September 15, 2009 (XIX:3) - Center for Studies in American Culture
Transcription
September 15, 2009 (XIX:3) - Center for Studies in American Culture
September 15, 2009 (XIX:3) Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger BLACK NARCISSUS (1947, 100 min) Produced, directed and written by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger Based on a novel by Rumer Godden Original Music by Brian Easdale Cinematography by Jack Cardiff Film Editing by Reginald Mills Production Design by Alfred Junge Costume Design by Hein Heckroth Deborah Kerr...Sister Clodagh Flora Robson...Sister Philippa Jean Simmons...Kanchi David Farrar...Mr. Dean Sabu...The Young General Esmond Knight...The Old General Kathleen Byron...Sister Ruth Jenny Laird...Sister Honey Judith Furse...Sister Briony May Hallatt...Angu Ayah Nancy Roberts...Mother Dorothea Academy Awards for Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Color (Alfred Junge) and Best Cinematography, Color (Jack Cardiff). EMERIC PRESSBURGER (5 December 1902, Miskolc, AustriaHungary-- 5 February 1988, Saxstead, Suffolk, England, UK, bronchial pneumonia). The Boy Who Turned Yellow (1972), They're a Weird Mob (1966), Operation Crossbow (1965), Atlantic Ferry/Sons of the Sea (1941), Spy for a Day (1940), The Spy in Black/U-Boat 29 (1939), Parisian Life (1936), Mein Herz ruft nach dir/My Heart Calls You (1934), Incognito (1934), Une femme au Volant/A Woman at the Wheel (1933), A vén gazember/The Old Scoundrel (1932), Une jeune fille et un million/A Girl and a Million (1932), Eine von uns/One of Us (1932), Das schöne Abenteuer/Beautiful Adventure (1932), Lumpenkavaliere/ Wiener Lumpenkavaliere (1932), Dann schon lieber Lebertran/I’d Rather Have Cod Liver Oil (1931), Das Ekel/The Scoundrel (1931), Abschied/Farewell (1930), Die große Sehnsucht/The Great Desire (1930). Won Oscar: Best Writing, Original Story- 49th Parallel (1943); Nominated Oscar: Best Writing, Screenplay- 49th Parallel (1943); Nominated Oscar: Best Writing, Original Screenplay- One of Our Aircraft Is Missing (1943); Nominated Oscar: Best Writing, Motion Picture Story- The Red Shoes (1949). MICHAEL POWELL (30 September 1905, Bekesbourne, Kent, England, UK-- 19 February 1990, Avening, Gloucestershire, England, UK, cancer). Return to the Edge of the World (1978), The Boy Who Turned Yellow (1972), Age of Consent (1969), They're a Weird Mob (1966), Herzog Blaubarts Burg/Bluebeard’s Castle (1963), The Queen's Guards (1961), Peeping Tom/Face of Fear/The Fotographer of Panic (1960), Luna de miel/Honeymoon/Luna de miel/The Lovers of Teruel (1959), 49th Parallel/The Invaders (1941), An Airman's Letter to His Mother (1941), The Thief of Bagdad/The Thief of Bagdad: An Arabian Fantasy in Technicolor (1940), Contraband/Blackout (1940), The Lion Has Wings (1939) The Spy in Black/U-Boat 29 (1939), Smith (1939), The Edge of the World (1937), Something Always Happens (1934), Red Ensign/Strike! (1934), His Lordship (1932), C.O.D. (1932), Rynox (1932), My Friend the King (1932), Two Crowded Hours (1931). Nominated for Oscar: Best Writing, Original Screenplay- One of Our Aircraft Is Missing (1943). PRESSBURGER/POWELL [jointly produced/directed/wrote] 'I Know Where I'm Going!' (1945), A Canterbury Tale (1944), A Matter of Life and Death/Stairway to Heaven (1946), Black Narcissus (1947), Gone to Earth (1950), Ill Met by Moonlight/Intelligence Service/Night Ambush (1957), Oh... Rosalinda!!/Fledermaus ’55 (1955), One of Our Aircraft Is Missing /One of Our Aircraft Is Missing/ The Story of - - - - - - one of Our Aircraft Is Missing (1942), The Battle of the River Plate/Graf Spee/Pursuit of the Graf Clayton—THE INNOCENTS—2 Spee (1956), The Elusive Pimpernel/The Fighting Pimpernel (1950), The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp/Colonel Blimp/The Adventures of Colonel Blimp (1943), The Red Shoes (1948), The Small Back Room/Hour of Glory (1949), Tales of Hoffmann/ Jacques Offenbach's The Tales of Hoffmann (1951), Volunteer (1943), The Wild Heart/Gypsy Blood (1952). DEBORAH KERR (30 September 1921, Helensburgh, Scotland, UK-- 16 October 2007, Botesdale, Suffolk, England, UK, complications from Parkinson's disease) The Assam Garden (1985), Witness for the Prosecution (1982), The Arrangement (1969), The Gypsy Moths (1969), Casino Royale (1967), The Night of the Iguana (1964), The Chalk Garden (1964), The Innocents (1961), The Naked Edge (1961), The Grass Is Greener (1960), The Sundowners (1960), Beloved Infidel (1959), The Journey (1959), Separate Tables (1958), Bonjour tristesse (1958), An Affair to Remember (1957), Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison (1957), Tea and Sympathy (1956), The King and I (1956), The Proud and Profane (1956), The End of the Affair (1955), From Here to Eternity (1953), Julius Caesar (1953), Young Bess (1953), The Prisoner of Zenda (1952), Quo Vadis (1951), King Solomon's Mines (1950), Edward, My Son (1949), If Winter Comes (1947), The Hucksters (1947), Black Narcissus (1947), I See a Dark Stranger (1946), Perfect Strangers (1945), The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (1943), Major Barbara (1941). Won Oscar: Honorary Award (1994): “An artist of impeccable grace and beauty, a dedicated actress whose motion picture career has always stood for perfection, discipline and elegance”; Nominated Oscar: Best Actress in a Leading Role- Edward, My Son (1950); Nominated Oscar: Best Actress in a Leading Role- From Here to Eternity (1954); Nominated Oscar: Best Actress in a Leading Role- The King and I (1957); Nominated Oscar: Best Actress in a Leading Role- Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison (1958); Nominated Oscar: Best Actress in a Leading Role- Separate Tables (1959); Nominated Oscar: Best Actress in a Leading Role- The Sundowners (1961). FLORA ROBSON (28 March 1902, South Shields, Durham, England, UK—7 July 1984, Brighton, East Sussex, England, UK, cancer) Clash of the Titans (1981), A Tale of Two Cities (1980), Les miserables (1978), "Heidi" (4 episodes, 1974), Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1972), The Beloved (1970), Eye of the Devil (1966), "David Copperfield" (8 episodes, 1966), Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines or How I Flew from London to Paris in 25 hours 11 minutes (1965), Young Cassidy (1965), 55 Days at Peking (1963), "BBC Sunday-Night Theatre" (1 episode, 1955), Romeo and Juliet (1954), Saraband for Dead Lovers (1948), Black Narcissus (1947), Caesar and Cleopatra (1945), Saratoga Trunk (1945), The Sea Hawk (1940), We Are Not Alone (1939), Wuthering Heights (1939), Fire Over England (1937), I, Claudius (1937), Anna Christie (1936), A Gentleman of Paris (1931). Nominated Oscar: Best Actress in a Supporting Role- Saratoga Trunk (1947). JEAN SIMMONS (31 January 1929, Crouch Hill, London, England, UK—) Shadows in the Sun (2009), Thru the Moebius Strip (2005), How to Make an American Quilt (1995), "Dark Shadows" (12 episodes, 1991), "Murder, She Wrote" (2 episodes, 1989), "Hawaii Five-O" (1 episode, 1977), Rough Night in Jericho (1967), Divorce American Style (1967), Mister Buddwing (1966), All the Way Home (1963), The Grass Is Greener (1960), Spartacus (1960), Elmer Gantry (1960), The Big Country (1958), Guys and Dolls (1955/I), Desirée (1954), The Egyptian (1954), The Robe (1953), Androcles and the Lion (1952), The Blue Lagoon (1949), Hamlet (1948), Black Narcissus (1947), Great Expectations (1946), Caesar and Cleopatra (1945). Nominated Oscar: Best Actress in a Supporting Role- Hamlet (1949); Nominated Oscar: Best Actress in a Leading Role- Happy Ending (1970). DAVID FARRAR (21 August 1908, Forest Gate, London, England, UK-- 31 August 1995, South Africa) The 300 Spartans (1962), "The Dick Powell Show" (1 episode, 1962), Solomon and Sheba (1959), Watusi (1959), The Son of Robin Hood (1958), I Accuse! (1958), The Battle of the River Plate (1956), Lost (1956), Escape to Burma (1955), Lilacs in the Spring (1954), The Wild Heart (1952), The Golden Horde (1951), Night Without Stars (1951), Gone to Earth (1950), The Small Back Room (1949), Mr. Perrin and Mr. Traill (1948), Frieda (1947), Black Narcissus (1947), Lisbon Story (1946), The Trojan Brothers (1946), The Night Invader (1943), The Dark Tower (1943), Danny Boy (1941), A Royal Divorce (1938), Silver Top (1938), Sexton Blake and the Hooded Terror/The Hooded Terror (1938). SABU (27 January 1924, Karapur, Mysore, India-- 2 December 1963, Chatsworth, California, USA, heart attack) A Tiger Walks (1964), Rampage (1963), Sabu and the Magic Ring (1957), Jungle Hell (1956), Buongiorno, elefante!