Far and away the best book of film theory/criticism I’ve read. Superbly researched (includes 100 pages of notes, bibliography, and index) and beautifully written, Kaes dissects post World War I German (and beyond) culture and filmmaker’s response to war and its aftermath. Focusing primarily on four iconic films - The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, Nosferatu, The Nibelungen, and Metropolis - which are described and analyzed on virtually a frame by frame basis, Kaes lays out all the cultural backdrop and provides great detail on the film techniques used to provide the visual expression of the extreme psychological states rendered by the war. The classic Film Noir cycle begun during World War II draws on many of these same techniques and sensibilities and this book is really indispensable for understanding the cinematic response to World War II found in Film Noir because it was prefigured in the “Shell Shock Cinema” of the 1920s.