Posts Tagged ‘criterion collection’

Criterion Conquest: The Lady Vanishes

LadyVanishesCriterion

by Jason Wilson

The Lady Vanishes (1938)
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
Screenplay by Sidney Gilliat and Frank Launder
Based on the story “The Wheel Spins” by Ethel Lina White
Starring Margaret Lockwood, Michael Redgrave, Paul Lukas, Dame May Whitty, Naunton Wayne and Basil Radford.

If anyone becomes a film buff, or even casual enthusiast of cinema, it is impossible to ignore Alfred Hitchcock. It is easy, however, to look past much of his work because of titles like Psycho, Rear Window, North by Northwest, The Birds and Vertigo. Those five films were the ones I immediately thought of when I heard his name. They are linked to his icon’s stature and some of his earlier films, particularly those he made in England before emigrating to the United States, get lost in the shuffle.

Obviously, film historians have plowed through his earlier work but not everyone has the time, resources or gumption to do that. Luckily, Criterion has made a few of his less mainstream films available, though some are now out of print. The Lady Vanishes was actually re-released in a two-disc set a couple years ago and is still readily available now. It seems that out of the gate, Criterion was more interested in the movie as a stand-alone and neglected the special features until re-releases down the road. Seven Samurai got the upgrade and a nearly bare-bones edition of The Lady Vanishes did as well.

The following review will contain some spoilers, so read on with caution.

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The opening sequence in the film introduces two lads named Caldicott and Charters. They are proper, slightly snooty and massive cricket fans. Ostensibly, they seem to be the protagonists of the film, only their shenanigans serve as a light introduction to their surroundings. They are holed up in a hotel waiting, along with all the other patrons, for a delayed train to London. Caldicott and Charters pop up now and again and serve mostly as a bumbling comic relief, though the movie is never all that bleak to begin with. There is an air of whimsy about it perpetuated largely by leading man Michael Redgrave.

Redgrave (father of actresses Vanessa and Lynn) plays Gilbert, a musicologist full of smarm and wit. He is handsome but his charms are less defined than his snide and selfish attitude. For the early scenes, Gilbert is more of a pest than either a protagonist or antagonist, though it is obvious from the first scene he shares with Margaret Lockwood’s Iris that he will be her knight in shining armour by the end of it. Maybe it wasn’t so predictable at the time of release, but 70 years later plot conventions have a tendency to be repetitive so even though it is a precursor to many similar films, I saw it later. This is not a complaint. I’d rather twists occur naturally instead of being forced (M. Night Shyamalan since Signs for instance) and at least Gilbert’s ascension to protector and co-conspirator comes across as organic and believable. To have it happen any other way would not have made sense.

Which brings us to Iris. Iris complains about music being too loud in the room above her at the hotel and Gilbert gets kicked out of his room only to forcibly shack up in her room when he figures out who ratted on him. She relents under pressure and he gets his room back. She, naturally, hates him and his boorish behaviour. The next day, awaiting the train, Iris takes a potted plant off the noggin. It was pushed from a window above her by an unknown person. Iris befriends an old lady by the name of Miss Froy who helps her to her spot on the train. They converse, have tea and Iris has a nap. She awakes to discover Miss Froy is gone and no one in her carriage or on the rest of the train seems to have any knowledge of the older lady. Did the plant cause her to hallucinate or is there a conspiracy afoot?

Obviously it’s a conspiracy. Hitchcock plays with the possibility that she may have dreamed it all and that Iris is in fact concussed but the clues slowly mount until the players are in place and the audience knows who is on which side. And here comes a spoiler! The doctor, whom Gilbert and Iris had confided in (you can always trust a doctor!) is the primary conspirator on the train who abducted Miss Froy. He is accompanied by a woman dressed as a nun. This is the point of contention I have with the film along with the fact that Miss Froy was a spy…well who suspects the elderly, I guess. The nun, on a dime, turns on the doctor and other cohorts to help Gilbert and Iris save Miss Froy (this is still before the climax of the film). Her motivation seems to be that she didn’t sign on to be an accomplice to murder. It seems too convenient and more of a plot contrivance than a true development of character. While the relationship between Gilbert and Iris develops organically, the nun is barely more than a cardboard cutout.

