And so this is Christmas and what have we
done...? Turns out quite a lot more than in the Year of Our Covid, 2021 but still
not as much as we’d like to have done… in this game you take what you can get
though and savour each experience as much as you can. Silent film doesn’t throw
itself at you like an overeager superhero flick desperate to win back it’s $200
million budget, oh my no, you have to make an effort and all of that is
rewarded with the shocks and joys of unremembered humanity and artistic
enterprise. All of which is a Boxing Day hungover way of saying; hey Ma, will
you look at these apples (and no, I don’t really know what that means)!
Woman of the Year: Dora Brandes (1916)/Poor Jenny (1912) with Stephen Horne, BFI Asta Nielsen Season
She acts, that’s the thing… she does not just pose before
the camera… She impersonates a character, she makes it live and have meaning, a
hundred meanings… New York Times, 1921
Who could have foreseen that Asta Nielsen would be 2022’s
MVP – someway ahead of Liz Truss in terms of relevance, attainment and talent –
but Pamela Hutchinson and the BFI set out one of the finest seasons of silent
treasures for many a year with screenings of rare Nielsen grooves propelling us
into the year with a spring in our step and a growing appreciation of this most
important actor. Sure, I’d seen Asta’s before but mostly in her greatest hits, Hamlet
(thrice), Joyless Street (twice), Afgrunden (so many times…) but
it was a real connoisseur’s delight to be able to dig deeper into a body of
work that is very rarely screened in this breadth and depth.
Asta Nielsen |
As an example of Die Asta’s almost unparalleled range I’ve
picked these two with accompaniment from Stephen Horne who has a way with
Silent Sirens (and a CD to prove it, available here if you are shameless and
unhip enough to have not bought a copy!). Poor Jenny (1912) was from the
early days of the Asta series, written and directed with partner Urban Gad who
the actress insisted at the time came with her to Germany to carry on the work
begun with Afgrunden. It’s a typical rags-to-riches-back-to-rags again
narrative but, as she joked, this was more than enough to feed her dramatic
energy.
Dora Brandes, directed by Magnus Stifter, following her break with Gad, plays with the already well-worn Star is Born tropes. Asta playing a successful actress who finds herself having to choose between an older politician and a much younger journalist. Drama ensues… hearts break. As you watch you can begin to fully understand Asta’s ability to express and connect. So often at the start of her films, she’s seen smiling straight to the audience before the action begins, melting hearts and renewing her intimacy with the watchers and unflinching honest look, the only time she’s out of character, or at least the character she’s about to play. As a person she’s a mystery and her pre-show smiles just hint at the complexity to come whilst showing how easily she can draw us in… it only takes a few seconds looking at those huge dark eyes. Queen.
Asta and her infinite variety... |
Downfall (1923) with John Sweeney, introduced by Pamela Hutchinson, BFI Asta Nielsen Season
Sorry, but I’m not just having one Asta moment and this was a breath-taking film that showcased the full power of Asta’s performance level whilst also confronting the fact that she was getting older – she commissioned the film aged 41. Watching her character with minimal make-up. looking in horror at her unfamiliar face in the unforgiving mirror before being deadened by her lover’s unyielding humiliations and finally vanishing from the love of her life’s vision… is oddly rewarding. Certainly, she presents one of the most searing portrayals of aged tragedy in silent film and proof, if any were needed, of her ability to transcend melodrama and to give something extra special entirely from within character.
Back in Bologna… Foolish Wives (1922), Timothy Brock, Il Cinema Ritrovato 36th Edition
At last, I was back in Italy and it was too hot, there was
too much to do and far too much to see: I loved it!! So many highlights,
watching the restored Nosferatu with Mr Brock and full orchestra in the
Piazza Maggiore, watching, The
Conformist and Singing in the Rain in the same space and then the
almost supernatural hit of three hours’ worth of The Beatles in Peter Jackson’s
third episode of Get Back, including the full Rooftop Concert: the gear does
not get any fab-er than that, a revelation and a stunning twist of the Extended
Scouse Universe.
