Friday, 11 October 2024

King Harold… Le Giornate del Cinema Muto 43, Day Six


In spite of the relatively advanced stage of my silent film condition, I had never seen Harold Lloyd’s Girl Shy even though I must have seen Speedy, for instance, at least ten times. Tonight it was an absolute revelation and with Daan van den Hurk’s sparkling jazzy score, played by the serially impressive Zerorchestra - conducted by the man himself - the roof on the Teatro Verdi was lifted so high we could see clearly that this week’s rain had stopped. Jazz is energy.

 

As with Saxophone Suzi the accompaniment illustrated the potency of jazz for Jazz-Age films and whereas Neil Brand’s cue had been more of the period – Benny Goodman or Paul Whiteman big bands “hot jazz”, van den Hurk’s score was more post-Bebop/Birth of the Cool and sometime in the modish fifties with beautiful blends of brass and reed instruments mixed with scintillating vibraphone runs and a rhythm section that kept the beat note for note with Lloyd’s tight script.

 

The era of the music was forgotten as we synchronised in sympathy with the themes, a repeated passage that caught perfectly Harold’s longing for respect, a cure for his stammer and love of Jobyna Ralston. This was the second of seven films in which the two appeared and their famous chemistry coupled with the fact that her timing and range are crucial to his story working. I’ve seen plenty of romantic comedies of this period – Lubitsch’s Three Women just this morning (see below) – but few have the feeling that the stakes are as real as this.

 

That’s crucial to the film’s laugh-ratio as we acre about the two connecting and are inflected with their awkwardness and little triumphs or setbacks on a personal level. You can’t look at those faces for so long without falling in love with their love just a little bit and, this wonderful, rousing score made sure you still felt it as happiness filled the square outside the Verdi as everyone, and I mean, everyone, was beaming!

 



Three Women (1924) with Philip Carli

 

Ernst Lubitsch’s touch is strong with this one especially in the breakneck opening third from Pauline Frederick’s character Mabel inching the weights on her scales to disappointment to Lew Cody’s weaselly Edmund eying up her jewels one by one at the ball when they meet. Then there’s lovelorn Fred Armstrong (Pierre Gendron) trying to find the right moment to give his sweetheart, Mabel’s daughter Jeanne (May McAvoy) the $50 bracelet he’s had to pawn his watch for, his progress is thwarted by split-second misfortunes as Lubitsch plays out a dance of frustration with said present repeatedly being pulled from and returned to Fred’s pocket… his last chance is lost when she opens her mother’s late-arriving gift of a diamond bracelet.

 

I still feel that the film loses its way after this point and whilst its still has good moments it takes the all too limited appearance of Marie Prevost as Edmund’s good-time girlfriend to lift the closing segment. There are missing pieces to the narrative which might explain what comes across as Two and a Half Women, but Lew ain’t no Adolphe Menjou and the likelihood of both women falling for him seems remote. The narrative moves along too quickly off screen with Jeanne’s marriage and Fred’s qualification as a doctor all of a rush.

 

So, OK, it’s not The Marriage Circle but it is still a very amusing film with much to appreciate especially with Philip Carli’s knowing accompaniment which delighted the audience packed in to see The Lubitsch! This was the third of the director’s three films from 1924, after the MC and before Forbidden Paradise with Pola Negri! I wonder if Ernst saw something of his Polish collaborator in the marvels of Giornate poster girl Marie P? As Michelle Facey said, the following year’s Kiss Me Again with Clara and Marie has to be top of the list of lost films that need finding!




Historia de un Gaucho Viejo (1924) with Mauro Colombis

 

Who is the gaucho, amigo?

Why is he standing in your spangled leather poncho

And your elevator shoes?

Bodacious cowboys

Donald Fagen and Walter Becker

 

As the week progresses and between film, talking, eating, drinking and um, blogging, things get a bit light-headed so forgive me for another impenetrable cultural reference if you are under middle age XL… But there was at least a film about Gauchos and a fascinating trip to Argentina it proved especially as the Spanish intertitles had to be translated in real time – good job that man! – competing with Mauro Columbus’ spirited accompaniment – your efforts are much appreciated amigos!

