Die Nibelungen - Kriemhilds Rache (1924)





After Siegfried's death Kriemhild marries Etzel (Atilla), the King of the Huns. She gives birth to a child, and invites her brothers for a feast. She tries to persuade Etzel and the other Huns, to kill Hagen, the murderer of Siegfried, but he is protected by her brothers. A fierce battle begins to force her brothers to give Hagen to her.


Books on Die Nibelungen - Kriemhilds Rache


Die Nibelungen
Berlin, 1992

Books with substantial mentioning of Die Nibelungen - Kriemhilds Rache

Hans Helmut Prinzler
Licht und Schatten, Die grossen Stumm- und Tonfilme der Weimarer Republik
München; Berlin, 2012

David Thomson
Have you seen?, A personal introduction to 1,000 films
New York, 2008

Tom Pendergast, Sara Pendergast (eds.)
International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers, 1. Films
Detroit/New York/San Francisco/London/Boston/Woodbridge, CT, 2000

Tom Gunning
The films of Fritz Lang, Allegories of vision and modernity
London, 2000

Robert K. Klepper
Silent Films, 1877-1996, A Critical Guide to 646 Movies
Jefferson, North Carolina and London, 1999

Jean-Pierre Frimbois
Les 100 chefs-d'oeuvre du film historique
Alleur (Belgique), 1989

Günther Dahlke
Deutsche Spielfilme von dem Anfängen bis 1933, Ein Filmführer
Berlin, 1988

Books with an entry on Die Nibelungen - Kriemhilds Rache

Robert B. Connelly
The Motion Picture Guide, Silent Film 1910-1936
Chicago, 1986

Articles on Die Nibelungen - Kriemhilds Rache

Anne Waldschmidt, Sendboten deutschen Wesens, Fritz Lang, Thea von Harbou und "Die Nibelungen", in: Hans-Michael Bock und Michael Töteberg (Hg.), Das Ufa-Buch, Frankfurt am Main, 1992

Michael Esser, Zombies im Zauberwald, "Die Nibelungen" von Fritz Lang, in: Hans-Michael Bock und Michael Töteberg (Hg.), Das Ufa-Buch, Frankfurt am Main, 1992

Jörg Gerle, Ein wahrer Schatz, Fritz Langs "Die Nibelungen" in neuem Glanz, in: Filmdienst, nr. 11 (27. Mai), 2010 pp. 16-17