Film Review
Geoffrey Chaucer's 14th Century work
The
Canterbury Tales was the inspiration for this lyrical wartime
drama from the celebrated independent filmmaking duo Michael Powell and
Emeric Pressburger, a.k.a. The Archers.
Like many of their productions, the film has a distinct propagandist slant, and it's not
difficult to see that this one is intended to help cement
Anglo-American relations by showing England in the most favourable
light. As it turned out, this particular bolt from the
well-meaning Archers' bow arrived somewhat late in the day - the film
was released two months after the Normandy Invasion in 1944.
If it were just a propaganda film,
A
Canterbury Tale would probably have been long forgotten, of
interest only to a handful of film historians. The mere fact that
it was Powell-Pressburger production ensured that there was far more to
it than that. The film is a beautifully evocative (albeit
idealised) portrait of everyday life in England during the war, a
multi-layered morality tale (which admits various interpretations), and
an entertaining satire on the clash of American and English cultures.
It is also a film which has a great intrinsic beauty, with some
wonderfully inspired touches. It opens with a Medieval pilgrimage
and fast forwards to 1944 in a shot which inspired Kubrik for the
famous opening sequence of his
2001:
A Space Odyssey (1968). This seductive opening provides
the keynote for much of what follows - the notion that our present
experiences are strongly shaped by past events.
Michael Powell grew up in Kent, and this accounts for the overwhelming
sense sense of nostalgia in this, his most personal film. The England that he and
Pressburger portray in this film is not one that most English people of
the time would have recognised. The England of
A Canterbury Tale is a
romanticised, picture postcard one, with gently rolling hills, pretty
villages and happy farm workers.
Yet, interestingly, whilst this view predominates, it is not the whole
picture. The image of a dreamy demi-paradise is frequently
subverted in the film. Firstly, there is the bizarre Glue Man
episode, in which the culprit is readily shown to be one of the most
important members of community. We learn that three of the main
characters in the film would never have thought to visit the
countryside if the war hadn't dragged them to it. And, when we
get to Canterbury, one of the first things we see is the devastation
wrought by German bombs. If this is Eden, it's a very strange
Eden - imperfect, in peril, and full of contradictions.
The main thrust of the film's pretty vague and meandering narrative
involves the journey the four main characters undergo, a pilgrimage of
sorts. Alison, Colpepper and the British and American sergeants
each experience an emotional crisis which is resolved, seemingly by
divine intervention, in Canterbury. Alison is struggling to come
to terms with the death of her pilot fiancé, Bob is hurt that
his girlfriend hasn't written to him, Peter regrets not having been
given a chance to fulfil his musical ambitions, and Colpepper awaits
retribution for his misguided glue-throwing adventures. Once we
get past the mildly tedious "Hunt the phantom glue thrower" part of the
film - which has all the sophistication of an Enid Blyton
Famous Five story - the film's true
charms and its underlying messages become apparent. Thereafter, the
film's emotional hold on the spectator gradually intensifies,
culminating in the beautiful closing sequences in Canterbury Cathedral,
where order is restored to a troubled universe.
Whilst
A Canterbury Tale has
some flaws (notably in the plotting), it wins
through in other areas. The main strength is the
cinematography, which, even for an Archers film, is of exceptional
quality. The photographer director was Erwin Hillier who had cut
his professional teeth on the German expressionist style - he had
worked as an assistant cameraman on Fritz Lang's
M (1930). His distinctive
use of chiaroscuro bring an extraordinary, almost ethereal, splendour to even
the most banal settings, although it is the film's exteriors where he
excels. It is the extensive shots of the Kent landscape which
provide the film with its heart and soul - the most sensually bucolic
depiction of the English countryside you can imagine, achingly poetic
but with a strong impression of realism. As an evocation of that
mythical England of rolling hills and sleepy sun-dappled pastures, this film is
virtually unsurpassed.
On its first release,
A Canterbury
Tale was ill-received by both critics and cinemagoers. In
a desperate bid to make the film more attractive to an American
audience, it was drastically re-edited (losing 20 minutes of its
runtime) and had a soppy additional scene (in which Bob is reunited
with his girl) tagged on at the end. The film's spectacular
failure at the box office meant that it was quickly forgotten and only
resurfaced in the 1970s, when it was restored and quickly earned the
recognition it deserved. Today, the film is as highly
regarded as Powell and Pressburger's other great works - an enjoyable
and beautifully composed piece of cinema showing us an England that has
long passed away - if, that is, it ever existed.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Michael Powell film:
I Know Where I'm Going! (1945)