Sunday, 16 August 2009
Manny Farber On The Leopard Man
Saturday, 15 August 2009
Manny Farber on Ugly Melodramas
Hollywood has spawned, since 1946, a series of ugly melodramas featuring a cruel aesthetic, desperate craftsmanship, and a pessimistic outlook. These films ("The Set-Up", "Act of Violence", "Asphalt Jungle", and “No Way Out") are revolutionary attempts at turning life inside out to find the specks of horrible oddity that make puzzling, faintly marred kaleidoscopes of a street, face, or gesture. Whatever the cause of these depressing films -- the television menace, the loss of twenty-four million customers since the mid-forties -- it has produced striking changes in film technique. Writers overpack dialogue with hackneyed bitterness, actors perfect a quietly neurotic style, while directors -- by flattening the screen, discarding framed and centered action, and looming the importance of actors -- have made the movie come out and hit the audience with an almost personal savagery. The few recent films unmarked by the new technique ("Born to be Bad") seem naive and obsolete.
The new scripts are tortured by the "big" statement. "All About Eve" (story of the bright lights, dim wits, and dark schemes of Broadway) hardly gets inside theater because the movie is coming out of somebody's mouth. The actors are burdened with impossible dialogue abounding in clichés: ''Wherever there’s magic and make-believe and an audience -- there's theater"; timely words: ''We are the original displaced personalities"; and forced cleverness that turns each stock character into the echo of an eclectic writer. The new trick is to build character and plot with loaded dialogue, using hep talk that has discolored cheap fiction for years. In "The Breaking Point" the environment is a "jungle", the hero a morose skipper ''with only guts to peddle" who decides after a near-fatal gun battle that ; "a man alone hasn't got a chance". His spouse comes, through with "You’re more ma n than anyone I ever knew".
Stories, parading success-seekers through a jackpot of frustration, are unique in that they pick on outcasts with relentless cruelty that decimates the actor as much as the character. As a colored interne moves through the "No Way Out" blizzard of anti-Negro curses, everything about him is aggressively spiked so that a malignant force seems to be hacking at him. When the cruel aestheticians really click on these sadistic epics, foreboding death lurks over every scene. Cameramen dismember the human body, accenting oddities like Darnell's toothpick legs, or Pat Neal's sprawling mouth to make them inanimate; faces are made up to suggest death masks, expanded to an unearthly size, spotlighted in dark, unknown vacuums; metaphorical direction twists a chimp's burial ("Sunset Boulevard") into an uncanny experience by finding a resemblance between monkey and owner. Under the guise of sympathy these brutally efficient artists are sneaky torturers of the defeated or deranged character.
Directors like Wilder and Mankiewicz mechanically recreate the unharnessed energy and surprise of great Silent films with an elegantly controlled use of the inexplicable. In the jitterbugging scene of "Asphalt Jungle" Huston delicately undresses the minds of four characters and gauchely creates a sensuous, writhing screen, though his notion of jive is so odiously surrealistic it recalls Russian propaganda against the United States. The first glimpse of the faded star in "Sunset", using Bonnard's suede touch on Charles Addams's portraiture (a witch surveying her real estate through shutters and dark spectacles) is lightning characterization with a poetic tang. Brando, in "The Men", commands a G.I. troop into battle like a slow, doped traffic coping cars through an intersection, but his affected pantomime electrifies the screen with the hallucinatory terror of an early painting by De Chirico. Movies have seldom if ever been as subtle as these scenes, or as depressing in the use of outrageous element to expedite ambiguous craftsmanship. To understand the motives behind the highly charged, dissonant acting employed today, one has to go back to the time wasting, passive performance of an early "talkie".
