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thedullwoodexperiment

~ Viewing movies in a different light

thedullwoodexperiment

Tag Archives: Kevin Brownlow

My Top 10 Movies – Part Nine

18 Tuesday Feb 2014

Posted by dullwood68 in Movies

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American Civil War, Buster Keaton, Clyde Bruckman, Comedy, Kevin Brownlow, Marion Mack, National Film Theatre, Review, Silent film, The General (1926)

The General (1926)

General, The

D: Clyde Bruckman, Buster Keaton / 75m

Cast: Buster Keaton, Marion Mack, Glen Cavender, Jim Farley, Frederick Vroom, Charles Henry Smith, Frank Barnes

A lot of my earliest movie memories are of watching silent comedians such as Charlie Chaplin, Roscoe “Fatty” Arbuckle, Harold Lloyd, and Laurel and Hardy.  When I was growing up, their movies  were a major part of the programming during the mornings on the UK’s BBC 2 channel, along with the Flash Gordon serials, Tarzan movies, and later, Charlie Chan features.  Silent short films were often included in the schedules as filler, but for me they were more welcome than most of the feature length, talking pictures that were shown.  The Tarzan movies starring Johnny Weissmuller seemed interchangeable after a while, and when Andy Hardy and Dr. Kildare entered the fray, their small-town dramatics quickly felt repetitive.  No, it was Chaplin et al. who were my preferred choice, and I did my best to make sure I didn’t miss any that were shown (this was before the advent of video).

At first, it was the antics of Laurel and Hardy that I liked most.  Then, I saw a short called The Haunted House (1921), followed (a few days later) by One Week (1920).  Now I was asking myself, Who is this Buster Keaton?  (And why don’t the BBC show more of his movies?)  I kept checking the schedules for any more Keaton movies, eventually seeing only a half dozen or so more.  It was frustrating, especially as I now knew he’d made feature length movies as well; where were they when a budding cineaste needed them?

Here my memory becomes a little less reliable.  I know that College (1927) was the first of his features that I saw, but when The General came along, that moment is lost in the mists of early onset Alzheimers.  But it was a pivotal moment, because like the true aficionado of silent film that I believed I was – I wasn’t Kevin Brownlow, but as a self-taught teenager, I didn’t think I was doing too badly – when I saw The General I knew I was watching Keaton’s masterpiece, the movie he will always be remembered for above all his other movies.

General, The - scene

What I liked straight away was the level of detail, the lengths that Keaton and his co-director, the (for me) much underrated Clyde Bruckman had gone to in order to recreate the American Civil War, and to re-enact a famous event from that period.  So often comedy exists in its own little “bubble”, a place where a joke or a gag can have the most effect.  But here, Keaton uses the War as the grounding for all the jokes to come, all the visual gags and physical stunts, so that when you’re watching them they don’t seem as far-fetched as they would do if they were presented purely by themselves.  For me, there will never be a greater physical stunt/gag than when he sits on the train’s cowcatcher and flips railroad ties out of the way of the approaching General; knowing this was done for real with no camera trickery involved just makes it all the more impressive (and frightening if it had gone wrong).

There’s a subtlety to The General, as well, a sense that Keaton was aiming higher by making the comic elements arise organically from the overall mise-en-scène, along with the romantic and action elements.  Having taken an event from the War that a lot of people would either still remember or be well aware of, he takes what was, ultimately, a tragic tale, and elevates it.  In the process he provides us with an uplifting, surprisingly emotional experience that makes us laugh and urge him on, and it’s all done with a seeming effortlessness that we know can’t have been the case.  And I don’t think Keaton’s stoic features have ever been used to better effect than here.  He’s often accused of being expressionless, but in The General you’re never in any doubt as to how he’s feeling, or what he’s thinking.  Again, it’s the subtlety that makes this so fascinating to watch.

A few years ago, I took a friend to see The General at London’s National Film Theatre. It was having what they like to call an Extended Run, playing several times a day for around six weeks.  My friend has a passion for movies but he’s very much a “modern day” moviegoer; he likes the sturm und drang of today’s multiplex fare.  With this in mind I thought it would be a great idea to take him to see The General.  He had some reservations, not least because it was a silent movie, but because it was so far out of his comfort zone (even the fact that it was “only” seventy-five minutes long didn’t entirely persuade him he would be fine).  And while we waited for the movie to start he was visibly nervous (I wish I’d been able to video this).  When the movie ended, he turned to me and said, “That was incredible.  I can’t believe how incredible that was.”  Vindicated, and feeling on top of the world for seeing the movie for the first time on the big screen, I couldn’t help but feel that here was the true strength of Keaton’s masterpiece: that it can captivate and envelop anyone who comes to it.

