Everyman

Everyman

56 mins | Sept. 9, 1915

In 1911 the German poet Hugo von Hofmansthal wrote a new version of the medieval morality play Everyman, and this was staged in Danish translation at the Royal Theatre in Copenhagen in 1915. At the time, it was radical example of symbolist abstraction. Its success inspired a film version, Enhver [Everyman], directed by Vilhelm Glückstadt for Filmfabrikken Danmark. The film, however, was set in a modern-day environment. It depict the moral choice confronting its protagonist at struggle because two attendant spirits, one good and one bad. The protagonist is tempted by dark figure of evil and succumbs, rejecting God and leading a life of iniquity, but he is then haunted by guilty visions until he finally dies, asking God for forgiveness at the last moment.

Everyman

56 mins | Sept. 9, 1915

Everyman
In 1911 the German poet Hugo von Hofmansthal wrote a new version of the medieval morality play Everyman, and this was staged in Danish translation at the Royal Theatre in Copenhagen in 1915. At the time, it was radical example of symbolist abstraction. Its success inspired a film version, Enhver [Everyman], directed by Vilhelm Glückstadt for Filmfabrikken Danmark. The film, however, was set in a modern-day environment. It depict the moral choice confronting its protagonist at struggle because two attendant spirits, one good and one bad. The protagonist is tempted by dark figure of evil and succumbs, rejecting God and leading a life of iniquity, but he is then haunted by guilty visions until he finally dies, asking God for forgiveness at the last moment.
Producers
Original title Enhver
Directors Vilhelm Glückstadt
Writers Hugo von Hofmannsthal

Cast

Peter S. Andersen

as The Evil Spirit

Gudrun Houlberg

as Sylvia

Lilly Jansen

as The Good Angel

Peter Malberg

as Kurt

Valdemar Møller

as Vicar

Jonna Neiiendam

as Enhver's Mother

Rasmus Ottesen

as Enhver

Else Schiwe

as Martha

Alfred Sjøholm

as Actor