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7/10
The Dancer, the Skier and His Young Friend – A Melodramatic and Tragic Triangle of Love
claudio_carvalho27 November 2010
The dancer Diotima (Leni Riefenstahl) meets the engineer and skier Karl (Luis Trenker) in his cottage in the mountains and they fall in love for each other and have a love affair. When Karl's young friend Vigo (Ernst Petersen) meets the dancer after a presentation and she gives her scarf with a smile to him, the infatuated Vigo mistakenly believes she is in love with him. Karl sees Diotima innocently caressing Vigo and he believes that Diotima is betraying him with his friend. Karl decides to commit suicide and invites Vigo to climb the dreadful Santo Mountain North face during the winter thaw with him. His best friend joins Karl in a tragic journey.

"Der Heilige Berg" is a melodramatic and tragic story of a triangle of love among a dancer that loves the sea; a skilled skier and engineer that loves the rock; and his young friend that loves the dancer. The plot is absolutely naive in 2010, but after all this is a 1926 film when the society had other moral concepts. The infamous Leni Riefenstahl, who directed the Third Reich's propaganda for Hitler one decade later, performs the dancer and pivot of the tragedy. Her dance is weird and clumsy but this is a silent movie and the viewer never knows what she was listening while dancing. If the romance is not interesting in the present days, the cinematography and the camera work are stunning considering the size, weight and technical resources of the equipment in this period. All shots outdoor were actually made in the mountains, including the ski race and the scene on the cliff, in the most beautiful parts of the Alps over the course of one and half years. My vote is seven.

Title (Brazil): "A Montanha Sagrada" ("The Holy Mountain")
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7/10
Early mountain film noted more for photography than its lead actress
OldAle116 March 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Most famous now, certainly, for containing the first starring role from actress and dancer, later director Leni Riefenstahl, this was director Fanck's second "mountain film" and in late 20s Germany probably didn't really stand out amongst the many other examples, including Alfred Hitchcock's now-lost The Mountain Eagle released the same year. And Riefenstahl's performance isn't really enough of a reason to see the film unless one has a significant interest in her; she's not really that good, rather amateurish here, and her dancing though decent enough seems entirely of the pagan/ritualistic type and gets rather tedious after a while.

It's an old story, too -- the love triangle, in this case a mistaken one as Diotima (Riefenstahl) falls instantly in love with mountaineer/ski instructor Karl (Luis Trenker, magnetic and giving far and away the best performance here) only to have his younger friend Vigo (Ernst Peterson) fall for her. Tragedy is the end result, but not before we get to see an awful lot of great mountain climbing, cross-country skiing, and ski jumping footage. It's the photography and action sequences that make the film worth a view, not the stilted storyline. Curiously the film seems to have a rather pagan, earthy attitude towards God and nature, only to have that disrupted in the final frame by a very Christian-seeming "FAITH".

The Kino DVD is quite beautiful and alternates between bluish and sepia tinting, but I have to take issue with the music, apparently scored and performed specifically for the film by a small ensemble; it's nice enough on its own but doesn't fit the Teutonic grandeur or wildness to my ears...more of a Buster Keaton or silent western score, it seemed to me. My advice is to turn down the music and crank your own Wagner, Bruckner or perhaps best of all, Mahler.
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6/10
A not so holy mountain.
Bill-10354 December 2005
A pioneering 'berg' film from the silent days of German cinema starring Leni Riefenstahl, later made famous or infamous as the documenter of Nazi Germany in 'Triumph of the Will' (the 34 Nuremburg rally) and 'Olympiad' (the 36 Olympics). This was her first acting film and she does a lot of dancing (quite good) and some over-acting, (quite bad) waving her arms in the air and rolling her eyes, taking her cue from Mae Marsh, no doubt.

The eternal triangle story is so simple I still can't believe Fanck took 1¾ hours to tell it. However to give him his due a lot of the film is taken up by scenery shots some of which are quite spectacular. A downhill ski race is also a feature although Fanck clearly plays fast and loose with times and locations so don't expect anything to make a whole lot of sense during this section. If they had had continuity girls at that time this one would have been looking for another job in real short order.