No matter how ingenious the actor -- Harlow, Garbo, Lee Tracy – effectiveness and depth were dissipated by the uninterrupted perusal of a character geared to a definite "type" and acted with mannerisms that were always so rhythmically and harmoniously related that the effect was of watching a highly attenuated ballet. Directors today have docked the old notion of unremittingly consistent, river-like performances, and present what amounts to a confusion of "bits", the actor seen only intermittently in garish touches that are highly charged with meaning and character, but not actually melted into one clear recognizable person. Darnell's honestly ugly characterization of a depressed slattern is fed piecemeal into ''No Way Out", which moves her toward and away from malevolence, confuses her "color", and even confounds her body. Her job -- like the recent ones of Nancy Olson, John McIntyre, Hayden -- shouldn't be called a “performance” because it is more like a collage of personality, which varies drastically in every way to create the greatest explosion and "illumination" in each moment.
Thursday, 13 August 2009
My Favorite Films of the 1930s
A Spanish magazine “Miradas de Cine” has conducted a poll and asked Spanish and a few abroad critics to select their 15 favorite films from the glorious 1930s and also to pick five that supposed to be overrated films. I have nothing to do with the latter part because I don’t believe if overrating of the classic films, when the creatures of them are all gone, will do any harm to us. As long as overrating is concerned, the predictable record breaker of the poll in Gone with the wind. But in my view, if we are really looking for overblown titles we must take a look around ourselves and revise some internationally accepted names and films in contemporary cinema.
Selecting top films of the 1930s is an irresistible poll to participate in. For me, one of the most essential periods in history of motion pictures is thirties and those early efforts to make something decent and artistic out of the new technical inventions like sound and later, color, while economical depression and fascism were the most serious issues of the time and maybe the whole century.
My real mentor in thirties cinema of the United States is Mr. Andrew Sarris. Writings of this wise man have been my companion in the worst and hardest days of my life and I owe him much for unveiling so many names of that era to me. So I’m going to pick my top 15 films of decade (sticking to the rules of Miradas de Cine!), but meanwhile I’m going to add another 50 titles to my selection! I must admit that my knowledge of 1930s cinema in Spanish language countries, far eastern cinema and also Italy is very limited.
You can see the complete lists in “Miradas de Cine” site, but if you are only looking for critics who are well-known outside Spain, these are the names and their picks:
Nicole Brenez (Paris) - À Propos de Nice (Vigo) • Lot in Sodom (Watson & Webber) • Lichtspiel Schwarz-Weiss-Grau (Moholy-Nagy) • L’âge d’or (Buñuel) • Le fleuve Sumida (Amaya) • Limite (Peixoto) • Taris ou la natation (Vigo) • Les Berceaux (Kirsanoff) • Que viva Mexico (Eisenstein) • L’Or des mers (Epstein) • Vampyr - Der Traum des Allan Grey (Dreyer) • Le Bonheur (Medvedkine) • Rapt (Kirsanoff) • Rainbow Dance (Lye) • Early Abstractions (Smith)
