Monday, January 31, 2011

Hitchcock One By One Is Moving!

Better late than never: after embarking upon Hitchcock One By One, it occurred to me that it would make better sense to have a dedicated home for that project. Here it is: Hitchcock One By One! From now on, all Hitchcock One By One entries will be posted there with only notifications appearing here at Movie Literacy. Be sure to follow me at the new blog. Thanks for reading!

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Hitchcock One by One: THE LODGER: A STORY OF THE LONDON FOG (1927)


Who Made It?
Written by Eliot Stannard
Based on the novel by Marie Belloc Lowndes
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock

Who's In It?
Ivor Novello as The Lodger
June as Daisy
Marie Ault as The Landlady
Arthur Chesney as Her Husband
Malcolm Keen as Joe, The Police Detective

What's It About?
Daisy's family takes in a mysterious boarder just as London is gripped by "The Avenger", a serial killer with a predilection for curly blondes. As the days go by, the family grows ever more suspicious: could their paying houseguest be the very fiend who terrorizes the city?

The film's opening scene. Hitchcock achieved this effect by having the actress lay flat on a glass pane, spreading her hair behind her, and lighting her from beneath.

Why Should I See It?
The Lodger is a superior silent film, stylish and atmospheric, fascinating and suspenseful. I was unprepared for just how good a film it is, especially coming on the heels of the enjoyable but unremarkable The Pleasure Garden (granted, Hitchcock's second film, the now-lost The Mountain Eagle was made in between). Clearly showing the influence of the German Expressionists in cinematography and design (Hitchcock had worked at Germany's UFA studios for a number of years and made 1925's The Pleasure Garden there), this is, hands-down, one of the finest silents I've seen. For many directors, this film would have been the high point of a career.

Ivor Novello, who was a matinee idol in the UK, plays the title role, the mysterious stranger who arouses fear and suspicion amongst the other occupants of the household, including Daisy's police-detective boyfriend, Joe. Could the lodger be the killer who roams the streets, claiming victims on Tuesday evenings? It certainly seems that he could be. He is a creepy guy (Novello does such a good job establishing this that it's tough to shake later when we're asked to be more sympathetic). He takes a liking to Daisy who happens to have blonde, curly hair—just the sort whom the killer finds attractive. And his behavior fits the pattern of the killer's activities to a T, a fact not lost on Joe the detective. (As I watched the film, I began to wonder if the lodger wasn't a misdirection and if Joe wasn't the killer. There's a point in the narrative where the pieces fit and either one of them could just as easily have been the villain.) It was Hitchcock's intent to film a faithful adaptation of Lowndes' novel, but Novello's status as silent-era heartthrob wouldn't allow it, so Hitchcock had to devise a new, somewhat ingenuous third act that deviates sharply from the novel while still telling a satisfying story. I think he did a good job. See what you think.

Ivor Novello as the lodger in the film's signature images.
Hitchcock was trained as a draftsman and his career in motion pictures began as a title designer, a talent which he put to good use here. In contrast to the traditional, textual intertitles of The Pleasure GardenThe Lodger's titles are stylish, bold, and even occasionally animated. They are works of art unto themselves and really help give the film a distinctive flavor. While such flamboyant treatment of intertitles is not unheard of elsewhere, it is fairly unusual. Seeing the impact they make here makes me wish that more producers of the era would have followed Hitchcock's example.

A few of THE LODGER's intertitles (click to enlarge). All three of these are animated in the film.
Also noteworthy are Hitchcock's attempts to compensate for the lack of sound. Chief among several examples is a scene in which the other occupants are chilled by the sound of the lodger's footsteps in the room above them. They look up, the chandelier sways slightly, and the ceiling fades away revealing the lodger, seemingly suspended in midair, walking over our heads. It's a bravura sequence and one that required innovation and ingenuity. It's worth pointing out that, had this been a talking picture, this scene would likely have been accomplished through sound effects and we would have missed out on what is, in my opinion, one of the greatest treats in all of silent cinema.

The lodger paces the floor above... (click to enlarge)
 What Else?
Many have pointed out the Christian imagery that appears here and there in The Lodger. As he peers out from an upstairs window at a newsboy shouting the news of the latest murder, the window grille casts a shadow in the form of a cross across the boarder's face. Later, during the film's climax, he hangs from a fence by his handcuffed wrists, a supplicant beaten by an angry crowd.



Where Can I See It?
As of January 2011, The Lodger is available in the US in a fine, tinted edition as part of MGM's "Alfred Hitchcock Premiere Collection" boxed set and, until recently, as a standalone DVD. There is also any number of cheapie public-domain editions available. Please avoid these and pay a few extra dollars for the MGM edition—the superior presentation is worth the investment.

The Lodger is currently undergoing a major restoration by the British Film Institute. Here’s hoping we see a sparkling new edition soon! 

