Film Review
Max Ophüls's career in Hollywood got off to the worst possible start when
he was fired by producer Howard Hughes within a week of starting work on
his first American film,
Vendetta (1946). After directing
Douglas Fairbanks, Jr in
The Exile (1947), Ophüls
hit his stride with
Letter from an
Unknown Woman, which is regarded as the best of the films
he made in Hollywood. Representing the high point in 1940s film melodrama, it is a
stylishly crafted piece that prefigures the great films that the director would go on to make
on his return to France in the 1950s, films such as
La
Ronde (1950) and
Madame de... (1953).
Ophüls' penchant for graceful camera movement and atmospheric
lighting serve the film better than any of his other American films and
the result is the most exquisitely poignant and delicately composed
adaptation that Stefan Zweig's novella could have asked for.
Joan Fontaine is at her most beguiling as the lovelorn heroine whose
life is wrecked by an unrequited love of the cruellest and most
virulent kind. The selfless devotion of Fontaine's character is
beautiful counter-pointed by the egoistical self-absorption of her
amnesiac lover, admirably played by Louis Jourdan, a French import
hoping to make it big in Hollywood after a fairly lacklustre start to his
career in France. For once, Jourdan's brooding presence serves
him well and gives the film the dark, slightly cynical edge it needs to
keep it from succumbing to the dreaded sin of mawkish
sentimentality. The tragic fate of the heroine hits the spectator
with quite an emotional jolt, as it should, but even when we are
invited to moisten our cheeks with tears the film performs the nimblest
of pirouettes and ends on a spiritually uplifting note, consoling us
with the thought that the heroine may not have loved in vain after
all. Ophüls's next two American films -
Caught (1949)
and
The Reckless Moment (1949) -
would be far bleaker in both tone and subject, a brief but brilliant foray into film noir.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Max Ophüls film:
Caught (1949)
Film Synopsis
Vienna, circa 1900. Renowned concert pianist Stefan Brand
is about to leave town to avoid having to fight a duel when he receives
a mysterious letter from an unknown woman. The writer reveals
that she has long loved Stefan and proceeds to tell her story.
She was an adolescent when she first fell in love Stefan, then
a tenant in rooms next to those occupied by herself and her
mother. When her mother left Vienna to
marry a wealthy man, the young woman stayed behind so that she could
tell Stefan of her love for him. By chance, they finally met and,
yielding to a strong mutual attraction, they embarked on a whirlwind
romance. But the young woman's happiness was not to last.
Stefan did not return to her after a concert in Milan, did not know
that she had borne him a son. To support her child, the
young woman had no option but to marry another man. Ten empty
years later, Stefan enters her life again, but does he even remember
her...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.