The actors are not dubbed, and the subtitles are played separately. The background music has never stopped, and it will echo with the progress of the storyline, the reactions of the actors, and the actions. The music is great and it really sets off the atmosphere of the story. At the end of the movie, I found that it was added later in the 1990s. There are some unseen objects in the movie, and in that era, clerks were sitting on high stools like bars, which felt incredible. Cesare's makeup is scary, kind of like a clown, with long, straight legs, and wearing leggings makes me feel like a ballet dancer. The male protagonist's face is good, but it's terrifyingly white in this old movie. Dr. Caligari's eyes really had been "staring like bells." He's the most mentally ill one, okay? The set-up in the movie is weird, especially the patterns on the walls and floors, the doors are weird, like they exist in a twisted dream. The ending of the film is intriguing. In the bizarre world constructed by the film, it is difficult for even a bystander to distinguish who is a doctor and who is a patient, which is a dream and which is a reality.
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