Film Review
By the time he came to direct
Waxworks
in 1924 Paul Leni was highly regarded in the German film industry as
both a filmmaker and art director, and in each capacity he was a
fervent exponent of expressionism. It is a testament to Leni's
reputation that for the last film he made in Germany he was able to
attract a cast of jaw-dropping proportions, including no fewer than
four of the country's most distinguished actors: Emil Jannings, Conrad
Veidt, Werner Krauss and Wilhelm Dieterle.
Waxworks (originally released as
Das Wachsfigurenkabinett)
was to be a pivotal film for Leni. Carl Laemmle, the founder of Universal Pictures,
was so impressed by the design of this film that he invited Leni to
direct his production of
The Cat and the Canary (1927),
one of the most influential of all horror films. After this
auspicious Hollywood debut, Leni went on to direct another horror
classic,
The Man Who Laughs (1928),
although his career was cut short when he died from blood poisoning the
following year. Leo Birinsky, who assisted Leni on directing
Waxworks, would also have an impact
in Hollywood as a screenwriter, his work including the Greta Garbo
vehicle
Mata Hari (1931).
Although the films Paul Leni made in Germany are overshadowed by his
subsequent work in Hollywood, where bigger budgets allowed his
creativity to flourish, they are worth rediscovering as they provide
insights into not only this talented artist but also the tortured
German psyche of the 1920s.
Waxworks
is a prime example of German expressionism at its most vivid,
comprising fantastic stories set in crazily distorted representations of
familiar settings - and it is no accident that each revolves around
a murderous tyrant. Influenced by Robert Wiene's
The Cabinet of Dr Caligari
(192) and F.W. Murnau's
Nosferatu (1922), Leni carves
an unsettling dreamscape that is both freakishly absurd and subtly
disturbing, the oddly proportioned sets lending a fearful manic potency
to each of the villainous protagonists. The stories contained
within this prototypical portmanteau film are far less interesting than
Leni's warped visualisation of them. In common with much German
expressionistic cinema,
Waxworks expresses
a deep-seated neurosis for authority and feels chillingly
prescient. In Conrad Veidt's portrayal of Ivan the Terrible we
catch more than a glimpse of the inhuman tyrants that would disfigure
the 20th century and dish out death on an industrial scale - Hitler and
Stalin.
Waxworks is often classified
as a horror film although its horror content is minimal and it actually
embraces a wide range of genres, including Arabian Nights style fantasy
and sombre historical drama. The stories that make up the
anthology differ not only in length but also in tone, and so the film
feels uncomfortably uneven and a tad unfinished. Part of the
reason for this is that Leni was unable to secure enough funding to
complete the film and ended up jettisoning a fourth story about the
fictional Italian robber captain Rinaldo Rinaldini. About half of
the film is taken up by the first (and least interesting) story in
which Emil Jannings gets to ham things up in an uncharacteristically
comical role, his Caliph of Baghdad looking suspiciously like a refugee
from a Carry On film. The second, most effectively realised story
takes up most of the remaining runtime, with Conrad Veidt at his
villainous best as a truly terrifying, and truly demented Ivan the
Terrible, his eyes glinting with a manic intensity in every
scene. Soviet director Sergei Eisenstein was supposedly
influenced by Veidt's characterisation of the monstrous tsar for his
subsequent cinematic epic
Ivan the Terrible (1943).
The film ends on a creative high with its all-to-brief coda, a
brilliantly realised dream sequence in which Werner Krauss is
metamorphosed into the most terrifying ghoul of the imagination,
Spring-Heeled Jack (a bogeyman of Victorian folklore). Linking
these three ill-fitting segments is a pretty limp framing story
involving a young poet played by Wilhelm Dieterle, who would later
forge a successful career in Hollywood (under the name William
Dieterle) as a director of such films as
The Story of Louis Pasteur (1935),
The Life of Emile Zola (1937) and
The Hunchback of Notre Dame
(1939). It is worth mentioning, en passant, that the owner of the
waxworks museum is played by John Gottowt, the original 'van Helsing'
in Murnau's
Nosferatu.
Despite its narrative and structural imperfections,
Waxworks is a fascinating example
of German expressionistic cinema. The design work is of a higher
order than that found on the far better known
Caligari and
Nosferatu, more subtly evocative of
the fears that impregnate and shape the subconscious mind.
Ultimately, what sells the film most are its full-bloodied, totally
unhinged performances from Germany's greatest actors. It is hard
to know which provides more entertainment value - Emil Janning's
salivating fat lecher ("I don't mind that you don't have any clothes
on") or Conrad Veidt's bloodcurdling psychopath ("The Tsar is mightier
than death!"). One will make you laugh, the other can hardly fail
to pep up your nightmares. Farce and terror - the two faces of
fanatical despotism that have 'Nazi Germany' written all over them.
© James Travers 2014
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