The climax of the film comes when 'The Mountaineer' sees his fiancée (Riefenstahl) being groped by some man. He is furious but in true public school style attempts to sublimate his anger in a daring mountain climb much like Riefenstahl sublimated her excessive emotion in a dance earlier in the film. (Quite clearly at the time violent exercise and a cold shower in the morning was thought to be a cure for everything.) Half way up they have stopped for a rest on a narrow ledge when a chance remark by Vigo, the companion, makes 'the mountaineer; realise that it was the guy he is now roped to who was groping his fiancée. He is so furious that forgetting the floor space is somewhat restricted he makes a threatening gesture towards Vigo who instinctively steps back and …..whoops! (An earlier comment on this site stated that he planned to murder Vigo but Fanck makes it clear that he did not, it was an accident.)

An interesting comparison can be made between Fanck's movie and the recent mountaineering drama documentary 'Touching the Void' in which fact virtually duplicates the fiction of 'Holy Mountain'. Watching the two in close proximity is very illuminating for the ethos of both films. I think the earlier movie has the edge when it comes to cinematography despite the fact that fixed camera position is the rule though I expect in some of the locations even actors' movements must have been a problem. The shooting of the film itself was plagued by weather problems, ice kept melting, snow turned to slush and the whole project was nearly thrown out by UFA. This is not a great movie but, especially with the comparison with 'Touching the Void', it is a fascinating movie from a historical perspective as well as worth watching in its own right if you are a fan of silent movies.
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7/10
The Holy Mountain
dav07dan0212 June 2005
Director/Script: Arnold Fank, Cast: Leni Riefenstahl, Luis Trenker, Ernst Petersen.

Arnold Fank was known for "mountain films" during the German silent era. This is considered to be his most famous. This film is basically a mellow drama. It is the mountaineering, skiing and dancing that make this film so interesting to watch. It centers around this beautiful dancer named Diotima (played by Leni Riefenstahl) and two men that fall for her, a mountain climber named Karl (played by Luis Trenker)and a ski champ named Vigo (played by Ernst Petersen). Karl and Diotima develop a relationship, Karl leaves to go on a mountain climb. During this time she meets Vigo at a ski competition and develops a friendship with him. Karl comes back from his expedition to find Diotima with Vigo and he become very jealous of Vigo. He offers to take him on a climb up the north face of a mountain during the time of the season when it is considered dangerous to do so because he wants to do harm to his friend. Vigo reluctantly offers to go because of the climbing conditions. Anyhow, they climb the mountain together, they get up on a high ledge and Karl pushes him off the ledge but ends up trying to save him because they are roped together. They are stuck up there for a long period of time in harsh conditions. At some point Vigo can't take hanging on the ledge any longer and asks Karl to cut the rope and save himself. Karl refuses to do this. I will not say what happens to them.

This film could be enjoyed by anyone who likes classic cinema and silent films and is a great film to have for anyone who is into skiing or mountaineering. The mountain photography is very good. The film is colour tinted mostly in blue and golden hues. Many of Leni's dancing scenes are shown with her silhouetted as are many of the climbing scenes with the colour tinted background. Their is a ski-jump competition scene that is very cool to watch. The ski race is also impressive and it takes up much of the film.

Leni Riefenstahl become a director in her own right. Evidently Hitler was impressed by her work and asked her to make Nazi propaganda films for him and she did. This all but ruined her career. I do not know if she actually shared those views but I have read that she regretted being associated with those films. She lived a long time, dieing just a few years ago. She made her last film just a year or two before she died.This was her first film in over forty years.
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6/10
The Sea and the Stone
JoeytheBrit26 November 2009
Some superb cinematography is the only thing that saves this fairly turgid melodrama from being completely ordinary. Given the stunning scenery featured here it would be difficult for even the most workmanlike of cinematographers to come away without some spectacular shots, but in the hands of a veritable army of credited cinematographers we are left with a succession of images that will remain in the memory long after other details of the film have been forgotten.

Leni Riefenstahl, who would later become notorious for directing Nazi propaganda films for Hitler, plays the heroine, a dancer who falls in love with a dashing skier. The skier's young friend, also dashing but in a less mature way, also falls for her and both men mistakenly believe the young man's love is reciprocated – a misunderstanding that leads to tragedy.

When she's called upon to emote, Riefenstahl overacts horrendously, flinging her arms into the air, half-swooning against any nearby piece of furniture or wall, and hysterically biting her hands when she's not throwing her head into them. She really is shocking and, given everyone else's more naturalistic style, she ends up coming across as a highly-strung diva who's misplaced her happy pills, which I don't believe is what the director is looking for.

