Analysis Of Social Angst And Succumbing To Evil In Fritz Lang's M

Superior Essays
Social Angst and Succumbing to Evil in Fritz Lang’s M In Fritz Lang’s film M, citizens of Berlin are horrified and on high alert due to a series of murders involving young girls. In the effort to locate and capture the killer, citizens from an array of backgrounds push the limits of morality and justice. Particularly, clear examples of social decay and human angst can be analyzed by exploring the actions of three key groups in the film: the police, the criminals, and the everyday people. An analysis of Asma’s theory that the emotional burden that the threat of monsters evokes causes people to behave in irrational, perhaps even monstrous ways is beneficial to understanding why citizens and police in the film turn on each other and view Hans …show more content…
Philip Zimbardo defines evil as “intentionally behaving in ways that harm, abuse, demean, dehumanize, or destroy innocent others” (5). While Hans destroys innocent others, it is not intentional in that he does not have full control of himself, but rather is victim to mental illness and society’s unwillingness to acknowledge and treat people with his type of disorder. However, the criminals do have control over their actions. The fact that they continue to live the life of crime strengthens the claim that they are evil when applied to Zimbardo’s theory of evil because the criminals are “knowing better but doing worse” (5). Moreover, the criminals are evil and hypocritical in that the majority of them want to kill Hans without a trial, therefore making him innocent—judicially speaking. The rest of the criminals are willing to wait for a bogus trial before killing Hans. The irony is that Hans is tried by criminals who one would think are in no position to judge. Using Zimbardo's theory, the evil and merciless behavior of the criminals is caused by the acceptance and encouragement of such behavior amongst the larger group. In other words, the criminals view their behavior as acceptable because everybody else is doing …show more content…
Specifically, it displays human angst, and the devastating effects it can wreak upon a society. Fear and paranoia cause people to think irrationally and view others as the enemy. Due to this angst people subconsciously let their emotions negatively dictate their actions and responses to what would otherwise be harmless encounters. The effect this has is a divided society that essentially exists in chaos. This is seen in the film through boundaries being overstepped, as seen with the police. A divided society is also seen when neighbors are pitted against each other, as seen through the anonymous tips and distrust by the populace. As is typically the case with social discourse, there is a domino effect. In the film, the domino effect would be the killer causing general paranoia, which leads to amplified police activity, which in turn leads to disgruntled criminals. The final collapse is the descent into evil that criminals succumb to. They dehumanize and devalue the life of the killer. They hypocritically give him a fake trial that would have inevitably resulted in his death had it not been prolonged enough for the police to arrive. As is typical of human nature, the crowd of criminals did not recognize the evilness of their ways because they were removed from guilt due to the group setting. However, Hans is saved by his fake defense lawyer, who sees the wickedness of his peers as well as feels sympathy for Hans and his

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    "Orwellian" is a term used to describe a situation, idea, or societal condition that George Orwell identified as being destructive to the welfare of a free and open society. Through the comparative study of George Orwell’s prose fiction Novel “1984” and Fritz Lang’s German expressionist film “Metropolis” it is demonstrated that the reign of Totalitarian governments and technology has the power to over-run and remove civil liberties. These two composers similarly share the ethics for which society has the freedoms of individuality and free will. In context, Lang reflects the anxieties of the Weimar Republic of Germany, under the stresses following the First World War, highlighting the consequences of rapid industrialisation and the subsequent…

    • 999 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The startling question you have to ask yourself from reading Peter Fritzsche’s book Germans into Nazis, is what made the ordinary man in the crowd into the “Führer of the Third Reich”. In one of the most famous pictures in the European history you will see a young Adolf Hitler standing in the enormous crowd of people in the “August Days” celebration in Germany 1914. In this celebration you will see the everyday German anxiously waiting to hear the Kaiser speak. This is happened to take place a month after the outbreak of World War 1 in Europe. Fritzsche determines that this is the start of the Nazi Revolution in Germany.…

    • 822 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Richard Wright’s Story Native Son is based on the racial situations in the 1930’s. The novel is focused on the life of Bigger Thomas, a poor 20 year old Negro, living in poverty in the poor black area of Chicago south side. The setting emphasizes the effect that racism restricts blacks in value and opportunity. In response to which, Bigger commits multiple and progressively violent crimes including rape, murder, and a couple atrocities that seduced him with hint of freedom in return, up until the aftereffect restricted his freedom when his crimes are revealed and he is captured and put to the ultimate trial to determine his termination.. Initially, a crime provides sense of freedom, but eventually consequences torment the criminal.…

    • 1136 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Ordinary Men Analysis

    • 884 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The Argument for Ordinary Men and their “Obedience to Authority” While Christopher Browning’s text Ordinary Men may be brief in length, it is robust with narrative content, data, and emotion. Detailing the corrupted Reserve Police Battalion 101 of the German Order Police, Browning effectively launches an argument that the majority of these men were not innate mass murderers, but instead ordinary men. Browning successfully makes this argument by applying a great deal of focus to the men, as he establishes their backgrounds and analyzes their behavior. Furthermore, the psychological impact of a group setting is illustrated, as well as the effect of authority.…

    • 884 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The processes in which the Germans were involved in to overcome the tragedies of World War II were vast and long. There were many complications present when the war ended; Germans found themselves questioned politically and mentally by their own compatriots, as well as outsiders. This essay will argue that the film The Murders Are Among Us depicts the complications involved in the German process of “overcoming the past,” post-World War II, through its characters. In particular, this essay will cover the development and practice of this process by discussing the three main characters of this film, Dr. Mertens, Cpt. Bruckner, and Susanne.…

