Film Review
With
The Paradine Case Alfred
Hitchcock ended his seven year long association with producer David O.
Selznick and, in doing so, completed the first stage of his highly
productive Hollywood career. By the time he came to make this
film, Hitchcock had grown tired of Selznick's controlling influence and
was eager to embark on a career as an independent filmmaker, hoping to
find far greater artistic freedom than he had enjoyed so
far.
The Paradine Case
is interesting in that it shows quite clearly the conflict between
Hitchcock's desire to push the boundaries of filmmaking technique and
Selznick's requirement for another box office hit. As it turned
out, the film fell short on both fronts: it was not as innovative as it
could have been and it barely recovered its enormous production cost.
Whilst it is often compared unfavourably with Hitchcock's other great
films of this era,
The Paradine Case
has a great deal to commend it - a fine cast, some impressive
production values and a respectable screenplay. The only real defect is some
slightly schmaltzy dialogue, which at one point comes
close to choking Ann Todd in what vaguely resembles a ghastly parody of
Brief Encounter.
Gregory Peck's performance is far more convincing than the one the
actor gave in his previous Hitchcock film
Spellbound
(1945) and vividly shows the anguish of a man who cannot prevent his
emotional feelings for an attractive woman from overriding his reason
and professional judgement.
The passion and humanity of Peck's portrayal is effectively contrasted
with the cold unresponsiveness of the woman his character has to save
from the gallows, the aloof Mrs Paradine, skilfully played by Alida
Valli. Just what kind of woman is the enigmatic Mrs
Paradine: the hapless innocent who is prepared to sacrifice herself to
protect a secret lover or a dangerous woman of immense cunning?
We never know - until the surprising, and highly poignant,
denouement. Interestingly, Greta Garbo and Laurence Olivier were
originally considered for the parts that ultimately went to Valli and
Peck.
The film also features a fresh-faced young French actor Louis Jourdan,
hoping to make a big break in Hollywood having achieved some measure of
celebrity in his own country. Although he did get to star in a
number of notable American films, notably
Gigi (1958), Jourdan never
achieved the stardom he sought and today he is little more than a
footnote in French cinema; he is perhaps better remembered for his
leading vampiric role in the 1977 BBC television production of
Count Dracula.
The Paradine Case is pretty
much a conventional courtroom drama but Hitchcock manages to find
plenty of opportunity for experimentation with camerawork. The
film is perhaps most memorable for its compelling trial scenes, which
were shot using four cameras simultaneously in an extended take -
rather like how television dramas would be recorded up until the
mid-1980s. Whilst multi-camera shooting has its limitations,
Hitchcock uses the technique successfully to create an almost
unbearable sense of confinement and tension, which serves the drama
perfectly as it heads towards its nail-biting climax. The
director would perfect the art of the long take with his subsequent two
films,
Rope (1948) and
Under Capricorn (1949) - but that,
as they say, is another story...
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Alfred Hitchcock film:
Rope (1948)
Film Synopsis
Maddalena Paradine is surprised when, one evening, the police call at
her London home and charge her with the murder of her recently deceased
husband, Colonel Paradine. She engages Anthony Keane, a brilliant
young lawyer, to defend her in her coming trial. As soon as she
sees the beautiful and mysterious woman, Keane is convinced of her
innocence and resolves to clear her name in a court of law. If
Mrs Paradine did not kill her husband, the only other suspect is
André Latour, the Colonel's handsome young valet. Yet, for
some reason, Mrs Paradine is doggedly reticent about Latour, and seems
strangely unwilling to say anything that may incriminate him.
Meanwhile, Keane's wife, Gay, becomes aware of her husband's growing
fascination for Mrs Paradine and realises that if he loses the case she
may end up losing him forever...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.