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The Serpent’s Egg 1977

Set in Berlin in 1923, the film follows American circus acrobat Abel Rosenberg as he grapples with his brother’s suicide. Amid the Weimar Republic’s social decay, he confronts unemployment, depression, alcoholism and a mounting terror that feels unmistakably Bergman‑like.

Set in Berlin in 1923, the film follows American circus acrobat Abel Rosenberg as he grapples with his brother’s suicide. Amid the Weimar Republic’s social decay, he confronts unemployment, depression, alcoholism and a mounting terror that feels unmistakably Bergman‑like.

Does The Serpent’s Egg have end credit scenes?

No!

The Serpent’s Egg does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.

Take the Ultimate The Serpent’s Egg Movie Quiz

Challenge your knowledge of The Serpent’s Egg with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.


The Serpent’s Egg Quiz: Test your knowledge of the 1977 film *The Serpent’s Egg* with these ten mixed‑difficulty questions.

In which German city does the story primarily take place?

Full Plot Summary and Ending Explained for The Serpent’s Egg

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Read the complete plot summary of The Serpent’s Egg, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.


In late 1923 Berlin, Abel Rosenberg, David Carradine, an unemployed alcoholic and former trapeze artist, struggles to cope with the grinding hardships of post-war Germany. After learning of his brother Max’s suicide, he is offered money by his old circus boss to return to the act, but he declines, convinced he won’t measure up without Max. He then meets Max’s wife, Manuela Rosenberg Liv Ullmann, to break the news, though he cannot provide a clear explanation beyond a fragment from Max’s note mentioning “poisoning.”

Seeking solace in drink, Abel spends a night at Manuela’s house. When she leaves for work, he steals from her to buy more alcohol. Shortly thereafter, police bring him to identify several bodies found near his home, and suspicion quickly falls on him. He attempts to escape but is recaptured.

Manuela visits Abel in the hospital, revealing that all her money is gone. Abel is released for lack of evidence and returns home, only to face eviction because they are not married. Manuela confesses that she is a prostitute, having crafted an ordinary office job to hide her shame.

As November unfolds with armed confrontations between extremist parties looming, Abel and Manuela live on the outskirts of Berlin, constantly fearing for their safety. One morning, Abel secretly follows Manuela and discovers she has been going to church. She confides in a priest, James Whitmore, expressing guilt over her husband’s death and the fear consuming their lives.

Abel learns that Manuela secured their apartment by providing sexual favors to the brothel’s owner. Initially repulsed, he later returns to her, and they share a passionate kiss. Their fragile closeness is shattered when soldiers overrun the brothel and kill the owner.

Abel finds a job as a file clerk in a hospital, while Manuela works at the clinic. They live in an apartment surrounded by abandoned buildings.

One night, Abel discovers files detailing inhumane experiments conducted on patients at the hospital. Overwhelmed by fear, he withdraws from intimacy, and Manuela experiences extreme mood swings. After a drunken episode and a later encounter with a prostitute, Abel returns home to find Manuela dead and cameras scattered in the apartment.

Fleeing the scene, Abel ends up in an abandoned industrial building and fights off an unknown attacker in an elevator, decapitating him. Returning to the hospital, he confronts the doctor about the experiments. The doctor claims the subjects were volunteers driven by desperation and shows footage of Max injecting himself with a serum that ultimately led to his suicide. The doctor justifies the experiments as a step toward benefiting mankind, and then commits suicide with cyanide as the police arrive.

Abel is placed in a psychiatric ward to recover. The chief of police informs him that the circus has offered his old job, and he is forced to accept. He escapes from police custody on the way to the train station, and a voice-over suggests that he evades capture and is never seen again.

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The Serpent’s Egg Themes and Keywords

Discover the central themes, ideas, and keywords that define the movie’s story, tone, and message. Analyze the film’s deeper meanings, genre influences, and recurring concepts.


female topless nuditysexmasturbationfemale nudityfemale frontal nuditynuditywatching through a mirrorantisemitismdepressionreference to vladimir leninreference to the russian revolutionbolshevismweimar republicrise of fascismreference to adolf hitlerpovertypolitical strugglereference to genghis khanamericanbackstage dramachildparanoiaband the musical groupdepravitybrothelgrand guignolyear 1923clinicsuicideserpentgermanycircuscabaretalcoholicunsubtitled foreign languagevoice over narrationviolencevaudevillevandalismvaginaunemploymentunderwearumbrellatrolleytrapeze artistthrowing a stone through a windowthirty somethingtheater productiontheater audiencetent
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