Film Review
By the time he embarked on his filmmaking career in 1919 with
Blind Husbands Erich von Stroheim
was already an established actor in Hollywood, albeit one who was
hopelessly typecast as the villainous Hun. In his most recent
film,
The Heart of Humanity,
he famously threw a screaming baby out of a window whilst raping a
woman. He was never going to end up a matinee idol after
this. Reluctant to spend the rest of his life playing
infanticidal Germans, Von Stroheim made up his mind to become a film
director and went to great lengths to persuade Carl Laemmle, the top
honcho at Universal Films, to allow him to direct a screenplay he had
written entitled
The Pinnacle.
Not a man to take kindly to being stalked by a sinister-looking
Austrian, Laemmle acceded to von Stroheim's request, provided the film
was made on a shoestring budget of around four thousand dollars.
Von Stroheim started where he intended to carry on and delivered a film
that cost almost ten times that amount. It was pretty well the
only film he made on which he was given a free hand, although Universal
did insist on a change of title, so
The
Pinnacle became
Blind Husbands.
Even in this first, somewhat imperfect film, Von Stroheim's remarkable
flair for visual drama is apparent, something he doubtless acquired
whilst working as an assistant to the great D.W. Griffith
(the author of such monumental pieces of cinema as
The Birth of a Nation (1915)
Intolerance (1916)).
Close-ups are used with consummate skill to expose the drama beneath
the surface - the lustful intentions of a womanising officer (played,
naturally, by Von Stroheim); the torment of the wife torn between
adultery and loyalty to her husband; and the murderous intent of the
cheated husband. There is a chilling dream sequence in which the
camera zooms in on Von Stroheim's scarred face from a distance, so that
the Austrian looks scarily like something out of a German expressionist
horror film. And then there is the great set-piece at the end,
the ascent of a mountain peak and the long anticipated showdown.
Some skilful editing renders these last scenes, magnificently played by
Von Stroheim and his co-star Sam De Grasse, unbearably tense and
suspenseful. In this, and many other respects,
Blind Husbands was a film that was
years ahead of its time.
What is most interesting about the film is that Von Stroheim compels us
to sympathise with what ought to be the least sympathetic character in
the amorous triangle. A title card at the start of the film
prompts us to consider that it is the husband who neglects his wife who
is most deserving of our contempt, not the 'other man' or the
adulteress. Von Stroheim's character is certainly the most
imposing of the three, and the one who is the most convincingly
drawn. Far from being your conventional Hollywood cad, Lieutenant
von Steuben is revealed to be a flawed, pathetic specimen of humanity
who conceals his true nature behind a screen of lies and a borrowed air
of superiority. Taken out of his comfort zone, he appears as
helpless as a newborn baby. This is Von Stroheim's attempt to
portray Don Juan as a tragic hero, and he almost gets away with
it. Already we can see echoes of those magnificant character
roles that Von Stroheim would take on later in his career, when his
directing aspirations had been totally extiguished.
In spite of its morally ambiguous, indeed openly subversive perspective
on male-female relationships
Blind
Husbands proved to be a very successful film, and Von Stroheim
followed this up with another, similarly themed hit,
The Devil's Passkey, a film that is
now sadly lost. With Von Stroheim shaping up to be one of his
studio's biggest money spinners, Carl Laemmle put him in charge of
Universal's most expensive production so far,
Foolish Wives (1922).
The film which went massively out of control and came close to bankrupting
Universal was to be von Stroheim's ticket to posterity - but that, as
they say, is another story.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Erich von Stroheim film:
Foolish Wives (1922)
Film Synopsis
An American doctor, Robert Armstrong, and his wife Margaret arrive at
the Alpine village of Cortina d'Ampezzo in Northern Italy, looking
forward to a well-deserved holiday. Dr Armstrong ends up
neglecting his wife, who turns out to be easy prey for a womanising
Austrian cavalryman, Lieutenant Erich von Steuben. Margaret is
certainly attracted to the dashing officer, but is she ready to begin
an affair which may lead her to leave her husband? Oblivious to
von Steuben's romantic manoeuvrings, Dr Armstrong agrees to accompany
him on a climb of one of the most fearsome mountains in the
Dolomites. When they reach the summit it becomes clear that, for
all his boasting, von Steuben is no mountaineer. As the Austrian
officer regains his breath, Armstrong inadvertently lays his hand on a
letter in his pocket. It is a letter from his wife. Before
he can read it, the officer grasps the missive and throws it
away. Armstrong immediately suspects the worst and threatens to
send his rival to his death unless he truthfully answers one question:
did his wife agree to leave with him? Von Steuben answers in the
affirmative...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.