Anyway, it's nature, and not Riefenstahl, who is the real star. The film heavily symbolises the links her character (the sea) and her lover (the stone) share with nature, scenes of which the camera seems to gorge itself on, suggesting a reverence that lends the most natural of phenomenon an almost mythical quality. The director juxtaposes the vast open spaces of the mountains and the sea with extreme close-ups of the principal's faces to offer an insight into their emotions and emphasise the disparities that will drive them apart.

And if you happen to catch this film, bear in mind – as the film beseeches you to – that there is no trick photography in use here: that man really is peering over the edge of a sheer cliff with the front of his skis in mid-air, and the cameraman really is hurtling down the ski-slopes with his subjects as he captures how it feels to take part in a rugged ski race. Forget the dreary romance, these scenes – and the breathtaking shots in which we see climbers pinned to mountains at the far left of the picture and silhouetted against a vast sky - are the moments that breathe life into this film.
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9/10
Exceptional winter alpine filming in Upper Engadine
atorri10 January 2007
The simple storyline is about Diotima, an inspirational dancer played by Leni Riefenstahl, and her love story with Karl, a tough mountain lover who, in the best German romantic tradition, finds the Absolute climbing the highest peaks. The greatness of the movie is in the winter mountain scenery and in the filming of ski competitions. Some of the filming was done in Upper Engadin, in Sils-Maria, a small Swiss village about 6 miles west of St. Moritz. In one scene it is clearly recognizable the Mount Margna and in a few others, the village of Sils-Maria is visible with the Hotel Alpenrose and the Chesa Zuan (both are still standing and look remarkably similar). Some other filming is probably from the nearby Val Fex, and there is also a beautiful view of the Silsersee with Maloja visible in the distance.

Considering the limited technical support available for winter alpine filming in 1926, it is remarkable that the photography is mostly crisp and engaging, and that it shows the peculiar light quality of Upper Engadin.

Riefenstahl's acting is fantastic but inevitably dated. She is expressive and intense, with a bit of influence from Weimar Expressionism. She outclasses all other actors, who appear unidimensional.

A movie strongly recommended, if only for the incredible quality of alpine photography and for the timeless Riefenstahl performance.
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6/10
Alpine for you, my darling Warning: Spoilers
German filmmaker Arnold Fanck single-handedly invented an entire movie genre: the mountain film. This refers not to mountain-climbing movies in general, but to a specific type of movie in an Alpine setting. A 'mountain film' depicts the experiences of an athletic young Aryan man, high in the mountains, where he communes with nature and meets a beautiful blonde woman who somehow embodies both the Aryan physical ideal and the German countryside itself. Their relationship is erotic, yet has semi-mystical aspects bordering on a religious epiphany. The man learns much about himself. Sometimes (as happens here in 'Der Heilige Berg') a mountain film has two male protagonists, both athletic, who develop a rivalry over the blonde fraulein.

Although Fanck invented and embodied the mountain-film genre, in the same way that Alfred Hitchcock defined the suspense film and Busby Berkeley defined the Depression-era musical, Fanck was by no means the only 'mountain-film' director. Movies in this genre have been made by directors as disparate as Hitchcock ('The Mountain Eagle') and Fred Zinnemann ('Five Days One Summer').

'Der Heilige Berg' ('The Holy Mountain') features Louis Trenker as Karl, a downhill skier who loves a beautiful dancer named Diotina. (Played by Leni Riefenstahl, who is so sexy here that I can well believe that Hitler had the hots for her.) Alles ist wunderbar for Karl and his little schnitzel, until along comes the slightly younger and handsomer Vigo, played by Ernst Petersen. A triangle develops between these three. Karl decides to eliminate his rival, so with German cunning he invites Vigo to join him in a climb up the nearest Alp. At the top of the Alp, Karl pushes Vigo over a precipice... then he suddenly remembers that he and Vigo are roped together. Oops! This scene reminded me of the climax of Erich von Stroheim's 'Greed', in which one man kills another man in the middle of Death Valley, then discovers that he's handcuffed to the corpse. The difference is that in 'Greed' the two men became shackled together at the last moment, whereas (in this piece of krautwurst) Karl and Vigo were roped together before Karl gave Vigo the heave-ho, so his actions are extremely ludicrous.

Anyway, in order to save himself, Karl must rescue the dangling Vigo, and the dangling plotline ... and in the process he makes a few self-discoveries.