 

The film was Historia de un Gaucho Viejo (1924) which presents as something like a western but with altogether more political overtones explained by Andrés Levinson in his catalogue notes. The main character Anastasio Ríos (José J. Romeu) is not just a leader of men but a fighter for democracy in a story set before the introduction of the secret ballot in 1912. He kills Contreras, the chief of police (Ramón Podestá), in self defence and whilst you’d expect this to lead to a life of crime, he’s more of a freedom fighter trying to right the injustice inherent in rural society at this time.

 

After a successful raid to liberate some cattle wrongfully taken by the authorities, he offers one of the men, Don Luna (actor unknown) leadership and, as the two fight honourably with knives they end up hugging in recognition of the other’s bravery and honour. This is no Duke Wayne bar brawl but something that feels altogether more rough and real.

 

There are some uncompromising characters such as “El Zorro” (Ernesto Etchepare) who is at one point bravely leading the police away from his fellow and then another trying to sexually assault Mercedes (Mycha Flores), Ríos’ daughter who is already involved with another man. He serenades her with a guitar so some “western” tropes are universal.

 

Shot around the small town of San Rafael, located at the foot of the Andes in the south of the province of Mendoza, the backdrops are stunning especially with the residual colourisation. It’s another fascinating education from Le Giornate and I am loving this South American road trip!

 

 



For the Soul of Rafael (1920) with José María Serralde Ruiz, Günter Buchwald, Frank Bockius, Gabriel Rigo (masterclass student)

 

Someway north of the Argentina, round Mexico way there was another remarkable score being played out by the above four piece, which featured pianist José María Serralde Ruiz expertly inter-weaving Mexican music of the period into the largely improvised score. Masterclass student, Gabriel Rigo provided flamenco flourishes on guitar with Günter Buchwald on violin and Frank Bockius hitting anything that didn’t move. It’s always a pleasure the see the musical combinations the Giornate throws up and this one was especially fit for purpose.

 

The film provided another rare opportunity to see one of the surviving Clara Kimball Young features, an actress who was on a level with almost anyone in the 1910s yet who has faded from memory after her career stalled in the mid-1920s. She’s a highly watchable actor, similar perhaps to Norma Talmadge but without the archive, or Lillian Gish without the lengthy career.

 

Here she’s Marta a young woman raised in a convent who has been pledged to marry Rafael (Bertram Grassby) the unruly son of matriarch Dona Luisa (Eugenie Besserer) who hopes she will civilise her boy and keep him on the straight and narrow. Before she leaves, Marta rescues and American Keith Bryton – such a British name Keith! – from being killed by native Americans by putting her ring on his finger. Naturally she falls in love with The Man with the Ring and doesn’t realise that, according to native practice, she has married him.

 

That’s not the only “crickey!” in the plot and the reviewer from Moving Picture World, May 15, 1920 nails it: The story moves on from this point to a happy ending, but with much action of tense and strenuous nature in between. Still, it’s entertaining and fascinating to see the actress and the kind of film that made her such a success with audiences of the time.

 

Still, the accompaniment was excellent and it was good to hear the injection of contemporary themes from the ensemble.

 

 

Dog walking brilliance!! Animals on Film…

 

When Winter Comes (US? 1921?)

 

Just as I’m missing my dog Mungo, here popped up a splendid short documentary of a family holiday told from the point of view of their dog. There are lovely shots of canine joy in the snow with colorised sections too. It’s one of the unidentified films so, hopefully someone will identify the filmmakers. Meanwhile, I can’t wait for my little four-legged fluffball to meet snow come this winter!

 

With Sled and Reindeer... (1926) with Donald Sosin

 

Erik Bergström’s documentary was screening as part of Swedish Nature and Ethnographic Films strand and featured a young woman and her family’s struggle to make a life farming deer in the far north of the country. There were breath-taking backdrops accentuated by an opening tracking shot – from a train? - of pure white snowy forests on endless mountains.

 

It is a recent restoration from the SFI and in addition to looking gorgeous, captures a way of life that one presumes has disappeared. The fascination then as now was man living in balance with nature. Life and death were seen in this film as part of that process. A terrible beauty.

 

 

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