The effort put into making this film far exceeds anything attempted thus far in France. No bluffing, no pompous blarney, or gibberish preface. No political or social theory, no boring or muddled intertitles… Beauty, truth, art – there’s the secret of the success of La Sultane de l’amour.
La Cinématographie française (18th October 1919)
Myriad lights, they said I'd be impressed
Arabian nights, at your primitive best...
Siouxsie and the Banshees, Arabian Nights
Some films are almost too impractically beautiful to
exist, too unlikely to have been made given the exchange between huge effort
and end results, no matter how charming, that make you sad the moment the
action stops and they fade from view. Two films today met this criteria, The
Blue Bird (1918) and La Sultane de l’amour (1919) – the first I’d
seen but not “live” and the second I’d never heard of making it whack me even
harder when the first image of the colourised Gaston Modot smiles on screen. Surely
they’re not going to keep this up for the whole film? Yes indeed they do and it’s
quite any colourised film I’ve seen before with gorgeous deep richness the
result of an impeccable digital restoration in 2021 were carried out by the CNC
laboratory using three tinted and stencil-coloured nitrate copies from the
Cinémathèque française.
It's introduced as a missing story from the Arabian
Nights... or it might as well be, with nasty Sultan Malik (Paul Vermoyal) bored, bored, bored
and looking for some romance or at least aggressive male sexual behaviour. He
despatches three knights to find him an appropriate female and yet when Kadjar
(Monsieur Modot) discovers Princess Daoulah, the “Sultaness of Love” (France
Dhélia – see above!) she informs him that she has other plans…
Problematic leader Sultan Malik (Paul Vermoyal) |
Not that it’s any of Kadjar or indeed the Sultan’s business, but Princess D’s plans are centred on the handsome man who recently rescued her from drowning, unknown to her but revealed to us as the hand-tinted rosy-cheeked Prince Mourad (Sylvio de Pedrelli) who, as it happens, is definitely thinking along the same lines. Sadly, Daoulah’s perfectly reasonable request to be left the heck alone, is ignored by the sexually malfunctioning Sultan who decides to kidnap her and use the tried and always successful techniques of abuse and torture to make her fall for his extremely well-hidden charms.
He's the poorest of leaders though alienating Nazir (Marcel
Lévesque) his court jester/advisor by abusing him and making fun of his physical
disabilities – see, there’s a pattern here – whilst his general administration
is building up resistance from the population and other royals including Princess
Zilah (Yvonne Sergyl) and Mourad. As tension mounts there’s plenty of dancing,
vestals and cross-dressed eunuchs… this is not a film that holds back in
presenting the excesses of Arabian socio-political structures. My main concern
is that, lacking any kind of industrialised workforce, they’re going to have to
wait a long time for the Sultan to be overthrown. Unless true love can win out…
Accompaniment was provided by Mauro Colombis on piano,
Frank Bockius percussion and Elizabeth-Jane Baldry on harp. The combination
added mystery and flavour to this magical reality and we not only did the time
warp again, reality folded around us in ways that will inform our dreams for
weeks to come.
An absolute cracker!!!
The audience leaving the Teatro Verdi last night... |
The Blue Bird (1918) with Neil Brand and Elizabeth-Jane Baldry
M. Maeterlinck's poem has been transferred from a book to the screen, and it is a safe assertion to say that seldom, if ever, has the atmosphere and spirit of a written work been more faithfully reproduced in motion pictures.
New York Times, 1918
Maurice Tourneur's The Blue Bird was released just
over a year after the director's collaboration with Mary Pickford in The
Poor Little Rich Girl and featured such regular collaborators as art
director Ben Carré, cinematographer John van den Broke and Editor Clarence
Brown. If that film was Revolver this was the full Sgt. Pepper -
a flight of fantasy from start to finish: silent psychedelia in full bloom at a
time when the World needed to believe in eternal truths and the truth of eternity.
When in the heart of their fantastic journey to find the
Blue Bird, the two youngsters meet not only their dead grandparents but their
dead brothers and sisters, there are at least ten of them... this was a time
when infant mortality was high and life came with the flimsiest of
"guarantees".
