Film Review
Baroness Emmuska Orczy's famous story
The
Scarlet Pimpernel is effortlessly transposed from revolutionary
France to Nazi Germany in this inspired adventure yarn, which is easily
one of the most effective and entertaining pieces of anti-Nazi
propaganda to come out of a British film studio during the Second World
War. The film was produced and directed by Leslie Howard, who had
previously played Orczy's 'demned elusive' hero in a celebrated
1934 adaptation
of her play and who reprises the role, this time reincarnated as a
scatterbrain English university professor, to great effect.
Pimpernel Smith (1941) was the
first of three propaganda films that Howard directed, followed by the
equally laudable
The First of the Few
(1942) and
The Gentle Sex
(1943).
Although it is far more subtle than most wartime propaganda films of
this era,
Pimpernel Smith
left its audience in no doubt as to the nature and magnitude of the
threat posed by Nazi Germany in the early 1940s. Francis L.
Sullivan's humorous portrayal of a Nazi general (Von Graum) may be an
amusing caricature but it also carries with it a terrifying reality,
the single-minded obsession with power and conquest that would take not
just Europe, but the entire world, to the brink of
Götterdämmerung. In several memorable scenes with Von
Graum, the hero, played to perfection by Howard, exposes the absurd
vacuity of the Nazi ambition, an insane drive for supremacy that
could only end in humiliating defeat amidst the inferno of a world
ravaged by war. Howard's words have a chillingly prophetic ring
to them, and his final scene in the film seems to presage his own death
just two years later, when the commercial airliner he was travelling in
was shot down by the Luftwaffe.
Leslie Howard's standout performance - possibly the greatest of his
career, certainly the most inspiring - is matched by equally sterling
contribution from his co-stars Francis L. Sullivan and Mary
Morris. At first, Sullivan's obese, chocolate-scoffing Nazi
general would seem to be better placed in a pantomime, but as the film
develops it proves to be a very apt characterisation, his amiable
surface buffoonery mirroring the apparent fecklessness of Howard's
Smith. It soon becomes apparent that both characters have a more
profound side to them, but whereas Howard's absent-minded professor is
shown to be a resolute champion of British ideals, ready to lay down
his life in the name of decency and compassion for others, Sullivan's
comedy Nazi is ultimately revealed to be a thoroughly despicable
villain, a man who is convinced Shakespeare is German and who doesn't
think twice about shooting a man in the back. There is nothing
more loathsome, nor more pathetic, than a clown without a sense of
humour.
As the film's alluring femme fatale, Mary Morris has a far
more solid presence than either of the two lead male protagonists,
although it takes some time before her true nature is revealed to
us. Her character is obviously intended to represent the innocent
masses who are caught up in the clash of ideals represented by Smith
and Von Graum, ordinary people whose individual choices will determine
the future of western civilisation. It is no accident that one of
the students who accompanies Smith on his adventure is a young and
slightly cynical American. At the time the film was made America
had yet to enter the war and so the inclusion of an American character,
supporting a Briton's lone fight against Fascism, carried a huge
symbolic weight. The propaganda value of
Pimpernel Smith is hard to gauge
but it was an enormously successful film on both sides of the Atlantic
and still rates highly as a classic of British cinema. Although
the film was banned in Sweden, it was seen by the Swedish diplomat
Raoul Wallenberg, who took inspiration from it and followed the hero's
example to save the lives of many thousands of Hungarian Jews.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Leslie Howard film:
Pygmalion (1938)
Film Synopsis
On the eve of WWII, Horatio Smith, an eccentric Cambridge history
professor, leads a party of students to Nazi Germany to look for
evidence for an ancient Aryan civilisation. Smith's
archaeological expedition is in fact an elaborate charade to conceal
his real purpose, which is to rescue the inmates of a Nazi
concentration camp, including the world famous pianist Karl
Meyer. This is not Smith's first adventure of this kind, and his
successful exploits have made the humourless General Von Graum
determined to unmask and execute the man who is known only as The
Shadow. To that end, Von Graum enlists the help of Ludmilla
Koslowski, threatening to kill her father, a Polish newspaper editor,
if she fails in her mission. Through one of Smith's students,
Ludmilla discovers that the Professor and The Shadow are one in the
same man and pleads with Smith to rescue her father. At first
suspicious that Ludmilla may be luring him into a trap, Smith makes up
his mind to save her father, fully aware that it is only a matter of
time before Von Graum uncovers the identity of The Shadow...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.