/Hello Elephant (1952), Baghdad (1952), Savage Drums (1951), Song of India (1949), Black Narcissus (1947), Tangier (1946), Cobra Woman (1944), White Savage (1943), Arabian Nights (1942), Jungle Book (1942), The Thief of Bagdad (1940), The Drum (1938), Elephant Boy (1937). KATHLEEN BYRON (11 January 1921, London—18 January 2009, Middlesex, England) Appeared in over 100 films and TV programs and series, the last of which was “Perfect Strangers” (2001). Some of the others were "In a Land of Plenty" (3 episodes, 2001), "Casualty" (2 episodes, 19891999), Saving Private Ryan (1998), Les misérables (1998), Emma (1996), "Reilly: Ace of Spies" (1 episode, 1983), From a Far Country (1981), The Elephant Man (1980), "Edward the Seventh" (3 episodes, 1975), Craze (1974), "The Golden Bowl" (6 episodes, 1972), "The Portrait of a Lady" (4 episodes, 1968), Night of the Silvery Moon (1954), Young Bess (1953), The Gambler and the Lady (1952), Tom Brown's Schooldays (1951), Scarlet Thread (1951), The Small Back Room (1949), Black Narcissus (1947), A Matter of Life and Death (1946), The Silver Fleet (1943), The Young Mr. Pitt (1942), Climbing High (1938; uncredited: she is the model on sofa after cream pie fight, glaring at Max). JACK CARDIFF (18 September 1914, Yarmouth, Norfolk, England, UK-- 22 April 2009, Ely, Cambridgeshire, England, UK) The TellTale Heart (2004), The Magic Balloon (1990), Tai-Pan (1986), Clayton—THE INNOCENTS—3 Rambo: First Blood Part II (1985), Cat's Eye (1985), Conan the Destroyer (1984), Ghost Story (1981), The Dogs of War (1980), The Awakening (1980), The Fifth Musketeer (1979), Death on the Nile (1978), Ride a Wild Pony (1975), The Mercenaries (1968), Fanny (1961), The Vikings (1958), The Prince and the Showgirl (1957), The Brave One (1956), War and Peace (1956), The Barefoot Contessa (1954), The Master of Ballantrae (1953), The Story of William Tell (1953), The Magic Box (1952), The African Queen (1951), Pandora and the Flying Dutchman (1951), The Black Rose (1950), Scott of the Antarctic (1948), The Red Shoes (1948), Black Narcissus (1947), A Matter of Life and Death (1946), Caesar and Cleopatra (1945), Western Approaches (1944), The Great Mr. Handel (1942), This Is Colour (1942), Plastic Surgery in Wartime (1941), Main Street of Paris (1939), Wings of the Morning (1937). Won Oscar: Honorary Award (2001); Won Oscar: Best Cinematography, Color- Black Narcissus (1948); Nominated Oscar: Best Cinematography, Color- War and Peace (1957); Nominated Oscar: Best Director- Sons and Lovers (1961); Best visionary director’s silent productions: Mare Nostrum (1926), The Magician (1926), and The Garden of Allah (1927). Working on these films and subsequently on his own features in the 1930s, Powell developed a penchant for expressionism that manifested itself in several rather unique ways…. Finally, the use of color, which most critics cite as a trademark of the Powell-Pressburger partnership, is shaped into an expressionistic mode. Powell chose his hues from a broad visual palette, and brushed them onto the screen with a calculated extravagance that became integrated into the themes of the film as a whole…. Thematically, Powell and Pressburger operate in a limbo somewhere between romance and realism. The former, characterized by technical effects, camera angles and movements, and the innovative use of color, often intrudes in the merest of details in fundamentally naturalistic films. In the eyes of some, this weakens the artistic commitment to realism. On the other hand, the psychological insights embodied in serious fantasies like A Matter of Life and Death are too often dismissed as simply entertainment. Most of the Powell-Pressburger efforts are, in fact, attempts at fundamental reconciliations between modern ideas and the irrational, between science and savagery, or between religion and eroticism. Although such mergings of reality and fantasy met with approval by the moviegoing public, Powell and Pressburger were less successful with the British film establishment. In a sense they were alienated from it through their exercise of a decidedly nonBritish flamboyance….The film Peeping Tom was perhaps ahead of its time–a problem that plagued the director and his collaborator for most of their careers. From World Film Directors V.I, ed. John Wakeman, H.H. Wilson Co., NY 1987. Cinematography, Color- Fanny (1962). from The St. James Film Directors Encyclopedia ed. Andrew Sarris. Visible Ink Press, NY, 1998. “Powell & Pressburger” [combined entry signed by Stephen L. Hanson] Between the years 1942 and 1957, English director Michael Powell and his Hungarian