Film Review
Perhaps no film better demonstrates the strengths and failings of Orson
Welles as a filmmaker than his spectacular film noir
The Lady from Shanghai. It is
a film which combines the most dazzlingly inventive cinematic style
with a plot so muddled and convoluted that even Welles himself couldn't
explain it. The impression you get watching this film is that
Welles was so preoccupied with technique and design that telling a
coherent story which anyone could follow was just about his lowest
priority.
Anyone familiar with classic American film noir of the early 1940s will
know that plot complexity was just one of the devices that filmmakers
employed to distract an audience from the low production values -
typified by cheap sets and high turn around. Even when film noir
acquired respectability and budgets to match, the absurdly complicated
plots prevailed. The production values on
The Lady from Shanghai could hardly
be bettered, to the extent that these actually distract us from the
plot, a curious reversal of film noir technique.
The dreamlike cinematography employed by Welles is typical of late
1940s film noir, with extreme expressionist lighting and contrived use
of shadows adding to the impression of the central character being
caught in a web of intrigue from which escape looks increasingly
unlikely - a foretaste of Welles's later masterpiece
The
Trial (1960). The film is best remembered for
its climactic showdown in the Hall of Mirrors, with multiple
reflections of the protagonists creating a spectacularly surreal
sequence which is utterly chilling to watch.
Welles stars in the film alongside his former wife Rita Hayworth. who
had to have her famous long red hair cut and dyed blonde. This
was one of the earliest film noirs to make extensive use of real
locations, here San Francisco and Acapulco. The yacht seen in the
Acapulco scenes belonged to none other than Errol Flynn, who piloted it
during the shoot.
In true Wellesian fashion, the film's production became fraught as
costs ran out of control, much to the annoyance of Columbia executive
Harry Cohn, who had hired Welles to direct this film so that Welles
could repay an earlier favour. The director's first cut was far
too unwieldy for a commercial release and was hacked down from 155
minutes to 90 minutes. Cohn loathed the film and could make no
sense of the plot, and Welles loathed the final edit with its
tawdry score. The cinema-going public was also unimpressed when it was
first released - just one of Welles's many box office disasters - and critical reaction was mixed. Today, the film is
regarded in a far more favourable light.
The Lady from Shanghai
isn't faultless, but it has great style and offers several moments of
sheer cinematic brilliance - of the kind that Orson Welles alone could deliver.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Orson Welles film:
Macbeth (1948)
Film Synopsis
In San Francisco, drifter Michael O'Hara falls under the spell of Elsa
Bannister, a beautiful young blonde who is grateful when he saves her
from some marauding thugs. As a reward, she persuades her
husband, the crippled lawyer Arthur Bannister, to offer him a job as a
deckhand on his next yachting cruise. During the cruise, Elsa and
Michael find it hard to keep their burgeoning love affair from Arthur
Bannister. Bannister's business partner, George Grisby, then
makes Michael a strange proposal. He offers him $5000 if he will
sign a confession to having murdered him (i.e. Grisby), so that Grisby
can pocket his own insurance money and start a new life.
When she learns of this, Elsa warns Michael that he is walking into a
trap. She is right...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.