As is typical of an Arnold Fanck film, there are some exciting skiing sequences, and some splendid footage of a skiing competition. Leni Riefenstahl is photographed to excellent advantage, with some fine backlighting in her blonde hair while she flexes her gorgeous physique, but she overacts very badly here. I'll rate this movie 6 out of 10.
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8/10
Marvellous and unique experience.
A remarkable film with beautiful images at times following each other in quick succession. The Blu-ray image and the colour tints help but whether it is the sea, the clouds or the mountains and snow, this is a wondrously poetic experience. The appearance here of Leni Riefenstahl as the dancer and love object for the two male climbers is what brings the film its controversy but there is no doubt her free style dancing is a joy to watch. Here it is likely she was influenced by the Californian born Isadora Duncan but whereas the American stuck to dancing, the young German would, of course, get into her own style of film making. Initially she concentrated on the 'mountain film' genre but, let us say, drifted into more controversial areas. Nevertheless this Arnold Fanck epic (partly, it is said, assisted by Riefenstahl, with he too is said to have become besotted) is a stunning piece of work and particularly impressive when it is considered how difficult it must have been to carry and work with those early cameras at those heights and in that snow. Marvellous and unique experience.
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6/10
A Tribute To Nature And The Teutonic Mountains
FerdinandVonGalitzien10 December 2006
After a scene in Herr Wilhelm Prager's "Wege Zu Kraft Und Schönheit" (1925), "Der Heiliger Berg" was the first film of Dame Leni Riefenstahl as a lead actress. It was a film written exclusively for her by Herr Arnold Fanck according to Dame Riefenstahl memoirs, a book that includes other partial and conceited memories… from a time in the mid-20s when she was a famous dancer.

The film includes a prologue in where we can see Dame Riefenstahl dancing or something like that, well… knowing that Germans, even the aristocrats, had a particular sense of rhythm more suited to military parades with plenty of goose steps, you will be able to understand the reason why Dame Riefenstahl was a famous dancer during the Weimar era.

Herr Arnold Fanck, as a director was noted as the creator of one of the most successful and peculiar German film genres: the mountain films. (Actually, Herr Fanck was a famous director at that time thanks to mountain documentaries; "Der Heilige Berg" was his first film that includes a plot). In these films nature and its consequences are always centred on the lead character of these beautiful films with their superb cinematography and vigorous editing. Men and women have to fight against the savage elements in what it is finally an unequal and difficult battle. That's the most important aspect of the film, those incredible beautiful nature shots because Dame Riefenstahl as a dancer/actress or Herr Trenker (the male lead actor) as an actor are not very impressive, or…in the strict German sense, they are depressive.

"Der Heilige Berg" shows different nature's conditions and contradictions. In the first part of the film, our heroine, Diotima the dancer, is immersed in bucolic, idealized and calm mountain landscapes full of flowers, shepherds, people skiing and all that kind of strange things. In the second part of the film the beautiful mountain landscapes will transform to a dangerous and inaccessible place in which the snowfalls and avalanches will prevent the rescue of two of Diotima's lovers who are isolated at the mountaintops. In many occasions during the film, some scenes are prolonged unnecessarily due to the excessive emphasis on mountain scenery that Herr Fanck wanted; duplicate shots diminish the film's action in a Herr Trenker oeuvre whose inner intention is to be a tribute to nature and the Teutonic mountains.

And now, if you'll allow me, I must temporarily take my leave because this German Count must to climb the aristocratic ladder.

Herr Graf Ferdinand Von Galitzien http://ferdinandvongalitzien.blogspot.com/
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4/10
The worst of Riefenstahl's mountain films.
planktonrules19 December 2011
Warning: Spoilers
If you haven't seen all of Leni Riefenstahl's 'rock and snow' epics, then you might be inclined to like this one a lot more than me. However, I have seen them and after you've seen a couple, they tend to be VERY repetitive. On top of that, this film suffers from some seriously bad acting--so bad that it often overshadows the great cinematography.

Today, few would remember Leni Riefenstahl, but if they did, they'd probably only remember her as a director of the massive love letter to Hitler "Triumph of the Will". However, before she began directing, Riefenstahl was a huge film star in Germany and specialized in films made in the Alps. They must have been popular, because they made so many. Some of them are really amazing--some not. What you need to acknowledge, though, is that they were extremely difficult movies to film and had many hair-raising climbing scenes.

The film begins with two people. One is a child of nature (Riefenstahl) who dances about the shores and loves the valleys. She meets a man whose interests lie in the great heights of the mountains and he revels in the snow. Can these two people find love without some disaster befalling them? Well, if you ask the old lady in the film, she'll scream a definite NO--since, I assume, she'd read the screenplay. And, not surprisingly, disaster does occur--though Leni has nothing directly to do with it. I'd say more about the plot, but don't want to ruin it.