partner, Emeric Pressburger, formed one of the most remarkable partnerships in cinema. Under the collaborative pseudonym “The Archers,” the two created a series of highly visual and imaginative treatments of romantic and supernatural themes that have defied easy categorization by film historians. Although both were listed jointly as director, screenwriter, and frequently as producer, and the extent of each one’s participation on any given film is difficult to measure, it is probably most accurate to credit Powell with the actual visualization of the films while Pressburger functioned primarily as a writer. The latter, in fact, had no background as a director before joining Powell. He had drifted through the Austrian, German, and French film industries as a screenwriter before traveling to England in 1936. Many of the gothic, highly expressionistic characteristic of the films produced by the partnership seem to trace their origins to Powell’s apprenticeship at Rex Ingram’s studio in Nice in the 1920s. There he performed various roles on at least three of the In 1925, on his way to visit his father, who had acquired a hotel on the Riviera, he stopped off in Paris to catch up with the work of Buñuel and Dali and “that lot, involved in surrealism,” as he put it to an interviewer, adding that “of course, all films are surrealist . . . because they are making something that looks like a real world but isn’t.” He entered the film industry the same year when his father introduced him at a party to Harry Lachman, an artist and filmmaker then working with Rex Ingram on Mare Nostrum at the Nice studio. Powell joined the unit and “worked all through” Mare Nostrum, an extravagant spy story. He says “it was a great film to come in on because, being a spectacular film, full of enormous tricks with a great theme and an international cast, it gave you ideas which stayed with you all through your life. . . .My first job was really to stick around–that was how Harry Lachman put it. Then I was a grip, but I was unofficially attached to Lachman as the strange, cultured young Englishman who had a remarkable gift for falling over things.” Some of these qualities were put to work in Ingram’s next two films, The Magician (1926) and The Garden of Allah (1927), in both of which Powell had small roles providing “comic relief.” These were great days in the film industry in France: “everyone was mad about the cinema,”and in Nice Powell met celebrated painters, sculptors and writers all eager to contribute to the medium. Then Ingram decided to take a break from films. Lachman launched a series of comedy travelogues featuring Powell, but this project was ended after a few months by the arrival of the talkies and, Powell Clayton—THE INNOCENTS—4 says, “we closed up the studio, said goodbye to the sun and headed for the fogbelt.” Lachman joined British International at the Elstree studios, where he found work for Powell also, first as stills photographer on Hitchcock’s Champagne and then as a cutter on Lupu Pick’s A Knight in London. Powell’s last assignment at Elstree was as an uncredited contributor to the script of Hitchcock’s Blackmail—he says it was he who suggested the final chase over the roof of the British Museum: “Being an East End boy, Hitch had never been there.” In 1930 Powell joined a young American producer named Jerome Jackson, then entering the the British “quota quickie” market. Alarmed by the fact that only about five percent of movies shown in Britain were made there, the government had instituted a quota system that was supposed to improve the situation. The result was a flood of generally rubbishy cut-rate pictures, most of them less than an hour in length, that were shown as second features with Hollywood movies. Some were churned out by small independent producers like Jerome Jackson and many, in fact, were made by Hollywood companies through British subsidiaries…. One of the last of Powell’s “quickies” was The Man Behind the Mask (1936), made for an American producer named Joe Rock. Powell says that the script was very poor but “I did my best to make it into a rather German type expressionistic thriller….The only good that came out of it was that I met Joe Rock.” For five years—ever since he had read a newspaper report on the depopulation of the Scottish islands-Powell had been trying to find backing for a film on that subject. Joe Rock encouraged him