Saturday 22 October 2022

29. Ingrid Bergman in 'Anastasia' (1956)

  



Plot Intro

In 1917-18, the Russian people overthrew the oppressive and opulent Romanov royal family and eventually Bolshevik soldiers murdered the Tsar and Tsarina and their 5 children. Ten years later, rumours abound that the youngest daughter of the Romanovs, the Grand Duchess Anastasia, survived and is out there somewhere. A former White Russian General, Bounine (Yul Bryner) discovers a mysterious woman named Anna (Ingrid Bergman) who is just out of an asylum and has conflicting memories of her past. He decides to train her up in royal customs in the hope that both the public and European royalty, including Anastasia’s powerful grandmother the Empress Dowager (Helen Hayes) will be convinced that she is the Grand Duchess herself. If he does, he and his associates gain access to quite a substantial inheritance left by the late Tsar. If he doesn’t, he and his associates could end up in prison for fraud…


Doug says...

No, not that Anastasia (although you might be surprised - more on that later). It’s a mid ‘50s film inspired by Anna Anderson, the most famous of the Anastasia-wannabes. This was a rash of women coming forwards pretending they were survivors from the assassination of the Russian Romanovs, and Anderson was the one who seemed to get the furthest. DNA testing has now proved (long after death) that she was a phoney. 


The film takes more of a non-committal stance, refusing to say whether this Anna (Bergman) is real or not, although it leans more towards her being the genuine lost Anastasia. I think this is inevitable as a film about a crook taking on a lonely broken old grand duchess and succeeding would be much less entertaining. 


But what I thought was really interesting about this film is how much the animated 1997 film, also called Anastasia, borrows from it. It’s the same characters - the handsome schemer (Yul Brynner in the Dmitri role), Anna fresh out of the orphanage/asylum (our winner Ingrid in the Meg Ryan role) and while there’s no ghostly Rasputin, cute bat Bartok or Pooka the dog, scenes often play out in exactly the same way. At points I was recognising lines from it, just reworded in the ‘97 version, as if the writer was there with a thesaurus to change it up a bit. 


Bergman disappoints here, she provides a fairly simplistic and at times overdone performance. Particularly as a ‘mad lady’ at the beginning, she’s irritating and I doubt there was much research that went into it. She’s out-acted by Helen Hayes (in the Angela Lansbury role) as a sad and lonely Dowager Duchess - and interestingly this was Hayes’ return to cinema after an absence when Hayes’ daughter sadly died. 


But most impressive - and I cannot shout it loud enough - is Martitia Hunt. In the Bernadette Peters/Sophie role of the Dowager’s trusted lady-in-waiting, Hunt is magnificently funny, campy and quick-witted. She enlivens every scene she’s in and frankly by the end, I didn’t give a fig about Bergman or even Hayes - I wanted Martitia! Her presence lends the film a much-needed energy while never straying into pantomime. 


It’s particularly worth noting that Hunt is best known for a very different performance. Her iconic performance as Miss Havisham in the David Lean Great Expectations is still upheld as the most influential portrayal of that character - and the one that every actress is still yet to beat. Even heavyweights like Gillian Anderson and Helena Bonham Carter have fallen short of the malevolent, creepy and heartbreaking performance Martitia Hunt delivered - a world away from the light, gossipy and campy turn she gives us in this film. 


As a film, it’s fine - although I do think the ‘97 Anastasia delivered the same plot with more verve and polish. It’s another film that ends very abruptly (did film-writers just not know how to draw films to a close in this era??) and Bergman doesn’t particularly stand out, despite her Oscar win. This film belongs in fact to the two older actresses who sweep everyone else offstage - Helen Hayes and Martitia Hunt.


Highlight

Martitia Hunt, see above. Whether tapping an attractive man on the shoulder with a parasol or gesturing footmen to leave a room, she imbues everything with a delightful joie de vivre that lifts the whole film. 