The big silent showcase was this splendid restoration of the
first million-dollar movie, as acclaimed the publicity… Spectacularly, Erich
von Stroheim delivered on the ROI and Universal had another hit on its hands
from the most complex man in most parts of Hollywood whose productions had the
skill of DeMille, the scale of Griffith and a dark heart the latter could never
explain to himself. This is a slick crime caper movie from before the days when
slick crime capers set in this period were all the rage. But Erich is making
sure we see the seedier side as well, he and his two “cousins” are charming con
artists, but he has a debauched sexuality which makes his character all too
difficult to root for and yet we are conditioned to try… even now.
Timothy Brock’s extraordinary new score was performed with
vigour by L’Orcestra del Teatro Comunale di Bologna which he conducted. His
score included Russia themes reflecting the grandiosity on screen and also delicious
lines of his own mapping every strange and unusual nuance from von Stroheim’s
screen. It felt complete with the film and completed that magical connection
between the place, the audience and the film that makes live silent screenings
so compelling and which makes this place, almost uniquely, a truly silent city.
This was epic in length and was an unexpected joy equalling
in its own way, the lengthier silent serial of 1926. Based in four parts
totalling 168 minutes in length it was split into two screenings with different
accompanists. The first parts, focusing on Jean Valjean and then Fantine, featured
John Sweeney’s accompaniment and we were back the next day for Gabriel
Thibaudeau’s piano and Silvia Mandolini’s violin as the story shifted onto Fantine’s
daughter Cosette.
Recommended for students of French history and film alike; extraordinary clarity of purpose from Albert Capellani who was able to capture so much from the book with a narrative fluidity not often associated with this early period.
Evelyn Greeley |
Phil-for-Short (1919), with John Sweeney, BFI
This film was introduced by me at the BFI and for a few
hours at least, I was an honorary Nasty Woman.
Inspired by a remark made by the grandson of a one-time
Yukon bordello owner, there has been an ongoing project to research and revive
interest in unsung women filmmakers who broke new ground in the early years of
cinema. This film is a deceptively nuanced take on gender roles in the wake of
the Great War and increased recognition of women’s roles.
I wouldn’t say that Phil is a nasty woman, but she is a
liberated one and just imagine how good it felt to watch her in 1919 newly
enfranchised and with a range of choices starting to open up. As played
by the energetic Evelyn Greeley, Phil stands out as practical, inventive and a
leader; all very male characteristics for the older generation. She has to deal
with reality as her aged father is still buried in the myths and legends of his
books and, lovely and liberating though he is, she works the farm and is happy
to step up to make things happen for herself and the men in her life.
There is now a magnificent new box set from Kino which
includes this film and 98 others. It’s out now and is THE Archive Release of
the Year – US and Canada can order direct.
Mary Johnsson - Gunnar Hede's Saga (1923) |
Gunnar Hede's Saga (1923) with Guenter A. Buchwald and Neil Brand, Bonn Silent Film Festival
Have Internet will travel and virtual Bonn was as excellent
as usual. As many may know I’m always up for a Saga directed by Mauritz Stiller
and based on a book by Selma Lagerlöf and, even though this one is still
missing about half an hour, it is a thoroughly entertaining romp through snow,
love and madness which features the humanity you’d expect from Selma along with
the mastery of locations and character you can rely on from Mauritz. It’s a
story about reindeers and redemption (the latter, always a Selma theme) and,
how fitting that a film featuring two violin players and the healing power of
music, should be accompanied by the Silent Film Supergroup of Guenter A.
Buchwald on violin and Neil Brand on piano… I really wish I’d been there to
witness this gig in the flesh but the streaming screening will have to do for
now and how!
Norma Talmadge in The Lady (1925) |
The Lady (1925), Daan Van Der Hurk, Le Giornate del Cinema Muto, Streaming
Oh, outrageous fortune! All set, ALL SET, for my first Giornate since pre-C, and I catch the latest variant a few days before I’m due to head for Venice Airport. So it goes, so it goes and at least we had the streaming version to give us some of the finest films from the full festival.
