Film Review
Pandora's Box (1929) and
Diary of a Lost Girl (1929), possibly the two most important films
directed by G.W. Pabst, have the distinction that both feature in the lead
role Louise Brooks, an actress who failed to make a name for herself in Hollywood
but who acquired immortality through these two cinematic marvels.
Together, the films form a perfect diptych which encapsulates not only Pabst's art
but also his view of women. The characters played by Brooks in these
films follow a similar trajectory but one is sinful and must pay for her
sins, whereas the other is virtuous and is ultimately redeemed. The
theme of women being driven to prostitution by misfortune and male venality
is one that Pabst had already dealt with in
Joyless Street (1925),
and together these three films provide a blistering indictment of society's
attitudes towards women at a time when it was widely accepted that their
sole raison d'être was to service the needs of men. It's tempting
to think of Pabst as a committed proto-feminist, but he was merely concerned
with airing what he felt was a grave social injustice.
Like the half a dozen or so films that Pabst made prior to it,
The Diary
of a Lost Girl courted controversy with its candid portrayal of female
sexuality and uncompromising social critique, which attributed the phenomenon
of the 'fallen woman' to a society that allowed women to be exploited and
maltreated by the dominant male. If the film was controversial, the
novel on which it was based - Margarete Böhme's
Tagebuch einer Verlorenen
- was several times more so when it was first published in 1905. Despite
being a worldwide bestseller, Böhme's book was widely condemned (even
banned in some countries) for its perceived immorality. Lurid though
the novel is, it gave a powerful voice to Pabst's concerns about women's
place in society, and may even have provided some impetus to the emerging
suffragette movement.
The drama begins with a woman's misfortune that grimly foreshadows the fate
of the central heroine played by Louise Brooks - Thymian, the 16-year-old daughter
of pharmacist Robert Henning. After receiving a diary as a confirmation present,
Thymian is puzzled by the abrupt dismissal of her father's housekeeper and
her subsequent suicide. Henning's assistant, Meinert,
takes advantage of Thymian's innocence to enlighten her, and in due course
she gives birth to a little girl. Thymian refuses to name her child's
father but her diary betrays her. When she protests she cannot marry
Meinert as she has no love for him, the baby is taken away by a midwife and
she is committed to a reformatory. Here, Thymian is subjected to a
strict regime imposed by a tyrannical matron and her cruel, bald-headed assistant.
With the help of the penniless Count Osdorff, who has been disowned by his
wealthy uncle after failing at every profession, Thymian escapes from the
reformatory with another of its unhappy inmates, Erika.
After learning that her child has died, Thymian takes up residence in a brothel and supplements
her income by giving dancing lessons. By this time, Thymian's father
has married his new housekeeper, Meta. When Henning sees Thymian at
a nightclub he is so shocked that he refuses to have anything more to do
with her. On her father's death, three years later, Thymian learn that
she has inherited his stake in his pharmacy, which is now owned outright by
Meinert. The latter has no qualms over evicting Meta and her two children
from their home, but Thymian cannot bear this injustice and gives them her
entire inheritance. By this time, Count Osdorff has made plans to spend
Thymian's newfound weath - when he discovers that the money is gone he commits
suicide. In a fit of remorse, the count's father offers Thymian a new
life. Virtue is rewarded in the end.
As Lulu in
Pandora's Box (1929), Louise Brooks is the liberated modern
woman whose misfortunes are partly of her own doing (a reflection of the
actress in her own colourful private life). By contrast, the character
she plays in
Diary of a Lost Girl (1929), a pharmacist's daughter
named Thymian, is a blameless innocent whose corruption and dalliance with
degradation are brought about by others - the heartless scoundrel who seduces
her (a choice part for German cinema's premiere rent-a-cad Fritz Rasp) and
the father (a man of staggering hypocrisy) who rejects her. Thymian's
inherent goodness is the breaking fluid that arrests her decline (a decline
that Lulu, by contrast, cannot prevent) and, in recompense for her kindness
towards others, fate ultimately rewards her. Just as
Pandora's
Box ends in a tragedy that seems inescapable (the sinful must be punished
if there is to be any sense to this universe),
Diary of a Lost Girl
concludes with its heroine not only saved from misfortune, but placed in
a position where she can help others in her erstwhile sorry predicament.
Although there is a clear moral point to be argued, Pabst never becomes preachy
- his stance, as ever, is that of the dispassionate observer who leave it
to us to draw our own conclusions, to judge and sympathise as we see fit.
Pandora's Box and
Diary of a Lost Girl share similar themes
and are made in a similar style, but there is a subtle tonal difference between
them, as well as some unexpected humourous asides in the latter (the revolution
in the reformatory makes an hilarious set-piece). Both films showcase
the New Objectivity approach that Pabst was keen to embrace in the late 1920s
as an alternative to expressionism, which he deemed unsuitable for his realist
dramas. There are one or two obvious expressionistic touches, notably
massive close-ups that serve either to distance us or draw us towards the
protagonists (depending on the choice of camera angle and/or lighting).
Helped by its more noticeable use of real locations and less mannered style
of acting,
Diary of a Lost Girl has a greater sense of realism to
it - indeed it occasionally foreshadows the neo-realist style that woud emerge
in the next few decades (first in France, then in Italy). One example
of this is the entire seaside sequence near the end of the film, which has
a similar documentary-style immediacy to what we find in Curt and Robert
Siodmak's
People on Sunday
(1930) and Brooks' next vehicle
Prix
de Beauté (1930).
Louise Brooks is at her most captivating, most iconic in both films - how
sad it is that only a director of Pabst's calibre could see what a remarkable
actress she was and dared to take full advantage of it. Her naturalistic
style of acting, which is far better appreciated today than it was in the
1920s, made her a perfect screen anachronism. Too far ahead of her
time for Hollywood , she only really shone in the films that she made in
Europe, where she came to be cherished as the emblem of the independent young
woman. What makes Brooks so exceptional is that she has, in addition
to that seductive, siren-like quality that cinema expects of its biggest
stars, the innocence and vulnerability of a sheltered teenager. We
saw plenty of the siren in
Pandora's Box; in
Diary of a Lost Girl,
we see more of the helpless gamine, and it's revealing to compare Brooks'
portrayal in these two films - they are so similar and yet so curiously distinct.
It is in the latter film that the actress perhaps reveals more of her true
self - her performance has a greater ring of truth about it, implying Brooks
identified more closely with the child-like Thymian than the vampish unfortunate
Lulu. Brooks is equally mesmerising in both films - indeed she is the
essence of both films - and arguably no director of the silent era
was as well served by his leading lady.
© James Travers 2016
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