Lowlight

Oddly it’s Ingrid Bergman for me. She turns in an okay performance (certainly not award-worthy) but we’ve already seen her this project in Gaslight where she was phenomenal. This doesn’t live up to her past work.


Mark

6/10


Paul says...

This is neither the late-90s/early-00s pop star, nor is it the 1997 animated film that not so much revised history as churned it up in a blender and fed it to the pigs. But, watching the 1997 cartoon multiple times did at least give me an interest and an awareness of early-20th century Russian happenings, and this very much helps for this film.


It’s quite a wordy piece although it does a better job of adapting from stage to screen than lengthy, over-written works such as Long Day’s Journey Into Night or Streetcar Named Desire. Anastasia remains brisk and lively even when the characters are bombarding the audience with lengthy Russian names and references to obscure members of European royalty (some of which, it turns out, are completely made up!). It is also helped along by some extremely vivacious side characters. Doug has mentioned Martita Hunt but I also enjoyed Akim Tamiroff and Sacha Pitoeff as Yul Bryner’s squabbling sidekicks. Bryner himself oozes charisma and sexy unscrupulousness, while Helen Hayes (one of our earliest Oscar winners) skilfully delivers some sassy one-liners as the Dowager Empress. At one point, Martita Hunt is excitedly describing the Grand Ball downstairs, to which the Empress retorts, “Yes, I can smell the moth balls”. 


This means it is easy to understand what is happening and why, and a film that could have felt turgid and insipid is actually very pacy and watchable. But the downside is that character nuances and opportunities for some really powerful moments become lost in talking. The romance between Anna and Bounine is immensely unconvincing, especially bearing in mind how unpleasant he is to her (it’s very Henry Higgins/Eliza Doolittle) so their eventual elopement is mind-boggling and anticlimactic. Bounine’s background as an anti-communist White Russian isn’t really explored. The Empress briefly mentions his mistreatment in the army and we get the impression that, being the owner of a club in Paris, he is entrepreneurial but potentially still treated as a foreigner. But his exact motivations are muddled and unexplored. 


Also, I would have liked the Empress herself to have been a much more tragic figure. The Empress Maria Feodorovna outlived 4 of her 6 children, lived in total denial that her son, his wife and five of her grandchildren were murdered in cold blood in a basement (the youngest, Alexei, was 13 years old). She was ostracised from the country she once ruled and never returned. But the script characterises her as a prickly, spikey old biddy. It’s a good job that the role is in the hands of Helen Hayes who effortlessly combines gravitas with comic timing. See our blog post on her to find out about one of the longest and most successful careers in performing arts.


I agree with Doug also that this isn’t Bergman’s best example of work. She’s very good although a bit maudlin sometimes here, and she’s basically playing the characters she always played (downtrodden, vulnerable European women eventually finding strength in herself). Her first Oscar-winning performance in Gaslight is much more powerful. She would go on to win one more Oscar in her career- Best Supporting Actress for Murder on the Orient Express playing yet another downtrodden, vulnerable European woman eventually finding strength in herself.


Interestingly, Anastasia was Bergman’s big comeback after she was heavily lambasted for her extra-marital affair with director Roberto Rossellini, who was also married. She was even denounced in the US Senate! It seems most of the public vitriol comes from the fact that Bergman’s persona (through the characters she plays) was very moralistic and pure. If she was known for playing whores and murderers, perhaps it wouldn’t have been such a shock. She and Rossellini eventually separated, although they had one child- actress Isabella Rossellini. Bergman continued to have a strong acting career, but sadly died on her 67th birthday in 1982 after a battle with cancer. 


Anastasia may not be Bergman’s most powerful or memorable work, but it’s a colourful and fun piece and I was never bored. It’s perfect for a cold, rainy Sunday afternoon with plenty of blankets and hot drinks. You can enliven yourself afterwards by watching Meg Ryan battle Rasputin in the 1997 version. Don’t expect accurate history lessons from either film. 