to write a script, and then sent him off to the remote Shetland island of Foula to make what became The Edge of the World, his first personal film. ...that has reminded some critics of Visconti’s La terra treme….In 1937 it was chosen by the New York Film Critics as the best movie of the year…. At that point Powell was considering going to Hollywood, but Alexander Korda, impressed by The Edge of the World, offered him a contract. His first film for Korda was The Spy in Black (1939), a fast-moving and often amusing spy thriller set during World War I….It opened just before the beginning of World War II and, Powell says, “during the run of the picture a submarine did get into Scapa Flow and torpedoed one of our best battleships. It just made people go more, because at least it was about what was happening. It was such a success that it was immediately retitled UBoat 29 and sent to America where it cleaned up.” More important, The Spy in Black began Powell’s collaboration with the Hungarian-born scenarist, Emeric Pressburger….[In] 1942 Powell and Pressburger established their own production company. The Archers, under the financial umbrella of J. Arthur Rank’s Independent Producers. Most of the films they made for the Archers credited Powell and Pressburger as joint directors, producers and scenarists, though it seems fairly clear that Pressburger dominated the writing, Powell the directing. The latter told an interviewer that “what we always did was that he would write the script and then I would rewrite in completely in my version, sometimes with very little change and sometimes with a very great deal of change. The changes would be because I was naturally interested in how to present it, how to create the actual atmosphere of the place, and how to get over Emeric’s story line in the most effective way.”... Black Narcissus (1947), in which Anglican nuns set up a new mission in the Himalayas, was also shot in the studio, Powell having decided that pictures made partly on location “are nearly always pastiche or hotchpotch.” Like I Know Where I’m Going, the film centers on the conflict between a “civilized” (here specifically Christian) notion of order and pagan nature, personified in the flailing Himalayan winds, local superstition, and a naked holy man. Nature wins when one of the nuns (Kathleen Byron) is driven to homicidal madness by her repressed lust for the hairy knees of David Farrar. Powell worked out the climactic final scene with his composer Brian Easdale (who was also in charge of the film’s sound effects) and prerecorded the scene’s soundtrack before filming the images. He took this decisive step towards the development of a musical structure for his movie because he believes that “composers and filmmakers think very much alike. Their tempos are very closely related to our cutting tempos, their longeurs and their statements are very similar to ours. Whereas, even with a writer as clever and subtle as Emeric, I always had this continual battle with words.” Jack Cardiff’s color photography for the film won him an Oscar. ...The Red Shoes seems to Roy Armes “Powell and Pressburger’s most explicit statement of the relationship of art and life,” “the high point of their career in both commercial and artistic terms….All [their] central themes and stylistic concerns find expression in The Red Shoes: the Romantic opposition of art and life, the concern with a choreography of film whereby overwhelming passions are acted out rather than expressed through words, and the creation of a dynamic inter-relationship of vivid visual imagery and an immensely rhythmic soundtrack….” The Archers’ last two productions, both unexceptional war films, were The Battle of the River Plate (Pursuit of the Graf Spee, 1956) and Ill Met by Moonlight (Night Ambush, 1957). Working separately, neither Powell nor Pressburger ever really established a consistent pattern of production again. Powell’s next picture, another ballet film called Luna de Miel (Honeymoon), was made in 1961 in Spain. Then he met a writer and former cypher expert named Leo Marks, who proposed a picture in the sadistic horrormovie genre then being exploited by Anglo-Amalgamated. The result was Peeping Tom (1960). ...The movie becomes an extremely complex essay on the voyeurism involved in making and watching films, as Powell clearly recognized….For many Peeping Tom is Powell’s masterpiece, though