Then again, the specifics about why Miss Froy was captured, what the doctor wants, the political motivations, are all intentionally vague, glossed over or left out altogether. The why is unimportant as Iris herself is mostly ignorant to the reasons but is simply trying to save her new friend regardless of the situation. So the audience is left in the dark much like the protagonist and is left to enjoy the banter and tension without thinking too hard. It’s a fluffy film with a darker subtext of political oppression. The Lady Vanishes is an enjoyable effort but lacks the gravitas and intensity that made Hitchcock’s later work so powerful and impressive. It’s still worth a watch because it is very entertaining and has some amusing characters, though others are underused and just there (though the judge avoiding public scorn is punished for his cowardice, so he does have purpose).

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Among the special features is a featurette narrated by Hitchcock scholar Leonard Leff. He goes in depth about the making of the film and the distinction of calling Hitchcock a thrill maker. Hitchcock apparently was seldom regarded as an artist in those days and received little funding or respect despite his films being financially successful. Leff provides some fascinating information, but his delivery is fairly bland.

He says the movie was filmed almost entirely on a 90-foot set acting as the train. Hitchcock used the same carriage chambers over and over again and otherwise used miniatures and models for outside shots, especially noticeable in the opening sequence at the hotel.

Leff also acknowledges much of what I considered shortcomings and while knowing a lot of the misinformation or lack of information entirely was on purpose, it doesn’t exactly improve my thoughts on those aspects. While Hitchcock might not have wanted to dwell on the minutia of the details, I would have liked to have known why these people were thrust into such a dire string of events. The Lady Vanishes is still exceptionally entertaining and if you enjoy Caldicott and Charters, you are treated to a feature length movie with them at the center called Crook’s Tour. It had never been released on home video until the Criterion two-disc of the Lady Vanishes.

Rounding it out is a commentary track from film historian Bruce Eder, a couple new essays and excerpts from a radio interview between Hitchcock and filmmaker Francois Truffaut (whose 400 Blows is coming up soon in the Criterion Conquest!).

I encourage you to check out The Lady Vanishes unless you hate old films for some irrational reason. “Eww, black and white!” Otherwise it’s worth a glance just to see Hitchcock in action years before his biggest films cemented him as the icon of suspense he is to this day.

Next up on the Criterion Conquest: Federico Fellini’s Amarcord

Criterion Conquest: Seven Samurai


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by Jason Wilson

Seven Samurai (1954)
Directed by Akira Kurosawa
Written by Akira Kurosawa, Shinobu Hashimoto and Hideo Oguni
Starring Takashi Shimura, Yoshio Inaba, Daisuke Kato, Minoru Chiaki, Isao Kimura, Seiji Miyaguchi and Toshiro Mifune.

It took me a long time to fully immerse myself in foreign films. I was all about the Hollywood system and watched the Oscars every year like a good little boy and accepted that they were pretty much spot on (though I never agreed with Dances With Wolves over Goodfellas or Titanic over L.A. Confidential). I can’t say for sure but I don’t think it was until university where I decided to dabble with foreign language films. High school was my discovery phase of film in general. I started with the newer stuff and slowly took in the Godfather films and older Spielberg stuff like Jaws and even some Kubrick and Hitchcock.

*A quick note: Access was always a problem. I lived in rural New Brunswick and foreign films weren’t at the ready until the last couple years. Even now classic foreign movies like anything by Kurosawa are hard to come by in my hometown.*

After a couple film classes here and there, my appreciation for global cinema started to breathe. I had started watching old Westerns by Sergio Leone like Fistful of Dollars and learned it was based on Yojimbo, another Kurosawa movie. Through my reading I came to learn The Magnificent Seven was not an original story but one based on Seven Samurai. Luckily, living in Fredericton, I was able to find a rental copy and it blew me away.

Cut to several years later and I’ve seen a fair chunk of Kurosawa’s filmography but had yet to revisit the one that got me started. I’m an obsessive and tend to re-watch movies multiple times, especially the ones I love and even some I hate (I’ve seen Daredevil three times). I figured I could definitely stand to watch Seven Samurai again.

