Showing posts with label 1915. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1915. Show all posts

Friday, May 8, 2015

Les vampires (1915) ***

lesVposter
First, don't allow the title of this 1915 French silent serial to fool you--this is not a film about blood-sucking vampires. Sorry to disappoint the Goths and Ann Rice fans. Yet, take solace, the villains do wear a lot of black and seem to like to wear a lot of face powder. Second, don't attempt to watch all 10 episodes (approximately 7.5 hours) in one sitting. After heeding these few bits of advice, sit back and prepare yourself for the strange mind of Louis Feuillade.

The story revolves around a Parisian criminal gang who refer to themselves as, you guessed it, the Vampires. Their arch-nemesis is a news reporter named Philippe Guerande; a man I would not refer to as compelling. And like any good hero, he has a bumbling sidekick named Mazamette. The clear svampire01tar of the film is Musidora, who plays Irma Vep, one of the more capable Vampires.

This film has a number of twists and turns--you never really know who is good and who is evil. And even when you get a good impression of who actually is a baddie, say the Grand Vampire for example, they end up killed and replaced by another Grand Vampire, who, in turn, also ends up dead as well. All told, there were 4 Grand Vampires. In addition, seemingly upstanding citizens, such as judges and cops, turn out to be members of this society of criminals.

The film is a showcase of criminal possibilities--robberies, shootings, poisonings, trap doors, scam artists...the list goes on and on.

This crime thriller is an interesting watch. Later films in this genre owe a lot to Feuillade. But be warned, you must have patience to enjoy this film. There are some episodes that could have done with a bit more editing--not Baz Luhrmann cuts exactly but something closer to Hitchcock. In the realm of film history, this film serves its purpose.

Release date of Part 1: November 12, 1915.

 

Sunday, January 17, 2010

The Birth of a Nation (1915) **1/2

birth
Three words describe this 1915 D.W. Griffith historical epic: controversy, controversy, and controversy.

For those out of the loop, the nation being born is the Ku Klux Klan during Reconstruction. The film follows a southern family through the defeat of the Confederacy and the troubling times of Reconstruction. Seeing their world decimated by Northern Republicans, Copperheads, and their former chattel, they form a secret society of sheet wearers with a propensity to burn crosses and lynch those with darker pigmentation. It is a historical fact that some white southern men found themselves disenfranchised during this period, and that some uneducated former slaves were used as props in a political game led by former abolitionists and Republicans. Quite honestly, Reconstruction wasn't good for anyone other than the corrupt Grant administration and Rutherford B. Hayes, who got Southern Democrats in the House to give him the 1876 Election by promising to end Reconstruction. And remember what followed? Jim Crow...which was legally sanctioned by the Supreme Court from 1896 to 1954.

Upon the release of the film the NAACP led a protest and a few riots ensued--none in the South mind you. Griffith was so miffed by the controversy over the film that he released Intolerance the next year. Does the film have racist overtones? Yes. When some watch the film today they visibly cringe at a number of scenes, most notably the black man hell bent on raping the white woman, who would rather throw herself off a cliff than submit.

birth-of-a-nation-klan-and-black-man Yet, with all the controversy surrounding the film, it was still a revolutionary film. At 3 hrs. long, the film is no doubt a historical epic. Cecil B. DeMille owes a debt of gratitude to Griffith's penchant for detail and story development. Norma Desmond owes her love of the close-up to the nutty sister in this film. Orson Welles' fondness for the tracking shot finds itself an avid admirer of the battle scenes filmed by Griffith. Morricone and Williams, those prolific movie maestros, should also give a congratulatory bow to Joseph Carl Breil and Griffith for their score.

While this film definitely has racist overtones, I don't think that's enough to negate the important film elements first revolutionized in the production. This film should be watched.

Release date: February 8, 1915.