Sergi Fabregat - City Lights (Chaplin) • L’Atalante (Vigo) • Vampyr - Der Traum des Allan Grey (Dreyer) • Modern Times (Chaplin) • M (Lang) • The Roaring Twenties (Walsh) • Das Testament des Dr. Mabuse (Lang) • Aleksandr Nevskiy (Eisenstein) • A Night at the Opera (Wood) • La grande illusion (Renoir) • Bride of Frankenstein (Whale) • Freaks (Browning) • Duck Soup (McCarey) • Otona no miru ehon – Umarete wa mita keredo (Ozu) • White Zombie (Halperin)
Floreal Peleato (Paris) - Zemlya (Dovzhenko) • Ze soboty na nedeli (Machatý) • Tabu: A Story of the South Seas (Murnau) • City Lights (Chaplin) • La chienne (Renoir) • Liebelei (Ophüls) • Das testament des Dr. Mabuse (Lang) • Only Yesterday (Stahl) • L’Atalante (Vigo) • U samogo sinyego morya (Barnet) • Make Way for Tomorrow (McCarey) • La grande illusion (Renoir) • Only Angels Have Wings (Hawks) • Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (Capra) • Remorques (Grémillon) • Zangiku monogatari (Mizoguchi)
Jonathan Rosenbaum (Chicago) - Laughter (d’Arrast) • City Lights (Chaplin) • M (Lang) • La nuit du carrefour (Renoir) • Ivan (Dovzhenko) • Otona no miru ehon - Umarete wa mita keredo (Ozu) • Love Me Tonight (Mamoulian) • Scarface (Hawks) • Trouble in Paradise (Lubitsch) • Hallelujah, I’m a Bum (Milestone) • L’Atalante (Vigo) • Judge Priest (Ford) • King Kong (Cooper & Schoedsack) • Make Way for Tomorrow (McCarey) • Zangiku monogatari (Mizoguchi)
Chris Fujiwara (United States) - La règle du jeu (Renoir) • Young Mr. Lincoln (Ford) • Only Angels Have Wings (Hawks) • Zemlya (Dovzhenko) • L’Atalante (Vigo) • You Only Live Once (Lang) • Naniwa erejî (Mizoguchi) • Stage Door (La Cava) • Tabu: A Story of the South Seas (Murnau) • Tsuma yo bara no yo ni (Naruse) • City Lights (Chaplin) • Les perles de la couronne (Guitry) • Otona no miru ehon – Umarete wa mita keredo (Ozu) • Me and My Gal (Walsh) • Design for Living (Lubitsch)
And here is my list of 15 (+50) films of the 1930s, dedicated to Andrew Sarris:
And the next 50, without any specific order:
À nous la liberté | 1931 | Rene Clair | |
Bete humaine,La | 1938 | Jean Renoir | |
Grand Illusion | 1937 | Jean Renoir | |
Boudu Saved from Drowning | 1932 | Jean Renoir | |
Dead End | 1937 | William Wyler | |
Holiday | 1938 | George Cukor | |
Informer | 1935 | John Ford | |
Propose de Nice, A | 1930 | Jean Vigo | |
| 1938 | Marcel Carne | |
Young Mr.Lincoln | 1939 | John Ford | |
Zéro de conduite | 1933 | Jean Vigo | |
Alice Adams | 1935 | George Stevens | |
All quiet on the western front | 1930 | Lewis Milestone | |
I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang | 1932 | Mervyn LeRoy | |
Judge Priest | 1934 | John Ford | |
Little Caesar | 1930 | Mervyn LeRoy | |
Night At The Opera, A | 1935 | Sam Wood | |
Road to Glory | 1936 | Howard Hawks | |
Scarlet Empress | 1934 | Joseph Von Sternberg | |
Vampyr | 1932 | Carl Th. Dreyer | |
Whole Towns Talking | 1935 | John Ford | |
Das Testament des Dr. Mabuse | 1933 | Fritz Lang | |