My biggest problem with the film is the direction given to Riefenstahl. During much of the film, she hops about in a diaphanous dress--dancing for no apparent reason. It's very artsy....but weird. And, when she emotes, she REAAALLY emotes!! Even compared to the over-emoting of the earlier 20th century silents, she's over-emoting--to the point of ridiculousness. Now I know she was a very good actress and have liked her other films--but here she simply is told to overdo it and she comes off very poorly. Not a terrible film but a poorly directed one in all of her scenes. As for the climbing and skiing portions, it's breathtaking.
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10/10
Its world premiere on December 17, 1926
Bernie44449 March 2024
Two Nitrate Copies Served as the basis for this reconstruction: one color-tinted element for the Bundesarchive/Film archive, Berlin, and one in black and white from Fondazion Ceneteca Italiana, Milan.

All the shots taken outdoors were made in the Alps for six years.

This is the story of a girl dancer from the Grand Hôtel Diotima (Leni Riefenstahl) who loves nature and the sea "she seems almost holy!" She is lured to the mountains by Karl (Luis Trenker) and his young buddy Vigo (Ernst Petersen). Karl plans to marry Diotima and is shocked to find her stroking the head of a stranger. How could this happen? Then there is a strange turn of events as Karl invites Vigo to do a little climbing on a dangerous mountain in bad weather. He has to get her out of his system somehow. Karl" You're my best friend. Come with me. We'll be mad together." Meantime Mother (Frida Richard) knows it all. Will Karl suspect it was Vigo that was being stroked? If so, what will happen up there just the two of them in isolation?

Mother confronts Diotima, "Was one man not enough for you?"

This is one of Lini's mountain series of films. Notice that the mountains and the clouds (shot in elapse time) are not filler or backdrop, but the main character in the film.
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7/10
Get past the first ten minutes! THEN...fasten your seatbelts...oh, and skip the philosophizing...
mmipyle8 December 2020
I finally had the stamina to get past the first ten minutes of "The Holy Mountain" (original title: "Der Heilige Berg") (1926), whose first ten minutes were, for me, so artsyphartsy (with the exception of the exceptional photography which was mesmerizing!) that it took the third try over a four day period to progress. The first ten minutes or so actually is entitled "Prologue". Starring Leni Riefenstahl, Luis Trenker, Ernst Petersen, and three other minor characters, plus a lot of participants in village scenes and ski race scenes, though these are the actors, the humans who make the story go - - - the genuine star of this film is the incredible photography of cinematographers Sepp Algeier, Albert Benitz, Helmar Lerski, and Hans Schneeberger. The story is wrapped in a literary framework exploring the supremacy of Nature, the nature of Supreme Beauty, and the fact that some humans, though they might embrace one of those two as supreme beliefs, nevertheless are wired as all humans to have nearly incomprehensible, inexorable, and overwhelming emotional reactions to human love. In other words, by the end, forget philosophy, all humans are animals that behave with instincts, emotions, and desires difficult to overcome and channel into one simple philosophical way of living. The two men, Trenker and Petersen, both fall for the same girl, Riefenstahl - who, not conveniently at all, falls for both men, though in one scene near the end we see her say, "Vigo (Petersen) is just a child", the implication being that she'll settle for Trenker...and we as viewers are going, "Really?"

The story gets going after the first ten minutes. It develops very nicely; but after a half hour or so, it revs up in skiing scenes to a hot point. THEN, it really gets moving. The ski scenes are wonderfully done, but, again, it's the cinematography that is riveting, not necessarily the story. THEN, THEN...the story for about just short of an hour till end is heart-racing and a thriller. Extremely well done at this point, the human story is ever as gripping as the photography. Finally, the direction under Arnold Fanck and Leni Riefenstahl herself has immersed itself in its job of storytelling, still wrapped in beautiful photography, but minus the artsyphartsy goo that's been cramping the film's style.

This is the first of Riefenstahl and Fanck's supposed "mountain" films. In its own way it's a masterpiece, but I must tell you - for me, it was a challenge to get into this thing. I'm very glad I did, because the ensuing tragedy is Shakespearean, if not Sophoclean - with a caveat... The very ending - a small group of intertitles - is a great let-down, in my opinion, because the fact that Fanck makes the story suddenly ONLY about loyalty sounds a good deal like a call to personal nature needing to be politically sacrosanct to all things in life - a loyalty to what all humans must believe, in loyalty. Well, loyalty to what? I believe the film in its overall telling ends on a vague note about the issue. We've seen a sort of loyalty suddenly unleashed in trying to save the life of the best friend Trenker has, where just beforehand he'd betrayed him by taking that best friend up the dangerous face of a mountain during a horrific storm - this, to see if he'll make it or not - jealousy being the motive. But the intertitles at the end aren't referencing that segment of the film necessarily, but seem to imply a bigger, perhaps, political message. I saw a very ambiguous take-away when I finished watching.