Norma Talmadge has always been relatively undervalued in recent times, not afforded the screen time or respect of stella contemporaries Gloria, Mary or Lilian and so I was pleased to see her featured so extensively in this year’s programme and, if I had to pick just the one film to watch t would have been Frank Borzage’s The Lady, a film rated so highly by Talmadge scholars such as Greta de Groat. Norma and Frank did not disappoint and she provides perhaps the most affecting, emotionally powerful performances of her career although not one she wanted to repeat too quickly.
After the mid-teens, Talmadge called the commercial shots
and as Jay Weissberg pointed out in his introduction, The Lady was too
louche for middle American audiences and did not perform that well. As Talmadge
herself said, quoted by Ben Brewster and Lea Jacobs in their notes on the
Giornate site, she wasn’t going to follow up the film’s style “… I am not
going to do any more like it for a time, anyway. Not that I don’t like to do
characterizations – I love it. But what can we do? We must play to the box
office… So, for a while I am going to do modern things. I think they want to
see me in gowns, in style.”
A great actor but also a smart businesswoman who played the
game until, to paraphrase, she no longer needed to.
Faces of Children (1925), with Meg Morley, Kennington Bioscope
2022 we were back home to the Cinema Museum and here was one
of the great films of the French silent period, and one accompanied with consistently
emotive, compelling improvisation with hints of period classical as well as
Meg’s diverse jazz chops, so in tune with Jacques Feyder’s tale of childhood
grief. The film was critically-acclaimed yet a commercial failure and for a
long time this it only circulated as a two-reel 9.5mm condensed version –
available on YouTube and worth watching! – and as Christopher Bird said in his
excellent introduction, this encouraged the young Kevin Brownlow to seek out
more complete versions. The film was finally restored over a twenty-year period
starting with the Cinémathèque royale de Belgique in 1986 and ending with
Lobster Films in 2004 but it is still rarely screened which is exactly why we
need the Kennington Bioscope more than ever!
Face off: Ivan vs Brigitte |
Manolescu (1929), with John Sweeney, Le Giornate del Cinema Muto Streaming
This was like watching Fantasy Silent Film, a game in which
the combination of two of the best strikers in cinema muto score hattrick after
hattrick combining in ways that seemed impossible especially to this viewer who
had no idea they had ever played together. Manolescu… Ivan “The Cat” Mosjoukine
versus Brigitte “The Panther” Helm in a battle for our eyeballs, our attention…
our love. Honestly, you could have taken the script for Carry on Cabby
and given it to these two and we’d all be collapsed in a pool of utter
distraction. You want engagement well here he and she are…
Mr Sweeney was fully aware of all of the above and slotted
into musical midfield as the great playmaker he is (that’s enough footie
references. Ed.)
Up in Mabel’s Room (1926), Günter A. Buchwald & Zerorchestra, Le Giornate del Cinema Muto Streaming
Directed by E. Mason Hopper, this perfectly executed farce
was based on the play by Wilson Collison and Otto Harbach from 1919, and like
every successful comedy of this type it relies on perfectly executed
performances and timing, whether from the performers and director or in the
editing suite. There’s also some exceptionally pithy title cards courtesy of F.
McGrew Willis’ script and Walter Graham’s text… and if a picture paints a
thousand words, the expressions on Marie Prevost’s face are a British Library’s
worth of inuendo!
Extra spice was added by accompaniment recorded right at the
start of this year’s festival at the screening in Teatro Zancanaro, Sacile, it
had that live energy some of the streaming films don’t always get, although, to
be fair this was an ensemble, with the local group Zerorchestra improvising
alongside Günter A. Buchwald’s piano and violin. This film was the perfect
finale for the streaming version though, setting us up for a physical return in
1923, sorry, 2023!
We’re back up and rolling and 2023 I aim to attend as many
screenings and festivals as possible, I’m looking at you Hippfest, Slapstick, Europe
and even further afield… as for Pordenone, we are long overdue!
Happy Christmas and a let’s have a brilliant 2023!
Look to the future now, it's only just begun. |
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