Film Review
The most memorable and charming of the films that the Ukrainian-born director
Anatole Litvak made during the American
phase of his career is this timeless adaptation of a popular French stage play by Marcelle
Maurette, which was inspired by a true story. The film has the production
values and appeal that audiences came to expect of Hollywood in the 1950s - lavish sets,
a great script, a superlative cast - including legendary performers Ingrid Bergman and
Yul Brynner - and one of the most haunting film scores (which later became a popular song).
Litvak's stylish mise-en-scène, with its evident Russian and French influences, is on a par with
his earlier great film
Mayerling
(1936), which bears some stylistic similarities. The colourful design
and spacious sets convey a sense of unbridled opulence, which the beautifully shot exterior
scenes (in Paris and Copenhagen) can only reinforce.
The film marks Ingrid Bergman's
return to Hollywood after a period in exile in the early 1950s, following her scandalous
affair and then short-lived marriage to Italian film director Roberto Rossellini.
Bergman won her second Oscar for her role in this film - and deservedly so, for this is
undeniably one of her most captivating and intense performances. Bergman is particularly
successful in playing the ambiguity of her character's identity - even at the end of the
film, you cannot be sure whether Anna is or is not Anastasia.
In a role reminiscent of the one he had recently played in
The King and I (1956),
Yul Brynner gives a solid performance, exuding his inimitable brand of charisma and machismo in every shot,
although it's hard to see much real emotional attachment between his character and Bergman's
(on which the story ultimately hinges). More impressive is Helen Hayes who
brings both majesty and humanity to her show-stopping portrayal of the Dowager Empress,
one of the supreme highlights of her career.
© James Travers 2007
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Next Anatole Litvak film:
Goodbye Again (1961)
Film Synopsis
Paris, 1928. A decade after Tsar Nicolas II and his family were executed by the
Bolsheviks, rumours continue to circulate that the tsar's daughter, Anastasia, somehow
survived. A Russian general, Bounine, has a plan to pass off an unknown woman as
Anastasia so that he can claim her inheritance, lodged in a British bank.
That woman is Anna Koreff, a fugitive from an asylum who has lost her memory and who believes
she is Anastasia. By getting Anna to digest every known fact about the missing princess
and her family, Bounine is sure he can convince the world that Anastasia still lives.
But the world - in the form of those who knew the princess and her family, are unconvinced.
Bounine's only hope is to get a positive identification from Anastasia's grandmother,
the Dowager Empress. However, the latter is suspicious and refuses point-blank to
see Anna...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.