in Britain in1960 it virtually ended his career, while the shortened version seen in the United States was largely ignored….Back in Britain, and re-united with Pressburger, Powell made a prizewinning children’s film, The Boy Who Turned Yellow (1972)…. Durgnat suggests that Powell “remains an upholder, through its lean years, of the Méliès tradition...a school of ‘Cinema’ which is always exquisitely conscious of not only its cinematic effects but its cinematic nature.” Clayton—THE INNOCENTS—5 Michael Powell Interviews. Ed. David Lazar. University of Mississippi Press, Jackson, 2003. Does a film like Black Narcissus present certain fantastical aspects? MP: Not so to speak. The success of the film surprised me; it’s all based on a question of atmosphere; first the education of the girl, in Ireland, in a simple family, an almost religious education. The entire novel was built on the idea that the house was full of painful things, wind, evil, etc. The fact that this made for a good movie, because this was a good movie, is rather surprising. This is the first film in which the music plays an integral role in the atmosphere; this was the first time I worked with Brian Easdale, who did the music for The Red Shoes and a few other films. We prepared several sequences together with the themes already composed, not the music; therefore when I filmed a scene, I knew what was going on in his mind. The image was equally very interesting? MP: Marvelous! This was Jack Cardiff’s second film, and one of his best. Completely unreal. . . MP: Yes; I think that the fact the film was filmed entirely in studios and in England, gave the film the style of a novel. When I read the book, I immediately thought that we were going to the Indies and that we would bring back some good shots to then try and match the others filmed in England. The result would not be brilliant. It worked better to film everything in England. This is what created the atmosphere of the film…. For Black Narcissus, you adapted for the first time a novel which was already published. MP: Yes, in fact an actress who wanted a role in the film proposed the subject to me during the war. I had been seduced by the plot and I told her: “We should talk about it after the war.” And it’s very strange because after the war, Pressburger got married, and it was his wife who talked to us about it again after she read Rumer Godden’s book. What interested you it the story? The confrontation between the morals of the Western world and those of the Oriental world? MP: It was a very beautiful love story. In an unusual setting. But I didn’t want to go shot in India. Because this kind of film had always been done that way with studio scenes and link scenes on location, with real actors, or sometimes stand-ins. I didn’t like that at all.I was convinced that everything had to be done either in India or in the studio. And you filmed it entirely in a studio? MP: Except for a few scenes. You know,you can find anything in England. And since we had been an empire for a long time, there were always people bringing back things from all over the world: trees, flowers, rocks! Extraordinary things! I was able to find great gardens with rocks, and mountains at the edges; and all the colors in the world! And all the flowers from the Himalayas. The great vegetation and even the torrential rains! In Sussex! (Laughs.) And the rest was filmed in a studio. The results in the change of scenery are astonishing. MP: We had built the great castle outside at Pinewood. It was Junge’s idea. All around this enormous décor he had a big plaster background built at a 20 degree angle from the ground. That way, all day long when the sun moved...there never was any shadow on the background! It was always well lit. And on the background we had painted the Himalayas: Everest, the great valleys, the forests. And all of it sunlit! And when a cloud went by, it was magnificent! It was so simple! Alfred Junge: a great master. … When I was very young, before I got into the film business, but still loving it, the great films in those days where the original work was being done—were the early German films; and Alfred of course was trained by UFA and so he had all these grandiose images and marvelous effects in his head. When I asked him to pull them out of his head for things like Colonel Blimp and Stairway to Heaven, he was delighted. I think his masterpiece