Highlight

The scene when the Empress and Anna first meet is a great example of two titans of the classic Hollywood era (Bergman and Hayes) given space to just do what they do best for about 5 minutes.


Lowlight

The ending has no climax at all. Anna and Bounine suddenly running off together isn’t the denouement that the film was building towards and it seems to suddenly stop. I was actually rooting for Anna to shack up with the handsome and, more importantly, stonkingly wealthy Prince she dances with. He’s a frigging Prince for god’s sake, Anna!


Mark
7/10

Saturday 8 October 2022

28. Anna Magnani in 'The Rose Tattoo' (1955)

 


Plot Intro

Serafina Delle Rose (Anna Magnani) is a Sicilian seamstress living in the south of the US with her husband and young daughter Rosa (Marisa Pavan). When her husband is killed in a sudden automobile accident, Serefina descends into depression and reclusivity over the following years, exacerbated by the discovery that her late husband was both a criminal and an adulterer. But hope shines for both mother and daughter when Rosa falls for a handsome young sailor (Ben Cooper) and Serafina is wooed by a bumbling truck driver, Alvaro (Burt Lancaster).


Doug says...

This is the first film we’ve watched since taking a lengthy break from the project and we actually watched it just before we stopped - and so we watched it again. Interestingly (at least to me), my opinion has grown much kinder towards the film in the 18 months or so between viewings. 


This being Tennessee Williams, subtlety is not the name of the game. Williams is lurid, overblown, near-fantastical and he never met an emotion he didn’t immediately want to increase by 1,000 per cent. Sometimes it works (Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Glass Menagerie), sometimes it’s just weird (Suddenly Last Summer, The Notebook of Trigorin). Here - it kind of works. 


Let’s deal with the stereotypes first. My god, Williams goes full pelt into his Italian Community Fantasy. Luckily Magnani was actually Italian otherwise this would be too problematic to bear, but every stereotype possible is rolled out - loud Italian women gossiping in groups, silent Italian men carrying out romantic affairs, a mad Italian grandmother chasing a goat (too niche?) 


But luckily Williams is too good a writer to get waylaid, and once he gets into his stride, the characters emerge as interesting, evolved people. Serafina is clearly very repressed, unable to talk about sex or romance without praying at her home altar or insisting that her daughter Rosa’s very nice boyfriend reveal whether he’s a virgin or not before taking her out. Rosa is itching for life and adventure while Alvaro, a truck driver descended from the village idiot, is charming, bumbling and ultimately the key to Serafina’s stepping out of grief. 


And THIS is where this film is superb. The first half, I spent wondering why Magnani had won the trophy for what is an oppressively overwrought performance. She wrings her hands (at one point falls over in such unintended slapstick genius that I made Paul rewind and watch it again while laughing hysterically) and generally mopes about. But Burt Lancaster only enters half way through and his appearance leads Serafina to drop her widow’s weeds to become a buoyant, laughing woman again. Magnani’s switch from grief to joy is utterly believable - and captivating. I found myself laughing with her as she begins to enjoy the silliness of life, and when she ultimately forgives Alvaro for being his hasty, impulsive self and takes him in to her home, I was celebrating (along with all the Italian women who loudly shout cheerfully at her door. What a cockblock). 


It’s a naturalistic and subtle performance which somehow works with the florid script. Williams wrote it specifically for Magnani and it’s hard to imagine another actress managing the growth and switch of Serafina’s character as well. Magnani was apparently renowned for her naturalistic acting but I actually think her performance is a weirdly fitting blend of naturalism and pantomime. It works - and it wouldn’t for many others. 