What's the Bottom Line?
THE LODGER is a superior silent film, stylish and atmospheric, fascinating and suspenseful. A clear precursor to Hitchcock's later films, this is a must-see picture and an excellent starting place for those new to silent cinema.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Double Feature: BLACK SWAN and THE RED SHOES


Darren Aronofsky's BLACK SWAN has been described as everything from clichéd melodrama to a work of genius. I'm somewhere in the middle leaning toward the latter, but regardless of how you may feel about Mr. Aronofsky's ballet horror film, you could do worse that to follow it with a viewing of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger's 1948 masterpiece, THE RED SHOES.

While telling a similar story of an artist's single-minded pursuit of perfection, THE RED SHOES (starring an incandescent Moira Shearer in her screen debut) manages to accomplish the same end as Natalie Portman's Nina without the detour into self-destructive madness. Interestingly, despite its prefeminist milieu, it's the heroine of the earlier film who seems to exercise the most control over her own destiny.


Moira Shearer, in full Swan Lake getup

THE RED SHOES is a can't-miss film, filled with indelible characters (played by real dancers!) and shot in stunning, saturated Technicolor -- a perfect chaser after an evening with BLACK SWAN.

Be sure to see Criterion's 2010 restoration on DVD or, preferably, blu-ray. You won't believe that you're watching a movie that's over 65 years old.


Be back soon with Hitchcock One By One: THE LODGER (1927).

Monday, January 3, 2011

Hitchcock One By One: THE PLEASURE GARDEN (1925)


Who Made It?
Written by Eliot Stannard
Based on the novel by Oliver Sandys
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock

Who's In It?
Virginia Valli as Patsy Brand
Carmelita Garaghty as Jill Cheyne
Miles Mander as Levett
John Stuart as Hugh Fielding
Karl Falkenberg as Prince Ivan

What's It About?
Patsy (Virginia Valli) and Jill (Carmelita Garaghty) are dancers at a local theater, the Pleasure Garden. Patsy promises herself to Hugh Fielding (John Stuart) but, as her star rises at the theater, and much to the alarm of Jill, allows herself to be wooed and pampered by the aristocratic Prince Ivan (Karl Falkenberg). Jill, in the meantime, weds Hugh’s friend and business associate Levett (Miles Mander) whom we soon learn is something less than a gentleman.
Virginia Valli as Patsy Brand, about to meet her future husband

Carmelita Geraghty as Jill Cheyne

What starts as a fun, American-styled show business picture transforms, when Jill and Levett marry, into a tale of adultery, madness, and murder.
Miles Mander as Levett, going unhinged

Why Should I See It?
As Alfred Hitchcock's first feature film, The Pleasure Garden enjoys a stature that would otherwise elude it. It's a fun and breezy picture, well photographed and highly evocative of its period. It’s tempting to try to find clues to Hitchcock’s future career in this film, but I have a feeling that attempts to do so are probably misguided. It’s entirely reasonable that a great deal of the creative control, at such an early date, would be out of his hands. Still, there are flashes here and there of the sorts of things that would one day be Hitchcock trademarks: voyeuristic POV shots and Levett’s hallucinatory insanity late in the film. At any rate, the picture is well shot, well paced, and engaging. One always knows that there is a competent hand at the helm.
Descending the stairs at the Pleasure Garden

What Else?
Apparently, cinematographer Gaetano Ventimiglia attempted to avoid Italian customs fees by hiding the film stock under Hitchcock's bunk aboard their steamer. This seriously backfired when Italian authorities seized the film, forcing the production to spend big bucks on all new stock.

There is a longstanding rumor that Levett's native wife is played by silent-screen vamp Nita Naldi. Frederica, a frequent contributor to Nitrateville, a highly-recommended discussion site dedicated to silent and early talking pictures, seems to put this issue to rest once and for all:

(Nita Naldi's) inclusion in the cast of The Pleasure Garden throughout various Hitchcock filmographies stems from a mistake made by Peter Noble in 1949 (in An Index to the Creative Work of Alfred Hitchcock, Sight & Sound Supplement, Index Series No. Eighteen). That error has been picked up by subsequent filmographies, including Donald Spoto's, which is from where the imdb reference derives, I suspect.

She isn't listed in the credits, she isn't the native lover, and she could not have been in the film. The Pleasure Garden completed filming in August of 1925; Nita didn't depart the States for Europe until late September 1925, and she was cast in The Mountain Eagle in December of 1925.

(The Mountain Eagle was Hitchcock's second film, no prints of which are known to survive.)

Click Here to read the original Nitrateville post (excerpted here with the author's permission and encouragement—and my gratitude). More on Naldi's relationship with Hitchcock is available Here and you can examine her complete filmography (which does NOT include The Pleasure Garden!) Here.

Where Can I See It?
As of January 2011, home video availability, at least in the US, is spotty: it looks as though it’s a public domain film, no longer under copyright protection, which has yet to receive a proper, well-presented DVD release. THE PLEASURE GARDEN is currently undergoing a major restoration by the British Film Institute. Here’s hoping we see a sparkling new edition soon! 

What's the Bottom Line?
THE PLEASURE GARDEN is entertaining and fun; an enjoyable silent picture that even those who are new to silents will probably enjoy. I recommend it on its own merits as well as for its status as Alfred Hitchcock’s first feature film.