IMDb RATING
6.8/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
When the moon is full, young men die attempting to reach the mysterious blue light in the mountains.When the moon is full, young men die attempting to reach the mysterious blue light in the mountains.When the moon is full, young men die attempting to reach the mysterious blue light in the mountains.
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis was a groundbreaking film at the time. It was a sound film shot all on location high in the mountains. Real mountain people were used as supporting players.
- GoofsAt about 20 minutes the moon comes up and moves from right to left. In the northern hemisphere it moves from left to right.
- Alternate versionsDirector Leni Riefenstahl recut and re-released a new version of the film in 1952.
- ConnectionsEdited into The Wonderful, Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl (1993)
Featured review
Leni Riefenstahl's directorial debut (she had been a widely recognised and praised dancer in the 20's and gone on to be one of the most well known silent movie stars, working with Arnold Fanck and G W Pabst on a series of mountain films). Here she shows that magnificent eye exciting visuals probably attainted while shooting up in the mountains with Fanck, and which would go on to make Triumph of the Will the most stunning, famous propaganda film of all time, and Olympia, her film of the 1936 Berlin Olympics the single most famous (and incredible visually) sports documentary of all time.
In The Blue Light you will find some of the most stunning visuals in early sound cinema, a gorgeous score and the magnetic, sensual screen presence of Leni herself in the lead role of Junta, the outcast who lives among the crystals in a mountain high above a fairytale village. It is a delight to watch, and one of the great treasures of early sound cinema, in my opinion (though the best things in it have more in common with the dancelike visual grace of the silent screen, than the stagey, wordy early talkies from Hollywood).
In The Blue Light you will find some of the most stunning visuals in early sound cinema, a gorgeous score and the magnetic, sensual screen presence of Leni herself in the lead role of Junta, the outcast who lives among the crystals in a mountain high above a fairytale village. It is a delight to watch, and one of the great treasures of early sound cinema, in my opinion (though the best things in it have more in common with the dancelike visual grace of the silent screen, than the stagey, wordy early talkies from Hollywood).
- Ben_Cheshire
- Mar 26, 2004
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- How long is The Blue Light?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 25 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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