was the film you’re showing here, Black Narcissus. Extraordinary. You give Alfred a very difficult task, he would rise to it and make something marvelous out of it. In that case, to create an entirely imaginative place in the Himalayas. Always his imaginative things were dealing with naturalistic sets, if you follow me. I mean, even heaven in either monochrome or color in Stairway to Heaven is based upon naturalism. ...When Powell thought of the money it would cost to go to India to make Black Narcissus, that simmering tale of sexually repressed nuns in the Himalayas, he said Heigh-ho, hired Deborah Kerr and shot it all on a British soundstage. The result—as designed by Alfred Junge, shot by Jack Cardiff and directed by Powell—is an expressionist masterpiece. “They said to me, But surely you’ll want to shoot some establishing shots in India? That’s a very insidious phrase, establishing shots. They said, You can’t do Mt. Everest in a studio. I said, A studio is exactly where you can do Everest, and avalanches and Tibetan horns. Wonderful studio stuff. And if we go and shoot a lot of real stuff to cut into the studio stuff, it’ll make all the studio stuff look terrible. And vice versa: if we do wonderful work in the studio, the exteriors will look like something from a documentary dragged in by the cat!” from the Criterion Collection Black Narcissus. 2000. Dave Kehr When Black Narcissus opened in England in 1947, Great Britain was barely emerging from the agony and exhaustion of World War II. Nothing could be further from gray, hungry postwar London than the India imagined by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger: here was a land of high mountains, lush forests, and fields of flowers exploding in deeply saturated Technicolor, a tempting landscape of overwhelming plenty. And though perhaps less-renowned within their body of work than The Red Shoes or The Tales of Hoffman, Black Narcissus’ reputation has grown over time; it now stand clearly as one of the highest Clayton—THE INNOCENTS—6 achievements in British filmmaking, as witty as it is sensual, as ironic as it is sweepingly romantic. Powell and Pressburger had been collaborators since The Spy in Black in 1939. Though Powell specialized in directing and Pressburger in screenwriting, they felt that their contributions overlapped enough to give themselves the joint credit, “Written, Produced and Directed by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger.” They called their production company , founded in 1942, “The Archers,” and their logo—an arrow hitting a target— was also their way of rating their work. If the arrow fell on the periphery of the target, that meant they felt they’d missed their mark. If the arrow struck the bull’s-eye, it was their way of signaling that they were happy with their work. Their partnership continued until 1956, and yielded some of the most distinctive and enduring work in the British cinema, including The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp and A Matter of Life and Death. Based on a 1939 novel by Rumer Godden, Black Narcissus follows a group of British nuns, the Servants of Mary, as they attempt to transform the former palace of a Hindu potentate into a dispensary and school for the local children. But the palace, perched on a mountaintop eight thousand feet above sea level, resists transformation. Once the site of joyously sensual feasts And orgies, the old palace exerts its influence over the sisters, and particularly over Sister Clodagh (Deborah Kerr), the group’s leader, who finds herself dreaming of the young man she left back in Scotland. Less innocently romantic are the reveries of Sister Ruth (Kathleen Byron), who becomes erotically obsessed with the British overseer of the district (David Farrar). There is little surface action in Pressburger’s script for Black Narcissus. The film is composed as a succession of small incidents and casual encounters, each of which adds to the slowly growing sense of erotic tension. Characters come and go— including an impossibly beautiful Jean Simmons, as a ripe 17-yearold bride who has been repudiated by her husband, and Sabu (the Indian child actor who was a mainstay of British movies about the Raj), as a preening local prince who forces his way into the school. The “Black Narcissus” of the title turns out to be not some poetic allusion out of Rudyard Kipling, but the name of