Rating: 9/10 – not just a comedy, The General works on so many levels it’s almost embarrassing; one of the finest silent movies ever made, and as breathtaking today for its perfection as it was back in 1926.

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My Top 10 Movies – Part Two

18 Wednesday Dec 2013

Posted by dullwood68 in Movies

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Tags

Abel Gance, Albert Dieudonné, Drama, French movie, History, Kevin Brownlow, Napoleon, Review, Silent film, Triptych, True story

Napoléon (1927)

Napoleon

D: Abel Gance / 330m

Cast: Albert Dieudonné, Vladimir Roudenko, Edmond Van Daële, Gina Manès, Antonin Artaud, Alexandre Koubitzky, Marguerite Gance, Yvette Dieudonné, Philippe Hériat, Abel Gance

A five and a half hour silent movie?  One that’s unavailable in any home video format, and is unlikely to be for the very foreseeable future?  A rich visual spectacle that impresses from its opening snow fight sequence to its stunning triptych finale?  I have only one word as my answer: Absolutely!

Before I saw Napoléon, my exposure to silent movies had been restricted largely to comedies featuring the likes of Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, Larry Semon etc.  The Keystone Kops were a favourite, and Harold Lloyd impressed me even more when I discovered he’d lost his right thumb and forefinger in an accident involving a bomb prop (I know, it’s a bit shallow, but in mitigation I was around nine or ten).  I remember seeing most of The Iron Horse (1924) on TV, and it had the effect of making me realise that silent movies could last longer than twenty minutes, but UK TV wasn’t in the habit of showing anything other than the short films already mentioned.  When Napoléon was shown as part of a nationwide tour in 1980 at my local arts theatre – with live piano accompaniment – I saw the advert for it and took out my trusty copy of Halliwell’s Film Guide to find out more about it.

It was the length of the movie that intrigued me.  At that time – and my memory is a bit hazy on this – the available print ran to just over five hours.  The idea of sitting in a theatre for that length of time, plus interval, was daunting, but equally an attractive one.  It’s a little shallow (again) but I wanted to see if I could “stay the course” and be able to say – if anyone I knew had even cared! – that I had seen, all the way through, the five hour plus silent movie set during the French Revolution and beyond.  It was like having a badge of honour.

Napoleon - scene

Imagine my surprise (and delight) when the movie began and I found myself swept up by the depth and breadth of Gance’s technical mastery of the silent medium.  By the intensity of the performances, the sweep of the narrative, the visual panache of the battle scenes – Gance put his camera in the middle of the action, unheard of up until then – and the effectiveness of the quieter moments against the stirring swirl of historical events.  Those five hours flew by.  At the interval, I can remember coming out of the auditorium (and into the light) and feeling overwhelmed.  Aside from 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), I’d never been affected as much by a movie, and definitely not by a silent movie.  I was seeing techniques and a visual language that were truly amazing; this was breathtaking stuff and I couldn’t wait to go back in and see if the rest of the movie was as incredible.  And, of course, it was.

Since then I’ve seen Napoléon four more times.  (Sadly, I was out of the country for its most recent UK screening, on 30 November 2013.)  Each time I’ve revelled in its complexity and the sheer joy it provides, and each time I’ve come away wanting someone, anyone – but preferably Kevin Brownlow – to come along and say, “We’ve found all the missing footage, and will be presenting the original premiere version of Napoléon in just a few months’ time”.  I know this is unlikely, and Brownlow has said himself that the current version is probably the longest it will be for some time to come.  (But, what’s the world without a little hope, eh?)  Perhaps the best screening was the premiere of Carl Davis’s score for the movie shown at the Royal Festival Hall on London’s south bank.  The addition of an orchestra made the whole event even more wonderful and fulfilling.

Napoléon was the first movie that really engaged my heart and my mind and wouldn’t let go.  It holds a special place for me as the one movie that remains an event each time I see it.  In these days of instant streaming and fast downloads and blu ray discs, the notion of only being able to see a film at a cinema or a concert hall is somehow reassuring, that we haven’t lost that true element of spectacle that we take now for granted.  This was how audiences were first exposed to movies, not with ads for the latest trainers or holiday destinations, but with a sense of scale and excitement, a palpable tension at being swept away by what was unfolding on screen.  The language of cinema was being created by these movies, and it’s this aspect that shouldn’t be overlooked or forgotten.  Without trailblazers such as Gance, a lot of what we take for granted about movies today (or don’t even notice), would be missing.  That we’ve lost some of that grandeur is simply disappointing.

Sadly, it will be some time before Napoléon will be seen again on the big screen.  But when it is, you can rest assured that I’ll be there (if it’s in the UK), and ready to be enthralled and transported and amazed all over again.

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