Film Review
Possibly the greatest British horror film ever made, certainly one of
the most controversial,
Peeping Tom marks
a surprising departure for its director Michael Powell. In the
1940s, through his association with Emeric Pressburger, Powell became
one of the leading figures in the British film industry, crafting such
timeless masterpieces as
The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp
(1943),
A Matter of Life and Death
(1946) and
The Red Shoes (1948).
Peeping Tom is a much darker and
far more psychologically complex film than anything Powell had
previously made, although the magical realism and subtle irony of his
earlier films does break through in a few places. The film was
not well received on its first release and the torrent of adverse
criticism that it aroused would effectively end Powell's filmmaking
career.
Interestingly,
Peeping Tom
was released just a few months before Alfred Hitchcock's
Psycho
(1960), a film that has many similarities to Powell's and with which it
is often compared. Both films feature a dangerous psychopath who
is portrayed as a likeable, albeit slightly sinister, young man; both
have scenes of a graphic violent nature; and both have voyeurism as a
central theme. Whereas
Psycho
proved to be a major box office success and would secure the
international reputation of its director,
Peeping Tom was subjected to a
clumsy reedit and proved to be a commercial disaster. Some critics
described Powell's film as repugnant, others said it was
perverse. When the film was restored in the late 1970s, thanks
mainly to the efforts of some notable admirers such as Martin Scorsese,
it was almost universally hailed as one of the triumphs of British
cinema.
Perhaps the hostile reception that
Peeping
Tom met with on its first release had less to do with its horror
content (which is negligible by today's standards) and more to do with
its subtext - that cinema is inherently a voyeuristic artform, one that
depends crucially on the voyeuristic instincts of the public.
Right from the opening sequence, Powell is making an identification
between the central character, who is soon revealed to be a killer, and
the audience. Cinema entertainment satisfies a craving for
vicarious experience to which every one of us is prone. The
fact the Mark Lewis is portrayed not as a villain, but sympathetically,
as a tragic victim, strengthens this viewer identification and we are
drawn ever more into his dark lonely world. We become complicit
in the crimes he commits, which he does not out of malice, but in
response to tortured psychosexual impulses arising from a traumatised
childhood. The real
voyeur
in this film is not the protagonist, but us, the audience.
Peeping Tom is a much darker,
far more unsettling film than
Psycho, surpassing it in narrative
complexity, acting performances (both Carl Boehm and Anna Massey are
excellent) and cinematography. It may not have
Psycho's memorable shock
set-pieces, but it is more successful at luring the audience into the
mind of a psychopath, whilst giving a deeper sense of what voyeurism
means. Far from being the cheap exploitation shocker that some
critics seemed to think it was,
Peeping
Tom is actually a moral film, one that warns of the dangers of
depicting excessive violence in cinema. What it suggests is that,
by pandering to an audience's craving for titillation, film directors
run the risk of fashioning a society where individuals are inured to
violence and regard all suffering and cruelty, no matter how obscene,
as entertainment. The fact that
Peeping
Tom no longer has the power to shock as it once did is proof
that these messages have gone unheeded.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Michael Powell film:
The Edge of the World (1937)
Film Synopsis
Mark Lewis is a shy young man who works as a focus puller at a film
studio but has aspirations of becoming a film director. He
supplements his meagre income by taking pornographic photographs for a
newsagent and renting out rooms in the house he inherited from his
father. Although outwardly normal, Mark is the victim of a dark
and dangerous obsession: he derives a macabre pleasure from watching
others suffer. One evening, he follows a prostitute back to her
home and kills her, filming the whole incident with his portable
camera. Not long after, he arranges for a female extra at the
studio where he works to stay behind, ostensibly so that he can make a
film with her. She meets a similar fate. One of Mark's
tenants, Helen Stephens, takes an interest in the strange young man and
is horrified to learn that, as a boy, he was subjected to cruel
psychological experiments by his father...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.