39 Steps | 1935 | Alfred Hitchcock | |
42nd Street | 1933 | Lloyd Bacon | |
Blonde Venus | 1932 | Josef Von Sternberg | |
Blood of a Poet | 1930 | Jean Cocteau | |
Bringing up baby | 1938 | Howard Hawks | |
Day At The Races,A | 1937 | Sam Wood | |
| 1933 | George Cukor | |
Dishonored | 1931 | Josef von Sternberg | |
Gay Divorcee | 1934 | Mark Sandrich | |
Invisible Man,The | 1933 | James Whale | |
King Kong | 1933 | Ernest B.Schoedsack & M.Cooper | |
L'Age D'or | 1930 | Luis Bunuel | |
Modern Times | 1936 | Charlie Chaplin | |
Mr. Deeds goes to town | 1936 | Frank Capra | |
Mr. Smith goes to Washington | 1939 | Frank Capra | |
Ninotchka | 1939 | Ernst Lubitsch | |
Top Hat | 1935 | Mark Sandrich | |
Twentieth century | 1934 | Howard Hawks | |
Under the roofs of Paris | 1930 | Rene Clair | |
Alexander Nevsky | 1938 | Sergei Eisenstein | |
Black Cat | 1934 | Edgar G. Ulmer | |
Frankenstein | 1931 | James Whale | |
Design for living | 1933 | Ernst Lubitsch | |
Devil Is a Woman | 1935 | Josef Von Sternberg | |
Duck Soup | 1933 | Leo McCarey | |
Fury | 1936 | Fritz Lang | |
It happened one night | 1934 | Frank Capra | |
Lady Vanishes | 1938 | Alfred Hitchcock | |
Peter Ibbetson | 1935 | Henry Hathaway | |
Petrified Forest, The | 1936 | Archie Mayo | |
Public Enemy | 1931 | William Wellman | |
Ruggles of Red Gap | 1935 | Leo McCarey | |
Plainsman | 1936 | Cecil B.DeMille | |
Tabu | 1931 | F.W.Murnau | |
Triumph Of The Will | 1935 | Leni Riefentahl | |
Women | 1939 | George Cukor | |
You can't take it with you | 1938 | Frank Capra | |
You Only Live Once | 1937 | Fritz Lang |
Thanks to Jonathan Rosenbaum for notifying me about the event.
My Favorite Films of the 1930s (in Farsi)
مجلۀ اسپانيايي Miradas de Cine از منتقدان اسپانيايي زبان و چند منتقد مشهور در اروپا و آمريكا خواسته تا 15 فيلم مورد علاقه شان از دهۀ 1930 را انتخاب كنند و در انتها نام پنج فيلم را بياورند كه به نظرشان دربارۀ اهميت و بزرگي اين فيلم ها بيش از حد اغراق شده باشد. در بخش دوم (كه چندان مورد علاقۀ من نيست) منتقدان اندكي شركت كرده اند، شايد آن ها هم فكر مي كرده اند به هر حال حتي زياد نوشتن و گفتن دربارۀ فيلم هاي قديمي خيرش بيشتر از ضررش است. هر چه باشد سازندگان اين فيلم ها از دنيا رفته اند و مانند آدم هاي بيراهي چون كوئنتين تارانتينو براي اعتبارهاي من درآوردي دندان تيز نكرده اند. در اين قسمت – يعني بزرگ شده هاي بيش از حد – بربادرفته در صدر نشسته است.
اين رأي گيري مرا ترغيب كرد تا من هم فيلم هاي برگزيده ام از دهۀ 1930 را انتخاب كنم، با اين تفاوت كه علاوه بر 15 فيلم برگزيده، از 50 فيلم ديگر هم نام ببرم كه هيچ فهرستي بي آنها كامل نيست. 15 تاي اول را با عنوان هاي رايج فارسي در اين جا مي آورم، براي پنجاه تاي بعد به فهرست انگليسي در بالا رجوع كنيد.
فيلم هاي برگزيدۀ من از دهۀ 1930
روشنايي هاي شهر (چارلز چاپلين،1931)
آتالانت (ژان ويگو، 1934)
ام (فريتس لانگ، 1931)
قاعدۀ بازي (ژان رنوار، 1939)
فقط فرشته ها بال دارند (هوارد هاكس، 1939)
پيشخدمت من گادفري (گرگوري لاكاوا، 1936)
دليجان (جان فورد، 1939)
سال هاي خروشان 1920 (رائول والش، 1939)
كشتي بخار در خم رودخانه (جان فورد، 1935)
گردشي در ييلاق (ژان رنوار، 1936)
صورت زخمي (هوارد هاكس، 1932)
جنايت آقاي لانژ (ژان رنوار، 1936)
گشت سپيده دم (ادموند گولدينگ، 1938)
دستري دوباره مي تازد (جورج مارشال، 1939)
پپه لوموكو (ژولين دوويويه، 1937)