Elsewhere, there are decent performances from the daughter Rosa and Lancaster impresses with a goofy, resolutely daft performance. The film (and plot) benefits from him coming in halfway through, bringing light and happiness with him. However I’d also like to throw in a good word for Jo Van Fleet, an actress who plays the small role of Bessie - a nasty and entitled white woman who demands Serafina miss her daughter’s graduation to fix her dress, and then in a fit of rage reveals Serafina’s dead husband’s infidelity to her. It’s a nasty caricaturish piece but Van Fleet turns in a barnstorming performance, shouting and screaming with energetic fury and stabbing in the proverbial needle where she knows it will do most damage. She actually won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress in this year - but for a different film, East of Eden (as well as a Tony Award the previous year starring opposite legend Lillian Gish). In a way it’s a shame as I’d have loved to explore her other work in a ‘Best of the Rest’ so here’s my little tribute to Van Fleet and her mostly forgotten but twinkling career.


Highlight

Anna Magnani navigates the tempestuous challenges of a Tennessee Williams play-turned-movie with superb skill. A deserved win, supported by strong performances from the cast including Lancaster and Van Fleet.


Lowlight

The first half does lag a bit with all the dreary grief and sadness, but it’s a necessary lag in order for the lightness of the second half to truly hit. Perhaps a few more mad Italian grandmothers with goats would have sped it along. 


Mark

10/10


Paul says...

I don’t think Tennessee Williams had ever actually met any Italians before writing this. I think he just looked into the future, saw the Dolmio adverts with the family of puppets, and thought “I got this one!” Admittedly he does well to depict a part of society that probably didn’t get much coverage at the time. A social group of immigrants and their children who live a life of relative poverty, keeping themselves isolated from xenophobic establishments such as the police and government in order to protect themselves. A society constructed around religion, closely-connected community, fiercely protective of their children, and with lashings of vigilantism thrown in.


But this film isn’t really about them. The Godfather, for all its faults, does a better job of examining Italian communities in America. This film is more about how loud, brash and aggressive Italians can be…..apparently. There is so much “You make-a me sick-a!”, slaps, gasps and falls to the floor (especially in the second half) that we found ourselves creased up in fits of laughter. I think sometimes you’re supposed to be, other times not so much. Either way, there’s a silliness to this film that feels a bit disrespectful to expat Italians. 


I think Tennessee wrote it this way in order to construct the emotional, matriarchal figure of Serafina, a character he wrote specifically for Anna Magnani who was known for playing impoverished, downtrodden but stoic, strong, forceful women. She turned down the stage production because her English wasn’t strong enough and focused on working in the flourishing Italian cinema industry with directors such as Rossellini and Fellini. By the time The Rose Tattoo entered film production, she was ready, and she nabbed her only Oscar for it, beating Susan Hayward, Katharine Hepburn, Jennifer Jones and Eleanor Parker to the award. She was the only one out of the five to have never been nominated before, so her lively performance evidently made an impact. 


Putting any stereotypes in the script aside, Magnani is great to watch. She manages to flit between emotions very quickly without feeling unnatural or clownish. She skirts dangerously close to campy melodrama but never quite crosses the line, ensuring the character feels real even if the rest of the gossipy, shouty Italian women in the background do not. It ensures that the second half of the film, which descends into typical Tennessee Williams over-writing (I lost count of how many times the word “rose” is thrown in) and insanely blatant attempts to force the title into the script in an A Passing Fancy sort of way (this is a reference to one of the greatest bits of satire from Family Guy - look it up). Most of this part of the film is her harsh, defensive exterior being broken down by the chaos that Alvaro brings into her household in a similar fashion to Shakespeare’s Taming of the Shrew (without the misogyny). Magnani and Lancaster make a great pairing and although it all goes on about half an hour longer than it needs to, there’s a sense of fun between them that makes the ending refreshingly uplifting compared to Williams’ usual bittersweetness. 