The "friends" and their love, Leni, may have to answer to a higher power when they get past the veil - based on story in the film.

This is a Kino Video release from 2002.
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3/10
i don't know why there are so many mistaken reviews as to what happens in this movie
marymorrissey21 July 2010
Warning: Spoilers
well one reason might be that there isn't a great deal of sense in the troubling behavior of the "magnificent man" - the ski master and engineer Karl - a self pitying son of a gun who (when he realizes that someone has been trying to get into the pants of his clueless lady, who has been innocently leading on 2 men at once, because she is a damn fool and regards one of them as "just a child" when he is most definitely of marriage age) decides to go on a little suicidal mountaineering jaunt and insists that the delightful young Vigo accompany him, even though he has no idea that it's Vigo he saw feeling up Lady Riefenstahl. Then when he does realize he moves towards him, menacingly, so that the young buck falls backwards over the precipice. Then our "hero" strives valiantly to save the young man ("I'd never do anything to harm you!" he declares. Not very convincingly in the wake of what we've just seen.)

Karl is about as "magnificent" as one of those people who decide to commit suicide by driving into an oncoming car, their despair being worthy of taking down some totally innocent bystander in the process of doing away with themselves. While the literal cliffhanger goes on for what seems like hours, the only possible happy ending as far as I'm concerned would have been for the boy to be rescued and somehow for this bastard Karl to snuff it himself all the same. Not a very likely scenario - unless the film had been made in Hollywood! For once I wish a German film had been. :( Somehow the filmmaker finds it very noble that Karl goes ahead and goes through with his suicide even though he might have exhibited less "FAITH!" by cutting poor Vigo loose so that he might save himself and make the temptress Diotoma into some kind of respectable hoochie coochie dancer. It was so annoying Diotoma, Leni's character, is only concerned about "him" and the fate of the younger guy is just so much collateral damage...that I ended up despising her so much by the end of the film that I'm afraid I don't even remember what became of her and her Isadoraesque twirling.

I really did feel it was a kind of Nazi aesthetic/morality in which this man's "noble" love allowed him to take his little buddy with him just out of sheer megalomania on his little suicide mission into the Föhn. Very demoralizing viewing!

Anyway I came to watch this movie cause I went to a performance of Olivier Messiaen's HARAWI for soprano and piano in LA for which a film accompaniment had been commissioned from the artist Lars Jens. Bits of this movie abstracted for the purpose of Messiaen's rather absurdist/romantic lyrics managed to yield more beauty/power without question. The magnificent Lars Jens edited together footage from this film with the very different Jodorowsky version of "The Holy Mountain" and I would have to say that on a purely aesthetic level that concert was far more successful a work than either of these films watched on their own. (Although I haven't made it through all of the Jodorowsky movie yet & so shouldn't really be saying this) The Messiaen score is one of his best. Your chances of seeing this little mash-up are likely close to nil, but if you should have a chance I'd encourage you to take advantage!

Oh, it was interesting to note that this film, evidently Leni's first, had ski jumping sequences that had obviously had an influence on her "Olympia"!
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6/10
subconscious prelude to war
joerg-3321 December 2005
the first thing i have to mention is the transfer of the film. usually physical film quality is not of primary importance to me - but if (as in this case) there are a disturbing number of frames missing, your viewing pleasure is seriously impaired. here barely one minute goes by that the continuity within the same shot doesn't jump. having said that - the transfer is somewhat recent, restored and licensed from the murnau-stiftung, so i guess it has to be the best version available (i own the eureka edition). now ... the film is certainly not a masterpiece, but the sports scenes still can excite. so can the mountain and nature photography, which is rather splendidly done (they didn't even shy away from pointing the camera straight into the sun - something one doesn't see too often in movies). and this was about all the good there is for me. starting with the awful German text plates - in which even the basics of human behavior (of the characters) are displayed as requiring superhuman efforts/emotions ... the subconscious prelude to war i guess. the English subtitles thankfully use much better language - quite elegant in that too. also there is no humor in the film. one might smile about the idiotic script every now and then (nowadays), but this was certainly no intention back when it was filmed. conclusion: if you like silent movies, winter sports and history it might be worth a look, but not much else is there to be found.
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7/10
Fanck should have been a nature documentary filmmaker
topitimo-829-27045924 October 2019
Arnold Fanck was a successful filmmaker in the 1920's Germany, known especially for his mountaineering films, like this one. "Der heilige Berg" (The Holy Mountain, 1926) is great proof of Fanck's greatest talent: his eye for depicting nature. This is still a very watchable film, because of the way the director shot it. The lakes, the mountains and the skies all melt together, forming a timeless-seeming space, that gets broken every time the director attempts to tell a story. As a storyteller, he is no great talent.

