Film Review
At a time when cinema is going through its most profound upheaval,
breaching frontiers that would have been unthinkable even a decade ago
(thanks in part to the 3-D and YouTube revolutions), it seems odd -
if not pretty damn surreal - that the most highly rated French film of 2011 should
be one that takes us back in time, to the dimly remembered days of
silent cinema. Michel Hazanavicius's
The Artist is an affectionate
homage to the old black-and-white silent film, but it is clearly far
more than that. It is a potent statement on the transience of
fame (a cautionary message for today's celebrity-obsessed youngsters)
but, more crucially, it is the keenest observation on the mutability
and versatility of the cinematic art form. After a hundred years
of steady evolution, brought about by gradual improvements in
filmmaking technology, cinema now stands on the brink of a new age of
artistic freedom, much as it did in the late 1920s when sound suddenly
came to revolutionise the medium.
The Artist celebrates this new
lease of life for cinema and confidently - almost brazenly - assures us
that in this brave new world there is a place for the silent
film. And why not? As the old saying goes, silence is
golden...
Director Michel Hazanavicius has long dreamed of making a silent film,
but no one took him seriously until he struck box office gold with his
two spy thriller pastiches,
OSS 117: Le Caire nid d'espions
(2006) and
OSS 117: Rio ne répond plus
(2009), which parodied to death the 1960s spy movie (of the James Bond
variety). Hazanavicius's penchant for cinematic mimicry and his
ability to attract a large mainstream audience secured him backing for
his riskiest venture to date, and one that may well prove to be his
biggest worldwide success: an affectionate
billet doux to the pre-sound golden
age of Hollywood. With the support of producer Thomas
Langmann, Hazanavicius was able to make the film in Hollywood, where he
had access not only to the back lot and studios at Warner Brothers and
Paramount, but also to the house that belonged to the legendary actress
Mary Pickford. Trivia fans should note that the bed in which the
film's hero wakes up once belonged to Pickford.
Although
The Artist was made
in Hollywood, Michel Hazanavicius was reluctant to employ a completely
American cast, and so he selected two established French actors - Jean
Dujardin and Bérénice Bejo - for the two lead roles, that
of the silent film star George Valentin (whose days are most definitely
numbered) and the rising starlet Peppy Miller. Dujardin had
headlined Hazanavicius's previous OSS 117 films and had played opposite
Bejo in
OSS 117: Le Caire nid
d'espions. Anyone expecting Dujardin to send up the
film, as he had done in the OSS 117 films, will be surprised by the
depth and subtlety of his performance in
The Artist. Whilst the
character he plays is something of a grotesque archetype, a deluded
narcissist whose sole reason for living is fame, Dujardin compels us to
feel for him, to see the fragility beneath the bluster, and to share
his despair as his world comes tumbling down amidst the wholesale purge
that ended many a glorious Hollywood career in the late
1920s. Modelling his screen persona on that of Douglas
Fairbanks, Dujardin looks surprisingly at home in silent cinema, and
when he's not wowing us with his tap dancing skills (eat your heart out
Fred Astaire), he's playing havoc with our heartstrings when the
tragedy of his character's predicament hits home.
Bejo seems to be equally comfortable with the silent format, every bit
as expressive as Dujardin and very nearly as radiantly beautiful as
Garbo in her heyday (her inspiration was the young Joan
Crawford). The other star of the film is Uggie, an adorable eight-year-old Jack
Russell who plays Dujardin's ever-faithful pooch Jack.
Following a long and distinguished canine tradition, Uggie has little
difficulty stealing the focus from his human co-stars and very nearly
steals the entire film, which explains why he was given a special
award (the Palm Dog) at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival. Dujardin
was not overlooked - the Cannes jury honoured him with the Best Actor
Award, although this precluded the film from winning the festival's top
award. This was just the opening salvo in a barrage of awards that came
the film's way in 2012, not least of which were five Oscars (including that for Best Motion Picture),
seven BAFTAs and six Césars.
Unlike Hazanavicius's previous OSS 117 films, which were blatant
parodies and a little too silly to be taken seriously by art house
audiences,
The Artist is
lovingly sympathetic to the genre that inspired it, so much so that it
could almost be mistaken for a long-forgotten silent classic. The
plot is little more than mechanical reworking of
Singin in the Rain (1952)
and
A Star is Born (1954), pure
Hollwood-style melodrama of the kind that is all too easily derided by
today's cynically minded audiences. What makes the film so
effective is its authentic, and so seductively stylish, 1920s
feel. Hazanavicius takes his inspiration from the true
masters of the silent era - Charlie Chaplin, Fritz Lang, Ernst
Lubitsch, King Vidor, Tod Browning and F.W. Murnau - and in doing so
creates a vibrant work of art that is both a worthy tribute to the age
of silent cinema and an exhilarating treat for a modern mainstream film
audience. There is no better therapy for the present recessionary
blues than this marvellous jolt of glitzy escapism.
The achingly beautiful black-and-white cinematography comes close to mirroring both
the exquisite lyricism of Murnau's
Sunrise (1927) and the brooding
intensity of Billy Wilder's
Sunset Boulevard (1950), and
you can't help wondering if a film can look as stunning as
this in monochrome why filmmakers ever went over to colour.
Meanwhile, the camerawork has the startling fluidity of Lang, Browning
and Vidor's grander cinematic masterpieces, seemingly revelling in the
freedom from today's filmmaking conventions, like a bird that has just
been allowed outside its cage. Ludovic Bource's evocative period
score is the perfect substitute for scripted dialogue, eloquently
expressing the feelings of the protagonists as they are swept along by
a whirlwind of fate. Bernard Herrmann's love theme from Hitchcock's
Vertigo (1958) is stylishly filched
for the film's dramatic climax, an open admission that
The Artist
is a love poem to film art in general, not just the magical domain of silent cinema.
© James Travers 2012
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