The film is a sumptuous collection of such moments and visual
set pieces, a hyper-creative comfort blanket that smuggles through the simple
message that there's not only no place like home but that kindness must spread
out from there into the heart-broken World beyond. There are tightly-defined
fantasy constructs - humanised versions of fire, water and light, dogs, cats
and wonderful "moods" such as vibrant dancers embodying The Joys of
Pure Thoughts and the slightly less impressive Sleeping-More-Than-Necessary (not
going to happen here at Le Giornate…).
Tourneur draws pure and naturalistic performances
from his cast of children, 12-year old Tula Belle as Mytyl and Robin Macdougall
as Tyltyl who react and act with genuine thrill to every new wonder. It's a child's film with many adult concerns.
The accompaniment from Neil Brand on piano and Elizabeth-Jane Baldry on harp brought the magic out across the auditorium and melted our stubborn hearts.
Song (1928) with Stephen Horne and Frank Bockius
I attended the talk and Q&A with Yiman Wang the
author of To Be an Actress: Labor and Performance in Anna May Wong's
Cross-Media World and one of the questions for this actress who struggled to
sustain her successes, was when she really showed her qualities as an actor.
Yiman pointed to Shanghai Express (1932) directed by Josef von Sternberg
and co-staring Marlene Dietrich who, she contends, came of second best to Anna May.
I would argue that Piccadilly and Song also allow her considerable expression,
especially in comparison to her Hollywood work.
In this newly and magnificently restored version, Wong
shows full command of her abilities moving effortlessly from drama to comedy
and playing with the audience with her controlled expression. She was, as she
said, never really a dancer but she could act dancing which is what she does
here and in the British film. She ended up paying 200 guineas to learn in Britain
in the thirties as people expected her to sing and dance given her oriental
background.
Anna May Wong excels here because it’s a rare part that
allowed her to just be and not just an exotic token or worse still, something
sinister. She responds to the camera’s frequently intense gaze with
naturalistic gestures and a positive focus on her character and rides out some
of the more extraordinary plot elements and costumery with ease and good
humour. She’s equally at home fighting off attackers, coming to the rescue
during a train robbery and selflessly supporting a selfish man who can’t see
further than his own infatuation.
The story is set in Istanbul and there are some lovely
establishing shots of what would become the scene of Liverpool FC’s Champions
League triumph almost 80 years later. Anna May plays Song, a poor woman eking out a
living by catching lobsters on the beach. She is spotted by two men who proceed
to assault her only to be fought off by a passer-by, Jack Houben (Heinrich
George). It’s a pretty grim fight that’s only won when Song gets stuck into
help her rescuer.
Jack takes Song back for shelter at his humble
home and frightens her to death as he demonstrates his profession – a knife
thrower. Jack decides she could be an asset to his act and before long she’s
dancing in front of the regulars at the homely music hall where he works. Song
and Jack’s life seems to have settled but the arrival of a famous ballet dancer
is about to upset the precarious balance of their apple cart. There are posters
for Gloria Lee (Mary Kid) all over town and Song decides to use one to make an
improvised table in Jack’s house, without realising she’s an old flame and that
flame is about to be rekindled…
Song is a melodrama with some sharp plot turns but
Richard Eichberg directs it well enough helped by some excellent cinematography
from Heinrich Gärtner and the designs of Willi Herrmann. Whilst Mary Kid makes
for an unconvincing ballerina, Heinrich George makes for a believable thrower
of knives and, of course, Anna May Wong's smile and ready tears steal the show.
Stephen Horne has previously said that, as a young
accompanist, he had played along to Song sight unseen (the days before
preview discs) and the film’s frequent narrative lurches had made for an
engaging challenge. Today he and percussionist Frank Bockius, knew exactly what
is coming and their improvisations enriched the film in ways that helped elevate
it in the canon of Anglo-German silents and, indeed, in the career of the
talented and beautifully-determined Anna May Wong!
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