Nonetheless it’s not a film I would watch again. But at least we got to see probably Magnani’s greatest and most quintessential role. The strength and tenacity she puts into her character may have developed from her own personal life. Her only child contracted polio at a very young age and was left disabled, causing Magnani to have to work extra hard to pay for medical and household bills, a situation that many other parents even now can identify with painfully. She maintained fame and popularity for the rest of her life and career, being considered one of the most important figures in Italian cinema, and being compared to another famously lugubrious European actress, Greta Garbo. She died at 65 from cancer in 1973 and huge crowds gathered for her funeral in Rome.


Highlight

The scene in which Serafina discovers her late husband’s infidelity from two local American gossips (Jo Van Fleet and Florence Sundstrom) has a theatrical punch that I quite liked. It starts almost like a Victoria Wood comedic skit before descending into frenzied anarchy when Serafina reacts to the reveal. It’s one scene that manages to balance comedy and tragedy a bit more successfully.


Lowlight

Serafina’s eventual confrontation with her late husband’s lover has ended up becoming unintentionally hilarious. She storms into a seedy bar/casino and confronts the woman, who then tears open her shirt to reveal the incriminating rose tattoo. The ensuing fight has more Dynasty vibes than it should do.


Mark
6/10

Saturday 1 October 2022

27. Grace Kelly in 'The Country Girl' (1954)


Plot Intro

Theatre director Bernie Dodd (William Holden) insists on employing down-on-his-luck actor Frank Elgin (Bing Crosby) for his new musical, despite resistance from other producers. Bernie works hard to persuade Frank to join the production but as rehearsals get underway, he gradually gets to know Frank and his wife Georgie (Grace Kelly) more and more, and realises that various past traumas and mental health problems are rife within the marriage. 


Paul says...

While the name of Audrey Hepburn evokes fashion and glamour, and the name of Bette Davis evokes drama and exuberance, the name of Grace Kelly evokes a sense of opulence and grandeur, and not solely because she eventually became European royalty. Throughout her (comparatively short) film career, her statuesque figure and elegant acting style made her an icon of 1950s fashion. Her legacy for this remains, as shown by this very film being quoted (amongst others) in Mika’s 2007 hit single, Grace Kelly


Interestingly, Grace Kelly’s only Oscar win is probably not a quintessential example of her work. She was one of the most enduring “Hitchcock blondes” (blonde-headed actresses whom Alfred Hitchcock liked to employ as leads, others being Janet Leigh, Tippi Hedren, Eva Marie Saint and Kim Novak), and was more closely associated with high society/royal characters. 


Here, she is as dowdy and miserable as they come. The Country Girl is essentially a film about recovering from trauma, and how a lack of a supportive base and healthy therapeutic coping techniques can lead to far worse consequences. In the case of Frank and Georgie, the death of their young son (a tragic accident that Frank blames himself for) has led to Frank’s alcoholism, depression and, most significantly, compulsive lying. Behind Georgie’s back, he often claims that it is she who is struggling to cope with life, that it is she who needs him to not have a career so that he can care for her, and it is she who drinks and hides from the world. In actual fact, this is all him. The film’s strength lies in the audience discovering all of this gradually through the eyes of Bernie, who initially sympathises with Frank and vilifies Georgie, but soon realises he has got it all wrong. True, Frank’s claims about Georgie’s behaviour feel insincere and not completely in keeping with what we see of her, but it is believable that Bernie should be taken in by his lies, especially when we look at the film through a feminist lens and see how society considers that the woman should be the “hysterical” one and it’s just not possible for a man to have a complete mental breakdown.


I can also see why Grace got her (only) Best Actress nomination and win for this. As I said, she’s playing very much against type. She is styled in a way that evokes exhaustion and constant discontent with her life and husband, as well as a desperate desire to help him, and a miserable resignation to the fact that she probably cannot. The poise and self-assurance that Grace usually possesses in films such as Rear Window and High Society is gone in place of a more hunched, disgruntled, bone-weary demeanour.


