Posted in FILM with tags on May 13, 2024 by dcairns

The Sunday Intertitle: Nice Day for an Auto-da-fe

Posted in FILM with tags , , , , , , , , , , , on May 12, 2024 by dcairns

I feel like the words “take part” (parties) are doing a lot of work here.

The film is CONTE CRUEL, a silent 1930 long-short (34 mins) which is the only film directed by Gaston Modot, France’s most psychotronic actor of his generation (from L’AGE D’OR to THE TESTAMENT OF DR. CORDELIER). It’s based on The Torture of Hope by Auguste de Villiers L’Isle D’Adam from the collection Contes Cruels, hence the title. It’s the main example of an actually cruel tale in that collection, some of whose entries are more weird or fantastical than plain cruel, and a good thing too — pure meanness can get monotonous, as Sade could tell/show you.

I recently discovered Jan Svankmajer’s THE PIT, THE PENDULUM, AND HOPE (1983), which grafts this story onto Poe’s (you know which one I mean and while I’m here, RIP Roger Corman) to excellent effect. I always felt that the Poe story wasn’t exactly a complete story, just two good scary scenes/images which didn’t even necessarily belong in the same work, roughly carpentered together and then thrust at the reader with a slight wince. The ADVLIDA story is more like a real narrative, but the second act is thin (acceptable in a short story where the big finish is more crucial). Svankmajer really creates the dreamed-of latent form of both stories by suturing them together — the story with no second act is joined to the one with no first or third act.

Modot is Mr. Intensity. And surprisingly this translates into his work behind the camera too — TESTAMENT OF JOAN OF ARC vibes, not including the constant close shots, but every composition is splendidly overwrought and quite a bit of it is close-up. Handheld shots, too, used excessively for more than mere dynamic chaos (see the battle scenes in that other JEANNE D’ARC, the Gastynne one, or Bernard’s LES MISERABLES) — Modot is getting at a more personal, individual instability in his anguished wobbles.

The intent is certainly different from Dreyer’s, since this tale could be called anticlerical (it’s not strictly anti-clerical to admit that the Inquisition existed, it’s just recognising historical fact, but then maybe recognising historical fact IS anti-clerical…)

I was admiring the big torture chamber set when I noticed the head inquisitor’s breath misting in the air and realised that it’s a real location, though one hopes (that word again) that the instruments of cruelty (that other word again) have been shipped in as dressing. And this is confirmed when Modot attempts his escape, and the cell expands to include the whole world, an illimitable Gormenghast of church-state architecture stretching to infinity.

In the story, the poor victim is Jewish, I think, a rabbi. Here, he’s some kind of unspecified heretic, so it’s arguable that Modot has flipped the whole story in a dubious way — torturing heretics is easier to sell than torturing Jews, especially when the torture is “only” psychological. Is this going to be a stealth Catholic tract?

Through expressionistically lit dungeons worthy of Piranesi, Modot’s camera stalks his fright-wigged protagonist — who is Modot himself, self-stalked like Keaton in Beckett’s FILM, his Karloffian features aglimmer with agitation and terror. Subjective camera, shadowplay, suspenseful intercutting, trick effects which insert us into the protag’s anguished imagination, it’s full of coups de cinema, piled on thick. Modot may have abandoned directing with the feeling that he’d exhausted his trickbox.

Above, Modot feels a monk clutch his shoulder, then realises he’s merely snagged his rags on an outcrop.

It’s a story with the same kind of final snap as Bierce’s An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge or Gilliam’s BRAZIL — curiously, this moment is the one not-quite-fumbled but arguably undersold by Modot. But he takes care to make clear how the trick was pulled, with a lot of detail the original author left out, and the sadism of the whole venture is emphasised, so that ultimately the piece is faithful in spirit to the original. God wins, but God’s a bastard.

Poor Modot — his silent emerged at just the wrong time, when talkies finally began production in France. Given his dramatic training I see no reason why he couldn’t have made it as a big director in sound-eea films, but his calling card was obsolete before he got a chance to flourish it.

Sleeping Arrangements

Posted in FILM with tags , , , , , on May 11, 2024 by dcairns

Marlon does his Rodin’s Thinker bit.

Fiona got jealous of me watching A COUNTESS FROM HONG KONG in ten minute sections by myself, and wanted to join in. After seven minutes she was ready to quit. But did laugh a couple times, more than I’d done in the first twenty minutes. Well, maybe I laughed three times, but all three of them were at the same gag, the flurry of activity triggered by the door buzzer. Pavlovian humour.

The third ten minutes of the film are devoted to Sophia trying to sleep on the couch while an increasingly grouchy Marlon tries to get her to use the bed, because he’s a gentleman. This chaste sex farce is somewhat anachronistic in ’67, seems to me. Though Sophia does use the word “prostitution.” Her character’s flight from poverty aligns with the star’s own biography and is the closest the film gets to emotional depth.

The main laugh was Brando’s devising of a secret knock, the old shave-and-a-haircut-two-bits rhythm, by which he assures Sophia that she’ll know it’s him. With very sharp timing, the knock comes at the door just as he finishes speaking, and of course it’s NOT him.

(I think the other main laugh was the buzzer again. Oh, and Fiona reminds me that Brando checking he has shorts on before answering the door was another.)

While much of the farce lacks speed/impetus, there’s one good slow bit where Sophia attempts to read while Marlon drums his fingers impatiently. It’s extended just long enough to be funny, and Sophia finds a few nice variations, or has been assigned them by Chaplin.

Long strange passage where Brando insists on loud music when he goes to the bathroom. This is apparently very discreet toilet humour, he wants to drown out whatever sounds he’s going to generate. I found it obscure on the one hand and vulgar on the other, but I guess that’s sort of the Lubitschian mode — handle delicately something which might be gross if handled bluntly, and you get both genteel good taste and a possibly humorous mismatch.

Brando supplies Sophia with yellow pyjamas, which provide her with outrageous baggy pants, which may remind us of someone we know. Any joie de vivre provoked by the canary-yellow Chaplinesque costume is wetblanketed by the depressing set. Pine wood at Pinewood. One thing that would be hugely improved if this were a thirties film as originally conceived: Charles D. Hall would have built a beautiful moderne ocean liner in opulent shades of cream.

And that’s about all that happens in minutes 20 to 30.

TO BE CONTINUED