In one of the most influential films of the silent era,
Werner Krauss plays the title character, a sinister hypnotist who travels the carnival circuit displaying a somnambulist named Cesare (
Conrad Veidt). In one tiny German town, a series of murders coincides with Caligari's visit. When the best friend of hero Francis (Friedrich Feher) is killed, the deed seems to be the outgrowth of a romantic rivalry over the hand of the lovely Jane (
Lil Dagover). Francis suspects Caligari, but he is ignored by the police. Investigating on his own, Francis seemingly discovers that Caligari has been ordering the somnambulist to commit the murders, but the story eventually takes a more surprising direction. The film's twisting plot takes its cue from its Expressionist style, which uses distorted perspectives to mirror the characters' extreme emotional states. The village is a maze of painted sets, filled with unnatural shapes and angles, the actors' movements are highly stylized, and everyone wears thick, grotesque makeup. Through the rest of the silent era, and on into such talkies as
Frankenstein (1931),
Svengali (1931), and
Murders in the Rue Morgue (1932), audiences were treated to such
Caligariesque devices as spider-like shadows, bizarre makeup and lighting effects, and zombie-like characterizations.
Caligari's Expressionist style ultimately led to the dark shadows and sharp angles of the
film noir urban crime dramas of the 1940s, many of which were directed by such German émigrés as
Billy Wilder and
Robert Siodmak.