    • 1117 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Great Essays

    Philip Zimbardo’s TEDTalk “The Psychology of Evil” discusses the line that separates good from evil, and how any human, placed under the right circumstances, can be swayed to either side of that line. Zimbardo begins his talk by discussing the century old question “What makes people go wrong?”. While some people may argue that humans are born either intrinsically good or evil, Zimbardo refutes this claim stating how, as a young boy growing up in the Bronx, he personally witnessed many of his friends cross the line from good to evil. Zimbardo calls this phenomenon the “Lucifer Effect” after the biblical story of the fallen angel Lucifer, once God’s favorite angel who falls from grace to eventually become Satan, epitome of all evil. Zimbardo’s…

    • 1635 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    For my film project I chose, Natural Born Killers, (1994) the film stars Woody Harrelson and Juliette Lewis as the notorious couple Mickey and Mallory Knox. The film follows Knox’s on their cross-country murder spree that captivates the world as the media glorifies their crimes making them the most infamous serial killers since Manson. Natural Born Killers starts out in a small diner in the middle of the desert, Mickey is ordering pie and Mallory is dancing to a jukebox, a couple of locals enter and one starts flirting with Mallory causing her to kick the crap out of him. Its when his friend jumps in that Mickey springs into action killing him and everybody else in the restaurant along with them. After the gruesome killings the Knox’s embrace…

    • 1636 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Guilt and Sanity: A Comparison Ever notice how doing something questionable leaves a shadow of guilt around you? In the plots of a short story and a thriller movie, guilt and sanity are connected at the hip. In “The Tell Tale Heart,” a character murders an aged man and guilt eventually floods over him. In The Call, a man is guilt ridden by the death of his sister and goes to maximum lengths to try to mend his deadlock. “The Tale Tale Heart,” by Edgar Allen Poe and The Call, by director Brad Anderson both illustrate that guilt and the question of sanity are connected; this can be seen by looking at sequence of events, observing motives, and cataloging actions.…

    • 1163 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In “The Normal and the Pathological” article Dr. Emile Durkheim explains how crime is inevitable in all types of societies ranging from low class throughout high class “There is no society that is not confronted with the problem of criminality” (Durkheim, 1964). He goes on to explain how crimes in one society may not be crimes in another society because the acts that characterize crime are not the same everywhere. (Durkheim, 1964). There is some indication that crime decreases as we move from lower class to higher class but as Dr. Durkheim explains the movement of criminality is much larger. “From the beginning of the [nineteenth] century, statistics enable us to follow the course of criminality.…

    • 1500 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    This proves the character to be very cautious and attentive. One example in particular that stands out is when the narrator accidently wakes the old man, and says, “For a whole hour I did not move a muscle, and I did not hear him lay down. He was still sitting-up; listening” (Poe105). This quote proves the killer to be very attentive.…

    • 675 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The movie Inglorious Bastards by Quentin Tarantino begins with a Nazi officer investigating rumors about Jewish stowaways hiding on a small French farm. This intense scene provides the viewer with information regarding the background of the story if they understand film analysis, psychoanalytic and sociologic concepts. The camera work in this scene both foreshadows events and establishes power for our main antagonist of the film, Colonel Hans Landa. The unique way in which the scene is filmed allows us to read the character’s emotions on a much deeper level. Tarantino disguises a lot of valuable information from the viewer that can only be discovered through the use of media analysis.…

    • 1280 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In this theory, individuals are motivated to preserve social inequities and see their ingroup’s as dominant over other groups. These individuals are likely to show patterns of favoritism towards their ingroup, and could also derogate and dehumanize members of outgroups. Many examples of the Social Dominance theory are seen towards the treatment of Jews. One example in the film is while the Nazis are shooting and killing all the Jews in the ghetto. During this scene, dehumanization towards the Jews is displayed by the Nazis trapping Jews that are hiding and then shooting them.…

    • 1088 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Throughout history, the human race has struggled with whether it is essentially good or inherently evil. Even the greatest minds have had difficulty finding a definitive answer to this perplexing conundrum. Saint Augustine of Hippo, Hobbes, and Nietzsche all pondered this and were unable to come up with a simple answer. Fortunately, the debate that has lasted for millennia is coming to a halt. However, in order to successfully analyze the ways of humankind, a clear framework must be established.…

    • 1655 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Crime fiction television shows from different countries portray the contrasting values and cultural ideologies societies of differing nations possess. A nation’s context greatly influences the crime fiction programs that it creates; current events occurring within a country and the contemporary issues that they deal with all shape the shows they produce. The American drama “Breaking Bad”, England’s “Sherlock Holmes” as well as the Australian show “Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries”, all demonstrate the contrasting views and values distinctive nations have and how they highlight these attitudes through their distinctive style of crime fiction shows. Both “Breaking Bad” and “Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries” subvert the conventions of the crime fiction…

    • 1019 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In his play, Accidental Death of an Anarchist, Dario Fo, a playwright and left-wing activist, uses comic elements to narrate the story of the suspicious death of a railwayman and anarchist, Giuseppe Pinelli. Although the details of the case have been twisted by Fo, this farce is successful in provoking thought in the minds of the audience. Pinelli’s name is not present in the dialogues, but the prologue states that the play is a reconstruction of the case. As per the police report the anarchist commits suicide by jumping from a window on the fourth floor in a police station while under custody for interrogation under suspicion of planting a bomb. It is believed that the anarchist was thrown out of the window to hide a fascist conspiracy of…

    • 920 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays