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WSWS
: Arts Review
: Film
Festivals
Sydney Film Festival
"The pleasure of seeing should be the moving force"
A selection of Max Ophuls films
By Richard Phillips
15 August 2000
Use
this version to print
One of the highlights of the Sydney Film Festival was the screening
of five classic films La Signora di Tutti (1934),
The Reckless Moment (1949), Le Plaisir (1951), Madame
de... (1953) and Lola Montès (1955)by
German born director Max Ophuls, one of the more significant European
filmmakers of his era.
While Ophuls is regarded as a great artist and widely studied
today, some contemporaneous critics claimed that his elegant films,
which mainly centred on the lives and loves of aristocratic or
bourgeois figures from turn-of-the-century Europe, were unserious
and escapist. Others argued that Ophuls was simply preoccupied
with elaborate stage settings and complex camera movements to
the exclusion of inner content.
Such assessments miss the underlying social critique in all
Ophuls' work, that the wealthy and privileged characters in his
films are trapped in societies that stifle the human spirit and
make it impossible to attain true love and fulfillment.
These critics also miss the inherent lyrical power of his imagery.
In fact, Ophuls' audacious cinematography, with 360-degree panning
shots, long tracks and intricate crane work up and down staircases
and around lavish ballrooms filled with scores of extrasall
before the era of steadi-cams and digital image-makinggive
his films tremendous intimacy and beauty.
For Ophuls the image, or as he often described it, the pleasure
of seeing was everything. He once said that he would not
begin a film until its story, as a succession of images,
created an almost physical desire to bring this sequence
of images onto the screen. It is this acute sense of cinema
as visual poetry that constitutes the genius of Ophuls' work.
Max Ophuls was born Max Oppenheimer in Saarbrucken in 1902,
to a respectable bourgeois German-Jewish family of textile merchants
and, contrary to his family's wishes, took up stage acting in
1919. In 1923, in the politically charged atmosphere of the Weimar
Republic, the talented young man began directing plays and within
two years had produced more than 200 theatrical works. Three years
later he was appointed the creative director of Vienna's Burgtheater,
the youngest director in the theatre's history, before returning
to Germany where he wrote radio plays and staged avant-garde theatre
and classics by Shakespeare, Molière and Schiller.
In 1929, with the emergence of talkies, Ophuls became an assistant
translator to film director Anatole Litavak and in 1930 directed
his first film, Dans schon liever Levertran ( Rather
Cod Liver Oil). He followed this with Die Verleiebte Firma
(1931) and in 1932 directed Die Verkaufte Braut ( The
Bartered Bride), Lachende Erben and Liebelei.
The latter work was an antimilitaristic film adapted from a play
set in late 19th century Vienna by Arthur Schnitzler.
Alarmed by the rise of Hitler's Nazis, Ophuls and his family
left Germany and settled in France the day after the Reichstag
fire in 1933. Up until the outbreak of World War II he directed
films in France, Italy and Holland and in 1936 was invited to
the Soviet Union, where he was offered a two-year filmmaking contract.
Ophuls declined the offer and returned to France where he resumed
filmmaking and made a number of anti-Nazi radio broadcasts.
When the Nazis took over France in 1940, Ophuls relocated with
his wife and son to Hollywood. But he was not immediately accepted
in America's film capital. In fact, the talented director was
unemployed for six years before Preston Sturges, a long time admirer,
intervened on his behalf. Ophuls was hired briefly to work on
Vendetta in 1946 for Howard Hughes' production company,
and then went on to direct The Exile, A Letter from
an Unknown Woman, Caught and The Reckless Moment,
the last two films starring James Mason.
An admirer of the studio system, or at least the ready supply
of highly skilled technicians, Ophuls, however, was deeply distrustful
of the commercial pressures dominating the industry.
[T]he public scarcely exists any more, he said
in an interview some years later. They're a mass of consumers,
that's all... In America, you start at 12-years-old, you watch
films then till you're 20 and that is how you become a consumer.
Consumers watch films the way they stick a cigarette in their
mouths; they're no longer aware that they are smoking, they keep
it in while they talk... They are no longer individuals ready
to receive, they're just people who come and consume, and destroy
what they have just consumed. How quickly it happens! Between
their seats and the exit they've discussed the whole thing. It's
quite finished. They never refer to it again. As a result of this
continuous mass production of dramas, with people to consume them
who see six or eight such works every month, it's impossible to
appreciate a really dynamic' film.
In 1950 Ophuls returned to France to work on a film version
of La Duchesse de Langeais by Honoré de Balzac,
one of his favourite writers. While the production never went
ahead due to lack of funds, Ophuls decided to remain in Paris
and over the next five years produced some of his best work
La Ronde, Le Plaisir, Madame de... and Lola
Montès.
Some regard Lola Montès, produced in France in
1954, as Ophuls' greatest film, although my choice would be Madame
de. Shot in colour and the new Cinemascope format Lola
Montès, the story of a humble Irish girl who became
one of Europe's most celebrated courtesans, was Ophuls' most lavish
and expensive productions. His producers, however, failed to anticipate
or appreciate the complex and at times surrealist style and cut
30 minutes from the 140-minute film. Lola Montès,
which was a commercial failure, was also reedited to reduce the
circus scenes and change the flashback order.
Ophuls, who opposed the changes, never made another film and
was still fighting the producers over the cuts before his premature
death at the age of 54. Before he died, Ophuls returned to Germany
where he wrote plays, directed adaptations of classic theatre
for radio, lectured and published critical reviews. He collapsed
and was hospitalised after a heart attack hours before the premiere
of his stage production of Beaumarchais' Marriage of Figaro
in Hamburg. He died in hospital three months later on March 26,
1957.
European and Hollywood films
La Signora di Tutti (Everybody's Lady), the only
film screened at the festival from his pre-World War II period,
is an interesting early work about the tragic quest for love by
Gaby Doriot (Isa Miranda), a glamorous movie star. Doriot's story
is told through a series of complex flashbacks from her hospital
bed, following an attempted suicide.
Doriot first discovers her hypnotic attraction to men as a
teenager, and while she begins to understand that her beauty can
open many doors, her restless search for affection is an attempt
to replace the love she never received as a child. All the men
smitten by Doriot are emotionally scarred and never recover. La
Signora contains some extraordinary moments, its themes and
techniquestragic love affairs, lengthy flashback sequences
and graceful camera tracking shotslater trademarks of Ophuls'
cinema.
Ophuls completed four films during his American residency.
Unfortunately only one, The Reckless Moment, his last Hollywood
production, was screened at the festival. Set in southern California,
The Reckless Moment is a dark melodramatic thriller, adapted
from a Ladies Home Journal short story, and a wry comment
on middle-class life in post-World War II America.
The film centres on Mrs Lucia Harper (Joan Bennett), a happily
married woman with all the trappings of comfortable upper middle
class life. Harper, whose husband is overseas, has discovered
that Bea, her 17-year-old daughter, has struck up a relationship
with an unsavoury art dealer in Los Angeles. Lucia travels to
the city to warn off the dealer from her daughter. The art dealer
says he will only end the relationship if Lucia pays him. She
refuses and later that night he visits the daughter at the family's
lavish beachfront home. Bea, who has been told about the art dealer's
demand for money, accidentally kills him outside the house after
they quarrel. Lucia Harper, when told about the accident by her
daughter decides to dump the body. But this attempt to protect
her daughter comes unstuck when the police find the corpse and
Donnelly (James Mason), a standover man, arrives at the house
with Bea's love letters to the art dealer. He threatens to tell
the press unless Lucia gives him $5,000.
Lucia cannot get this kind of cash without notifying her husband
and tries stalling Donnelly. Meanwhile Donnelly, who is under
pressure from Nagle (another gangster) to collect the money, becomes
obsessed with Lucia and decides to help her. Donnelly kills Nagle
when he arrives at the family home but is fatally injured in a
car accident after he tries to dispose of the body. The dying
Donnelly tells Lucia she will be safe: he will confess
to killing Nagle and the art dealer.
The film's remarkable final scene has Lucia taking an overseas
phone call from her husband pleasantly discussing the niceties
of the forthcoming Christmas season. As family members gather
round the phone, life appears to continue as before, the murders
unknown to Lucia's husband, friends and neighbours. Excellent
cinematography contrasting the low-life existence of the Los Angeles
gangsters and the spotless interiors of the family home, gives
the film a shadowy, threatening quality.
Post-war French films
Le Plaisir (House of Pleasure), made in France
in 1951, consists of three short stories written by Guy de Maupassant.
The first, Le Masque, is set in 1890s Paris and is
about an old man who disguises himself in order to dance with
young girls at the Palais de la Danse. The film, which begins
in the spectacular dance hall, concludes in the dark and oppressive
poverty of a Parisian tenement. The second, La Maison Telier,
which also opens with astonishing camera work, is a delightful
story about a group of prostitutes who visit the country to attend
one of their young relatives' first communion at a village church.
The brothel's patronslocal politicians and businessmenare
distressed over the one-day closure; the prostitutes are deeply
moved by the church service; and the young girl's father is transfixed
by one of the whores. While life resumes its normal routine when
the prostitutes return to the town, all feel a sense of melancholy
for the love they cannot attain.
The last of the Le Plaisir trilogy, The Model,
deals with a tempestuous affair between an artist and his model
and explores the fragility of love and beauty. The painter, who
falls passionately in love with his model, eventually grows tired
of the beautiful young woman and tries to end the relationship.
When he dares the distressed girl to commit suicide, she leaps
out of his upper-storey window and is permanently crippled. She
then forces the guilt-stricken painter to marry and care for her.
As the narrator sardonically comments in a voiceover at the end
of the film, Love is gay, love is sad.
Ophuls next film, Madame de..., is another tragic love
story, this time about a countess unhappily married to a cold
and rigid military general (Charles Boyer). The complex, almost
circular story centres on a pair of valuable earrings given to
Madame de (Danielle Darrieux). The countess, like all the film's
protagonists, leads a double life and decides to sell the earrings
to pay a personal debt. Madame de pretends she has lost them but
the jeweller sells them back to her husband, who says nothing
and gives them to his mistress. She sells them to a jeweller in
Turkey where a handsome diplomat (Vittorio de Sica) buys them.
He returns to Paris, falls in love with Madame de and gives her
the earrings, inadvertently revealing their love affair to her
husband. The general challenges the diplomat to a duel and kills
him, thus depriving the countess of the only thing she ever loved.
As possession of the earrings changes, in total 19 times throughout
the film, each transfer heightens the jewellery's symbolic significance
and the emptiness of the characters' opulent lives. The earrings
become a harbinger of tragedy and a mirage-like promise of true
love and fulfillment.
Like most of Ophuls' work the dialogue is deceptively simple,
sometimes almost bland, but as the film evolves the director creates
an absorbing and ironic portrait of people trapped in a heartless
society, their tremendous wealth, mannered behaviour and superficial
pleasures only substitutes for real happiness.
To superficial observers Ophuls' films appear as rather frivolous
and insubstantial romances about wealthy, but rather stupid people.
As one particularly crass Ophuls detractor, Roy Armes, a film
historian, wrote: For those whose concern is purely visual
and whose ideal is an abstract symphony of images, Ophuls has
the status of one of the very great directors. For spectators
and critics who demand in addition to the images the sort of human
insight and moral depth that a play or a novel can give, he is
merely a minor master, a maker of exquisite but rather empty films.
But to dismiss Ophuls' symphony of images ignores
the essential dynamic and poetry of cinema, a relatively new artistic
medium in the 1940s and 50s. Perhaps the best response to this
somewhat shallow approach is by Max Ophuls himself:
The masters of our profession... transcend both dramatic
structure and dialogue, and create a new kind of tension which,
I believe, has never existed before in any of the other forms
of dramatic expression; the tension of pictorial atmosphere and
of shifting images. They have the same impetus and produce the
same beauty and excitement that can be found in the pure procession
of words in the classical theatre, where logic is thrown overboard,
over the footlights, so that it is the sound and rhythm of the
words alone which inspire and maintain the spectators' belief
in the action. Just as in the theatre the lighting, the set, faithfulness
to nature and other incidentals must play a subordinate role to
the word, so in films the words, the technology and the technique
and the logic of the visible must be secondary to the image, subordinate
to the vision containing the untold wonders within it, which,
in the cinema can be the bearer of artistic truth.
[ The Pleasure of Seeing: Thoughts on the Subject Matter
of Film (1954)]
Ophuls possessed remarkable talents and aesthetic insights.
For those prepared to immerse themselves in his work, there are
many rewards.
See Also:
French filmmaker Robert Bresson
(1901-1999)
"When one is in prison, the most important thing is the
door"
[20 January 2000]
Reviews
from the 2000 Sydney Film Festival
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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