Posted: Thu Feb 11, 2016 1:29 am
Their books were ordered burned. Their plays were condemned as Propaganda of subhuman Slavs and all their works were ordered to be destroyed and they were all put on death lists and arrest warrants were issued. They had seen Robo Maria, they had sent out thinly veiled mockery of the new Geopolotik. They were warning the children of Robo Maria. The Robot monster. I may get in trouble... but here is what the film is about.
The Rise of Robo Maria as seen by Lang. The destruction of the German workers children was fantastic! Never before in human history was there such evil madness!
Rotwang (along with Maria, his robot) appears as a member of The Twilight Heroes, a German analogue to*The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, in the*graphic novel*The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Black Dossier.
Rotwang also appears as part of the German forces attempting to create the*Red Baron, along with silent film characters*Doctor Mabuse,*Doctor Caligari*and*Count Orlok, in*Kim Newman's*alternate history*novel*The Bloody Red Baron.
Rotwang existed at some point in the*DC Universe, where his robot creation became the time traveling villainessMekanique. Mekanique claims to have traveled to the era of the*All-Star Squadron*to alter history for her master, and that she succeeded; whether this is true is unknown. Rotwang himself did not appear in the comic.
In the novel*Superman's Metropolis,*Lex Luthor*is cast in Rotwang's role.
In*Osamu Tezuka's*Metropolis*manga*and the later*anime*film based upon it, Rotwang is replaced by a character named Laughton (though their names are pronounced similarly in*Japanese).
In the Yugoslav comic book series*Borba, Rotwang is a recurring villain, and is portrayed as a*Nazi.
In*Before Tomorrowland, a prequel novel to*Tomorrowland, there is a villain named Werner Rotwang. Presented as the namesake of Fritz Lang's character, he is an unethical roboticist who defects from the Plus Ultra organization and joins the Nazis to further his research into achieving immortality through robotics.
In the first series of Hergès*Jo, Zette and Jocko*adventures: "The Secret Ray", an unnamed scientist unsuccessfully experiments with transferring a human soul into a robots body
The Rise of Robo Maria as seen by Lang. The destruction of the German workers children was fantastic! Never before in human history was there such evil madness!
Rotwang (along with Maria, his robot) appears as a member of The Twilight Heroes, a German analogue to*The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, in the*graphic novel*The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Black Dossier.
Rotwang also appears as part of the German forces attempting to create the*Red Baron, along with silent film characters*Doctor Mabuse,*Doctor Caligari*and*Count Orlok, in*Kim Newman's*alternate history*novel*The Bloody Red Baron.
Rotwang existed at some point in the*DC Universe, where his robot creation became the time traveling villainessMekanique. Mekanique claims to have traveled to the era of the*All-Star Squadron*to alter history for her master, and that she succeeded; whether this is true is unknown. Rotwang himself did not appear in the comic.
In the novel*Superman's Metropolis,*Lex Luthor*is cast in Rotwang's role.
In*Osamu Tezuka's*Metropolis*manga*and the later*anime*film based upon it, Rotwang is replaced by a character named Laughton (though their names are pronounced similarly in*Japanese).
In the Yugoslav comic book series*Borba, Rotwang is a recurring villain, and is portrayed as a*Nazi.
In*Before Tomorrowland, a prequel novel to*Tomorrowland, there is a villain named Werner Rotwang. Presented as the namesake of Fritz Lang's character, he is an unethical roboticist who defects from the Plus Ultra organization and joins the Nazis to further his research into achieving immortality through robotics.
In the first series of Hergès*Jo, Zette and Jocko*adventures: "The Secret Ray", an unnamed scientist unsuccessfully experiments with transferring a human soul into a robots body