Gold
Gold

Gold (1934)

7.5 ? Mar 29, 1934 2h 0m

Overview

Using an atomic reactor, two scientists try to create gold.

Genres

Crime Science Fiction

Release Date

March 29, 1934

Rating

7.5 /10

Runtime

2h 0m

Hans Albers

Hans Albers

Werner Holk

Brigitte Helm

Brigitte Helm

Florence Wills

Michael Bohnen

John Wills

Lien Deyers

Lien Deyers

Margit Möller

Friedrich Kayssler

Friedrich Kayssler

Prof. Achenbach

Ernst Karchow

Ernst Karchow

Willi Luders - alias Charlie Jenkins

Eberhard Leithoff

Eberhard Leithoff

Harris - a Technician

Rudolf Platte

Rudolf Platte

Schwarz

Walter Steinbeck

Walter Steinbeck

Braun

Heinz Wemper

Vesitsch

Hans-Joachim Büttner

Hans-Joachim Büttner

Becker - the Murderer

Erich Haußmann

Secretary

Willi Schur

Willi Schur

Heinz Salfner

Heinz Salfner

Rudolf Biebrach

Friedrich Ettel

Ernst Behmer

Ernst Behmer

Rainer Litten

Fita Benkhoff

Fita Benkhoff

Heinz Förster-Ludwig

CinemaSerf avatar

CinemaSerf

7.0/10

Jun 13, 2022

Hans Albers is really quite good in this rarely seen sci-fi story. His character "Dr. Holk" has been working on the principle of using huge amounts of electrical current to effect some startling alchemy - and he thinks he can turn lead into gold! His efforts attract the attention of British millionaire "John Mills" (Michael Bohnen) who agrees to build a magnificent underwater generator - where, low and behold, his technique of generating 7½ millions volts and zapping the lead does exactly that! Now, this is where the plot loses it's way a little... "Mills" decides to make loads and loads of gold, concluding that it would solve world poverty (rather than just reduce the value of gold to that of, well, lead...) but "Holk" goes ahead with the plans to up-scale production, though it is evident he has a plan of his own. Most English speakers will be used to folks with foreign characters speaking our tongue with an accent to indicate their origins; it is interesting here to see both "Mills" and his daughter - who has taken a bit of a shine to our scientist - "Florence" (Brigitte Helm) speaking fluent German throughout - indeed Bohnen delivers an almost Nazi-esque speech towards the end. Speaking of the ending, it's tense and the "Metropolis" (1927) style machinery comes to life to great effect. The scale of the sets gives the science a certain degree of plausibility and coupled with a strong effort from Albers makes this must see film if you like this genre.

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