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It’s a sprawling epic that embarrasses pretty much any of its kind released today. It’s a deep character study with intensity and wild action and swordplay. It’s three and a half hours long but the time is used economically and not a minute is wasted. Each of the seven ronin are fully developed and maintain their own identity, none of them are one-dimensional characters and none are used as mere window dressing. Even the supposed secondary characters like the farmers they are hired to protect are presented with depth and dignity unseen in many epics of today (I will give credit to Braveheart in this regard though, Gibson and company had a colourful cast of people in that flick).

The story in a nutshell is a group of bandits are discovered to be plotting a raid on a village of farmers once their barley harvest is ready. The farmers decide, at the behest of an elder, to hire samurai to protect the village. Kanbei (played by the fantastic Takashi Shimura) is the first one recruited. He’s an aging samurai without a master expecting to live out the rest of his days as a vagabond. Out of a sense of duty to morality he takes on the farmer’s cause even though he knows he may die and they cannot pay him. He slowly recruits others and the seven of them journey to the village to prepare for the onslaught.

It follows a formula of the lone wolf hero (multiplied by seven) or gun for hire but focuses on the human elements of the story. But it’s not treated as above the action. Instead the characters, the story, the action and the themes are all treated as equal and thus the film is one of the most well rounded and thoughtful action films ever committed to film. Kikuchiyo (Toshiro Mifune) could easily be considered the comic relief but in the same breath he could be considered the most tragic character among the samurai. His past his slowly revealed as the movie progresses; there are hints and guesses by other characters until he has two specific breaking points where he reveals his lineage and history.

It’s incredible because in many stories like this a love story will seem completely out of place but Kurosawa even gets that right. The farmers don’t trust the samurai even though they rely on them for their salvation. The farmers force their daughters to cut their hair and dress like boys so they will not fall into the romantic trap of the village protectors. Of course this has to be visited again later on and it addresses the disparity between social classes and the idea that love between two people regardless of their status is a beautiful thing. Kurosawa and his co-writers Hashimoto and Oguni put together a complex yet simple to understand story that works on every aspect of humanity. It lives up to the hype because it takes itself seriously with a sense of whimsy.

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The three-disc edition released by the Criterion Collection is one of the best DVDs ever released. While the special features may seem minimal despite the three discs, it makes up for it with the quality of each. There are two feature-length commentaries (neither of which I was able to listen to…I must purchase this DVD). One by five film scholars and the other by Japanese film expert Michael Jeck.

There are two 50-minute documentaries; one on the making of the film itself and another on the impact of samurai cinema and traditions and how Kurosawa was influenced. There’s also a two-hour long interview with Kurosawa himself from 1993 (he died in 1998) with filmmaker Nagisa Oshima covering most of the films of his career and his early life as well. If you purchase the DVD you’ll also get a booklet of essays on the film. By the end you’ll know all you need to know so you can brag to all your friends about your expertise on the samurai genre. The Seven Samurai set provides an intimate look at Kurosawa and what many consider his masterpiece (take imdb with a grain of salt but this film rests at #15 on their top 250 of all time).

It’s a humanistic movie with amazing action and intensity. It doesn’t feel like its runtime, if anything it feels like it should be longer. That’s not to say Kurosawa left anything out, he didn’t, but by the end the audience is so attached to the goings on that more of the story would be welcome. Instead we can revisit it over and over again. I gladly will…if for no other reason than I should see it more times than I’ve seen Daredevil.

Next on the Criterion Conquest: Alfred Hitchcock’s The Lady Vanishes

Criterion Conquest: Grand Illusion


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by Jason Wilson

The Criterion Collection is a company based in the United States that became popularized during the brief laserdisc movement in the 1990s. It introduced the concept of commentary tracks and have generally released the best available versions of films on DVD. It researches the films and put together a plethora of special features for each release. In some cases (like Orson Welles’ Mr. Arkadin), Criterion digs deep and produces a version of a film that had never been available prior to the special release.

Since moving to DVD, Criterion has released nearly 500 titles and it is my goal to watch them all in order and review them all here. There are some limitations as films like Hard Boiled, The Killer, Sid & Nancy, This is Spinal Tap, The Silence of the Lambs, Robocop and maybe a few others are out of print and not available at the local video rental emporium. So in lieu of watching whatever edition is available, I will simply skip it and move on to the next. They are organized numerically by a spine number next to the logo on (you guessed it) the spine of the DVD case.

Is it lame? Maybe. Geeky? Definitely. Fun? You know it.