The narrative is about two friends, who travel in the mountains, and meet a dancer (Leni Riefenstahl), with whom both fall in love with. The romantic triangle means their doom, since the mountain is cursed. The story is told in a very uneven manner, with narrative bumps here and there. Also we have a skiing contest for no apparent reason, which again affects the film's mood in a negative way.

The nature shots of this film could be edited into a better film, as some later tried to do. They are that gorgeous. Besides the scenery, this film is remembered for Leni Riefenstahl's first big role. Acting-wise, it isn't anything special, but the years she spent on the mountains with Fanck are visible in her directorial works as spacial understanding.
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8/10
Bergfilmes are Germany's Kin To American Westerns
springfieldrental19 March 2022
"Bergfilmes" were fictional movies set in the high mountains. They were Germany's answer to American Westerns from the mid-1920s throughout the 1930s. Shot amongst Europe's tallest peaks, mostly in the Alps, the genre has spread worldwide from those wild decades to where today's audiences are thrilled by edge-of-the-seat cliffhangers.

The one German movie that single-handedly popularized the genre was director Arnold Franck's November 1926's "The Holy Mountain." The look of Franck's film can be much attributed to cinematographer Sepp Allgeier since his experience shooting newsreels in the Balkans translated to this film's groundbreaking photography in the Alps. Allgeier was the first motion cameraman to shoot ski footage trailing skiers down the slopes. His breathtaking work transported viewers sitting comfortable in their warm theater seats into the cold world of an icy, frostbitten environment.

A young dancer, Leni Riefenstahl, saw an earlier Fanck film, 1924's 'Mountain of Destiny,' and was enthralled by it. She became totally captivated by movie making after seeing it and began attending a series of film exhibitions. Her reputation as an improvise dancer was rather well known when she approached actor Luis Trenker, who appeared in the Fanck film, and convinced him to introduce her to the director. Riefenstahl's performing fame as well as her persuasive verbal skills opened the door as the lead female in "The Holy Mountain." She displays her dancing skills in several scenes specifically designed to show off her talent.

Riefenstahl plays the town beauty who's in love with an older mountain climber, Karl (Luis Trenker), while the younger mountaineer Vigo (Ernst Petersen) is equally infatuated with her. Veteran skier Karl happens upon an intimate scene with Luis and Vigo after he wins a thrilling ski race, but the embrace is really all innocent in her eyes. Except Karl does feel that way, and exacts his revenge by persuading Vigo to climb a high mountain during a raging snowstorm. The resultant heroic rescue scene is something the screen had never witnessed before.

Riefenstahl, later one of Nazi Germany's most favored documentary filmmakers, directed her first scenes in "The Holy Mountain" when Fanck was unavailable to shoot the springtime flower sequences as well as the nighttime rescue party search with flares ablazing. The movie took a year to film since the weather was uncooperative at the time. Adding to the production troubles was a series of serious injuries suffered by three stuntmen performing the many dangerous ski maneuvers. "The Holy Mountain" turned out to be wildly popular in Germany and France, and introduced to American audiences a thrilling mountaineer movie, setting the standard for future bergfilmes high above the timber line.
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6/10
I wonder how German cinema would've gone had the Nazis not come to power
lee_eisenberg14 April 2019
Warning: Spoilers
In between the end of World War I and Hitler's takeover, Germany turned out some of the most impressive movies of the era. The famous ones are F. W. Murnau's "Nosferatu" and Fritz Lang's "Metropolis". Others include "Der heilige Berg" ("The Holy Mountain" in English), starring the now controversial Leni Riefenstahl.

