Film Review
Archie Mayo's atmospheric production of
Svengali may not have been the
first screen adaptation of George Du Maurier's famous 1894 Gothic novel
Trilby but it is almost
certainly the best, if only for John Barrymore's mesmeric and utterly
creepy portrayal of the title character. The first half of the
film is very different in tone to the novel, eschewing the latter's
Gothic mood for comedy, but there are plenty of chills along the way as
Svengali puts his mind control skills to despicable use.
The expressionistic set design and high contrast lighting add to
the film's unsettling atmosphere, in a way that is more than vaguely reminiscent
of Robert Wiene's
Das Cabinet des Dr Caligari (1920). The film
owes its status as a classic of the horror genre to some blood-curdling
close-ups of Barrymore as he hypnotises his victims, his irises
disappearing to leave a blind stare of nightmare-inducing
proportions. In long shot, Barrymore's Svengali is a stock comic
villain; in close-up he is utterly terrifying.
Mayo directed many notable films in his time but he can hardly be
described as the most inventive or daring of filmmakers.
Svengali contains one notable
sequence that runs contrary to this impression, an unbroken take in which the
camera slowly pulls back from a close-up on the villain's face, passes
through the latticed pane of an upstairs window, spins through 180
degrees, cruises purposefully over the rooftops of Paris before veering
towards another window, that of Trilby's bedroom. Not only was
this a major technical feat for the time but it is the most inventive
and effective way of showing the extent of Svengali's power to take
over and control another person's mind. The film has some other
inspired touches, but nothing to match the sheer brilliance of this
indescribably spooky sequence.
Svengali was such a hit at
the American box office that
Warner Brothers hastily signed up John Barrymore and Marsh Marian
for another horror film,
The Mad Genius (1931).
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In late 19th century Paris, Svengali ekes out a modest existence as a
music teacher and pianist. He hopes that by marrying a wealthy
woman he will be able to enjoy a more comfortable mode of living, but
when his victim leaves her husband without a penny to her name he has
no choice but to hypnotise her into drowning herself. Hypnosis is
another of Svengali's talents. As he tries to extort some money
from his fellow boarders, Svengali meets an attractive young model
named Trilby. The latter is impressed when the strange man cures
her of a headache by hypnotising her but she soon realises that she is
losing her will to him. Lured away from the man she really loves,
a young teacher named Billee, Trilby flees Paris with Svengali and in
no time she is his wife and a famous opera singer. When Billee
next sees Trilby she is entirely subservient to Svengali's will, as if
she has been possessed by him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.