the pungent aftershave with which the prince perfumes himself—a product he imports from England. But if there is little action on the surface, emotions are seething just beneath it—or, more accurately, just behind it—in the form of fantasy landscape that the Archers and their collaborators have created out of purely cinematic means. Despite its dazzling visual sweep, not one frame of Black Narcissus was filmed on location. Instead, the film was shot at the Pinewood Studios in suburban London, with a few daytrips to an Indian garden in Sussex. The mountains and the castle are the creations of production designer Alfred Junge, with matte paintings executed by Peter Ellenshaw; the special effects were coordinated by W. Percy Day, who had apprenticed with Méliès; and the magnificent color photography, surely among the finest work ever produced for the medium, is the contribution of Jack Cardiff. (Both Junge and Cardiff won well-deserved Oscars for their work.) Powell builds Black Narcissus as a series of moods created through space and color. He contrasts the boxy interiors and blank walls of the British colonial offices with the curved multi-leveled, spatially indefinite chambers of the old palace. British certainty and sterility cedes more and more to Eastern mysticism and sensuality; the sister in charge of the vegetable garden can’t help but plant a crop of flowers instead, their exploding primary colors providing a dizzying contrast with the black and white habits of the nuns. Gentle, green hillsides—reminiscent of the Scottish landscapes we see in Sister Clodagh’s flashbacks—suddenly turn into vertiginous canyons when viewed from another angle. The ground literally opens beneath the feet of the characters, inviting them to take the plunge—to abandon their twin faiths in God and the British Empire, and turn themselves over to more ancient and dangerous powers. For Powell, who had always placed great value on music in his work, Black Narcissus is perhaps his breakthrough to a musical conception of the medium (the Archers’ next film would be The Red Shoes). Building on the great wit and character of Pressburger’s dialogue, Powell worked as a cinematic composer, an artist who used contrasts in tone and rhythm rather than purely literary or dramatic means. The carefully developed tensions between monochrome and color, between closed, coherent spaces and aching, cosmic voids, reach a crescendo in the bravura climactic sequence. It is enough to see the bright, red lipstick that Sister Ruth has put on to know that the apocalypse is near. British audiences in 1947 may well have seen Black Narcissus as a last farewell to their fading empire. World War II had altered colonial relations forever; in its wake, nationalist movements would grow and British authority would collapse. India achieved independence on August 14, 1947, and the final images of Black Narcissus of a procession down from the mountaintop, seemed to anticipate the British departure. For Powell and Pressburger, these are not images of defeat, but of a respectful, rational retreat from something that England never owned and never understood. It is the tribute paid by West to East, full of fear and gratitude. Clayton—THE INNOCENTS—7 COMING UP IN BUFFALO FILM SEMINARS XIX: Sept 22 Jules Dassin Du rififi chez les hommes/Rififi 1955 Sept 29 Kenji Misoguchi Akasen chitai/Street of Shame 1956 Oct 6 Richard Brooks Elmer Gantry 1960 Oct 13 Roman Polanski Nóz w wodzie/Knife in the Water 1962 Oct 20 Stanley Kubrick Lolita 1962 Oct 27 Carl Theodor Dreyer Gertrud 1964 Nov 3 Eric Rohmer Ma nuit chez Maud/My Night at Maude’s 1969 Nov 10 Andrei Tarkovsky Solaris 1972 Nov 17 Arthur Penn Night Moves 1975 Nov 24 Abbas Kiarostami Nema-ye Nazdik/Close Up 1990 Dec 1 Bela Tarr Werckmeister harmóniák/Werckmeister Harmonies 2000 Dec 8 Mike Leigh Topsy-Turvy 1999 CONTACTS: ...email Diane Christian: engdc@buffalo.edu …email Bruce Jackson bjackson@buffalo.edu ...for the series schedule, annotations, links and updates: http://buffalofilmseminars.com ...to subscribe to the weekly email informational notes, send an email to addto list@buffalofilmseminars.com ....for cast and crew info on any film: http://imdb.com/ The Buffalo Film Seminars are presented by the Market Arcade Film & Arts Center and State University of New York at Buffalo with support from the Robert and Patricia Colby Foundation and the Buffalo News