through sexuality—the male gaze is literally depicted as hypnotized. For younger viewers, preview this scene and decide: skip it, fast-forward through it, or use it as discussion material about how sexuality can be weaponized for manipulation. The scene is approximately 2 minutes and can be identified by the nightclub setting with leering male faces.

The flood sequence: Children are trapped in the worker city as floodwaters rise—a genuinely tense sequence even by modern standards. The children survive, but anxious viewers may need reassurance in advance.

Historical context for older students: The film was made in Weimar Germany, and both Nazis and Communists claimed it supported their ideologies. Director Fritz Lang later fled Nazi Germany; his wife and co-writer Thea von Harbou became a Nazi supporter. The film’s politics are genuinely ambiguous—neither revolutionary nor reactionary—which makes it excellent discussion material but uncomfortable for those seeking clear moral positions.

The “2026” Connection

In some versions and promotional materials, Metropolis is set in the year 2026. Watching the film in 2025/2026 creates an extraordinary opportunity:

Then vs. now: Lang imagined 2026 as a world of flying cars, massive machines, robot workers, and extreme class division. What did he get right? What did he get wrong? What couldn’t he have imagined (smartphones, internet, social media)?

Technological prediction: The robot Maria is essentially a deepfake—a manufactured duplicate designed to manipulate mass behavior. In 2025/2026, this technology actually exists. How does our reality compare to Lang’s nightmare?

Economic prediction: The film depicts extreme inequality—luxury above, exploitation below, separated by physical and social distance. How does contemporary inequality compare? Are we closer to or further from the Metropolis scenario than audiences in 1927?

The “mediator” question: The film proposes that the “heart” must mediate between “head” and “hands”—that emotional connection, not structural change, resolves class conflict. Nearly 100 years later, has this solution worked anywhere? What has actually reduced class exploitation in history?

Studying the Film’s Visual Language

Metropolis is one of the most visually influential films ever made—its imagery echoes through Blade Runner, Batman, Star Wars, The Matrix, and countless others.

Visual motifs to watch for:

  • Vertical space: Upper/lower = rich/poor; movement between levels = class transgression
  • Mechanical movement: Workers move like machines; machines move like monsters
  • Circles and gears: The city runs on circular motion; workers are cogs
  • Light and shadow: Expressionist lighting creates psychological states
  • Crowds as masses: Workers are rarely individualized; they move as collective bodies

Architecture as character: The city itself communicates meaning. The towers aspire upward; the worker city is cavernous and crushing. Compare to how contemporary films use architecture (the Capitol in Hunger Games, Gotham in Batman, the Districts in various dystopias).

Exercise: After watching, have students sketch their own “Metropolis”—a visual representation of a divided society. What goes on top? What goes below? What keeps them separated?

Curriculum Connections

History: Weimar Germany, the rise of fascism, industrialization, labor movements Economics: Class systems, labor exploitation, automation anxiety (then and now) Media Studies: Propaganda, manufactured consent, visual persuasion Art History: German Expressionism, Art Deco, the influence of architecture on cinema Ethics: Worker rights, technological responsibility, class mediation Current Events: AI and employment, income inequality, algorithmic control, deepfakes

Recommendation: Appropriate for ages 10-12+ with engagement strategies for silent film format. The content is genuinely mild by modern standards; the challenge is engagement, not appropriateness. Choose your version based on your student’s tolerance for historical film formats—the Giorgio Moroder version sacrifices completeness for accessibility. Preview the erotic dance scene and decide on your family’s approach. For students interested in history, technology, economics, or visual storytelling, Metropolis is essential—a nearly century-old film that feels more relevant each year, now especially as we live in the future it imagined. The question it poses remains unanswered: Who controls whom, and how do we know?