Most of the movie isn't anything profound. Set in the Alps, it depicts a love triangle between a dancer and two mountaineers. The scenes that stand out are the dance numbers, the ski race, and the stranding of the mountaineers on the cliff. Seriously, this is some storytelling like you can't imagine. The mix of these - as well as shots of the ocean - make for one compelling film, even though it has a simple plot.

Arnold Fanck would later direct Riefenstahl in 1930's "Storm over Mont Blanc". I understand that Hitler was fascinated by her performance in that movie and decided that he wanted her to film his propaganda documentary. Riefenstahl never did apologize for her participation in the propaganda machine. Strange legacy.

In the meantime, this one is worth seeing.
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4/10
Only visually stunning
Horst_In_Translation17 June 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"Der heilige Berg" or "The Holy Mountain" is a German silent film in black-and-white from the year 1926, so this one has its 90th anniversary this year already. It was written and directed by German filmmaker Arnold Fanck, a man who is mostly known for his mountain-themed films from the first half of the 20th century. The cast includes Ernst Petersen, a regular in Fanck's films, Leni Riefenstahl before her days as a propaganda filmmaker, and Luis Trenker, a famous mountain climber who turned to acting. The film runs for 100 minutes approximately, but I have to say that in terms of the story and the plot 50 minutes would have been more than enough. The story is not the greatest strength here about a pair of climbers and a woman who stands between them, but this is a common problem with Fanck's works. However, his biggest strength also keeps this film from being a really boring or disastrous watch. Visually, it is way ahead of its time, no doubt about it. The snowy landscapes are a joy to watch and I can see why this film still appeals to people today. There are some genuinely beautiful shots in here. However, this is not enough to make up for the deficits in terms of story-telling and my overall verdict for this movie from between World Wars I and II is a negative one. Thumbs down and I do not recommend the watch. The good thing for foreign audiences is that this film also exists with English intertitles if they really want to see it. But I cannot really support this decision.
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5/10
Very disappointing!
JohnHowardReid26 December 2017
Warning: Spoilers
I was really looking forward to the Kino DVD of The Holy Mountain (1926) which I assumed would feature the original music score by Edmund Meisel.

Instead of the grandeur of Meisel, however, Kino treats us to a monotonous, half-baked and often totally inappropriate offering from Aljoscha Zimmerman.

Admittedly, even Meisel may have found it difficult to set Leni Reifenstahl's repetitive posturing (you couldn't call it "dancing") to music, but even a dim reflection of the stark, deadly beauty of the Swiss and Bavarian Alps should have been possible.

Not so, however. The score manages to undermine the luster of everything it touches. An oft-told noirish tale of a love triangle twisted to the point of dementia, The Holy Mountain serves not only as a scenic backdrop but as a murderous participant.

(The Kino DVD rates 10/10 for its superlative preservation of the original's color-tinted photography, but somewhat less for the failure of its music score).
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5/10
Not so holy
TheLittleSongbird14 July 2020
Have given this mixed feelings rating with regret, would never rate or review anything with malice or any kind of bias. Leni Riefenstahl was not a bad actress at all but was an even better director (the latter of which she is perhaps better known for and her personal life), and when it came to films centered around adversity in the mountains it didn't get much better than Arnold Fanck when it came to direction at that particular point in film history.

So it did sadden me that 'The Holy Mountain' didn't connect with me completely, being somebody that really did want to like it as Riefenstahl's directing efforts and her other mountaineering-oriented outings with Fanck have much to admire. Visually 'The Holy Mountain' is a triumph and there is some inspired direction, but it is far from exceptional story-wise and Riefenstahl went on to do much better things when her acting style matured and became more subtle and comfortable (neither of which evident here).

'The Holy Mountain' has a good deal of good things. Visually it is masterly. The scenery is beautiful and atmospheric but even better is the cinematography. Not only are there some truly breathtaking images, but the moving camera and time lapse photography are so well used and make what happens raw and moving and the points of view interesting. It is a hauntingly scored film again and written with sincerity and good intentions.

Fanck's direction has a lot of impressive parts, especially when capturing the intensity of the action and emotional impact of it. As there are intense and moving moments here.

On the other hand, the story tends to be very dull and not particularly eventful, which may be down to that there is not a lot to it structurally and the film tried to pad it out. It is also excessively melodramatic, especially later on when it got very overwrought. The characters are underdeveloped and quite sketchy even.

Generally, the acting is nothing special and Riefenstahl herself went on to much better after. Here she overdoes it quite dreadfully and Fanck's direction of her is all over the shop.

In conclusion, watchable but underwhelming. 5/10
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