Anonymous ID: 2d58c5 Aug. 19, 2023, 4:23 a.m. No.19387047   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19386485

Director Fritz Lang shot the scene so many times that an exhausted Helm asked him why she should play the role, when no one would possibly know she was inside the costume. Lang answered, "I'd know." Helm's son believes that Lang was trying to teach the 17-year-old girl some discipline and mold her in his image, almost like the characters she played.

Anonymous ID: 2d58c5 Aug. 19, 2023, 4:25 a.m. No.19387052   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Golem:_How_He_Came_into_the_World

 

Loew's assistant rushes to the synagogue to alert the praying Jews of the disaster, but upon their arrival at Loew's house, they find that it is burning, and both the Golem and Miriam are missing. Despaired, the community begs Loew to save them from the rampaging Golem. Loew performs a spell that removes Astaroth from the Golem. Promptly, the Golem, who is wandering the ghetto causing destruction, leaves Miriam (whom he has been dragging by the hair through the streets) lying on a stone surface and heads towards the ghetto gate. He breaks the gate open and sees a group of little girls playing. They all flee except for one, whom he picks up, having now a docile nature. Out of curiosity, she removes the amulet from the Golem; it drops her and collapses, unconscious.

Anonymous ID: 2d58c5 Aug. 19, 2023, 4:29 a.m. No.19387059   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Astaroth was ultimately derived from that of 2nd millennium BC Phoenician goddess Astarte, an equivalent of the Babylonian Ishtar, and the earlier Sumerian Inanna.