But the major downside to The Country Girl is that its story is so melodramatic and, in the last 45 minutes, downright bonkers, that its themes of alcoholism and trauma get lost amidst the “DUM DUM-DUUUUUM” moments. The flashback sequence where we discover the circumstances of Frank and Georgie’s son’s death (he was hit by a car whilst Frank was having his picture taken for a newspaper) is edited like something out of a soap opera. Doug and I laughed rather than gasped, and I think it would have been infinitely better to have a character explain what happened rather than show it. Meanwhile, there is a plot development within the second hour that elicited the biggest “WTF” reaction from both of us since we started blogging (see my lowlight below for more details). 


This can happen with films of this era. Whilst some tackle social issues with realism and sensitivity (see The Lost Weekend and The Best Years of Our Lives), we also get the likes of Gentleman’s Agreement and Johnny Belinda where themes such as anti-semitism and sexual abuse are evidently thrown in because they’re dramatic and sell tickets. 


So The Country Girl is certainly not the most quintessential Grace Kelly film, nor is it her best, although she does well with a slightly turgid script. I would recommend any of her Hitchcock collaborations or High Society to get a real sense of who she was and why she was so popular. She’s also in one of the most high-regarded and unusual films ever made, High Noon, although that’s more of a Gary Cooper vehicle (I urge you to watch it though).


Remarkably for someone so well known, Grace was only in eleven films between 1951 and 1956. In 1955, at the Cannes Film Festival, she ended up doing a photo session with none other than Prince Rainier III of Monaco. The two married a year later and it was a Charles-and-Diana-style event in terms of the worldwide media frenzy it elicited. It was watched by 30 million people live, and 36 seamstresses worked for 6 weeks on Grace’s dress. Grace also gained a whopping 142 titles.


Naturally, she retired from acting (I mean, wouldn’t YOU?) and threw herself into princessy things like diplomacy and charity work and raising three children. Famously, Grace died at the age of 52 in 1982 when she had a stroke whilst driving along a mountainside and the car went over the edge (she drives along the very same road during her film To Catch A Thief). Miraculously, her seventeen-year-old daughter was in the car too, and survived. Prince Rainier never remarried and died in 2005, one of the longest-reigning European monarchs of all time.


Highlight

The gradual set-up and discovery of the true nature of Frank and Georgie’s relationship through outsider Bernie’s eyes is a great way to frame the drama- and may have toyed with 1950s audiences’ gendered preconceptions.


Lowlight

The final half of the film descends into melodrama, almost demeaning the underlying themes (themes which remain relevant to this day).


Mark
5/10


Doug says...

Luckily Paul has written a lengthy review of this because, dear reader, I must confess that I’m writing this over a year after watching it. That’s right, we got slightly distracted by other things (eg getting married etc etc). And I’m flat out refusing to watch it again because I remember very little except that I didn’t really enjoy it. 


What I do remember is that this is the film that Grace Kelly Does Dowdy. Except, much like Dolly Parton in Christmas On The Square, Kelly finds it physically impossible to go dowdy. So we’re left with a weirdly glam Kelly wearing some thick-rimmed glasses. Cynics might say it’s Oscar bait to ‘play plain’ (remember Mariah Carey getting a lot of buzz for Precious?) but reader - it works. Kelly won. 


This film felt oddly unfinished to me, I remember the ending feeling thoroughly confusing and undeserved, with sharp plot turn-abouts and frankly bad writing. Kelly does well throughout - you can see she’s working hard to look worn out and miserable, and the film does pull off its clever trick well - as a viewer you suddenly realise you’ve been believing him, when it’s actually her who’s in the right. 


But as a whole, this was a weaker instalment in this project and as I say - it feels like Oscar bait with a starry cast playing against type in a pretty shoddily written piece. Perhaps the memories from a year ago aren’t very kind, but oh well. Sue me. 


Highlight

Watching Grace Kelly is always a treat, and I will give her props for throwing herself into playing a very different role. 


Lowlight

This beat Judy Garland in A Star Is Born? Really? No.  


Mark

4/10