Grand Illusion (1937)

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Directed by Jean Renoir
Starring Jean Gabin, Dita Parlo, Pierre Fresnay and Erich von Stroheim.
Written by Jean Renoir and Charles Spaak

Grand Illusion was released in 1937 as a portrait of mankind during the years leading up to the Second World War. It was directly anti-war without being derogatory to any race or culture. The point was to show that the invisible borders separating countries were pointless and the differences between mankind were skin deep. Sadly it didn’t exactly effect the next war from beginning — though it was considered a dangerous movie by the Third Reich. The original prints were believed to be lost during German’s occupation of France in the early 40s. Luckily in 1958, the prints were re-discovered uncut and it was again available to be seen by the public.

The Criterion Collection chose Grand Illusion as its first release in large part to its cultural significance. Orson Welles once declared it as his desert island movie; the one film he would save if he had to choose. The company secured the rights and through digital technology was able to restore the visuals and audio to pristine condition. There is a special feature included showing the differences between the film print and the eventual digital transfer.The movie was over 60 years old when it received its DVD release on Criterion. To think all the crackles and blemishes could be removed to make a transfer this crisp is astounding.

Jean Renoir, the director of Grand Illusion, was a pilot in World War One and he draws on his own personal experiences for the creation of the film. Two men, Marechal and Boeldieu are shot down in German territory and are taken prisoner. They are taken to a prisoner camp where they meet with fellow members of the French army. While before the war, these men would never have conversed due to the disparity in social status, these men form their own bonds and work toward the common goal of escape. The class structure is broached as subtly as the prejudices between culture and country. These petty stereotypes and segregations, found not only in war but in everyday society, are man made and a result of greed and lust for power.

There is a sequence where the French prisoners receive a shipment of costumes so they can put on a show, and at least for a couple hours they can escape their imprisonment. It may be fleeting but it is a glimpse of life before the war. Some of the German soldiers attend and for a moment it is a sign of connection, where no man is bound by their allegiances in the war. This lasts until news arrives that France was able to take back one of its townships that had been taken by the German army. The French prisoners immediately sing the French National Anthem and once again bringing everyone back into the reality of the moment.

The play sequence isn’t all cheerful. As they joke and prepare with their costumes, one of the soldiers comes in dressed as a woman. Everyone stops the laughing and joking and all look at him longingly and even saddened. Without words, they communicate their solemnity about missing their loved ones, wives, girlfriends and even children. Freedom seems like it will never return and this is their present as well as their future.

Marechal and Boeldieu are transferred to a different camp, a fortress under the watchful eye of Captain von Rauffenstein (played by Erich von Stroheim – also in Sunset Blvd.). The Captain and Boeldieu know one another from before the war. Both were aristocrats and both became soldiers. The two of them have several moments discussing the gore of war and pointlessness of it all but concede to being powerless to stop it. They follow their orders and hope to be on the winning side and that peace may follow.

“Nothing grows here but ivy and nettles,” the Captain says when Boeldieu compliments him on the one flower he has. The land is barren. It’s a warning that escape would be suicide. It also serves as a melancholy reminder of the marching feet on the fields of war killing the land underneath.

The ensuing escape attempt and the moments between the Captain and Boeldieu are both exciting and deeply thoughtful. Like the rest of the film, it’s all about how the invisible boundaries and prejudices are exactly that; invisible. War is a pointless exercise that does not represent valor or courage but greed and pettiness. It comes as no surprise that Goebbels thought of the movie as a danger to the war effort.

On the disc, the special features are not exactly plentiful but they do offer some added contextual information that is fascinating and worth checking out. There is an audio commentary by essayist Peter Cowie, archival radio recordings from the late 30s when Grand Illusion received Best Foreign Film from the New York Film Critics and several essays on Renoir, the meaning of the name of the film and more. There is also a great video introduction from Renoir himself about the making of the film, his own experiences at war and the people who worked on the film .

The prize feature I mentioned earlier where the digital transfer is shown from specific scenes. It’s an amazing feature about the digital process.

Grand Illusion is a phenomenal movie that set the stage for prisoner of war films like King Rat, The Great Escape and even The Bridge on the River Kwai. It was the first of its kind and was a terrific choice for the Criterion introduction to DVD.

Next up: Spine # 2, Akira Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai