Film Review
The Red Shoes, arguably the
best film ever made about the world of ballet, marks the creative
highpoint of one of cinema's most successful partnerships, Michael
Powell and Emeric Pressburger (a.k.a. the Archers). No matter how
many times you watch this film, you cannot help but be impressed by the
sheer imaginative genius and beauty of its design, and the searing
poignancy of the story it tells, about the irreconcilable conflict
between art and life.
The film started out as a draft screenplay which Pressburger wrote
early in the 1930s for producer-director Alexander Korda (who is
believed to be the inspiration for the story's main character, the
austere impresario Lermontov). This was intended to showcase
Korda's future wife Merle Oberon, but was ultimately
unused. After the Second World War, Powell and Pressburger
were keen to make an escapist film, quite different to the realist
dramas they had previously produced, and so bought back the screenplay
from Korda. This they hastily developed into
The Red Shoes.
The story is based on the well-known fairy tale by Hans Christian Andersen.
To give the film as much authenticity as possible, the Archers offered
some of the supporting roles to some very eminent figures from the
world of ballet: Léonide Massine, Ludmilla Tchérina and
Robert Helpmann. The leading role of Victoria Page went to
Moira Shearer, who had a promising ballet career with the Sadler's
Wells Ballet Company. Not only was Shearer a natural born dancer,
but she also proved to have great talent as an actress. Although
she preferred her career in ballet, Shearer would subsequently appear
in a number of other films, including the Archers'
Tales of Hoffman (1951) and
Michael Powell's
Peeping Tom
(1960).
The film's other stars are Anton Walbrook, the distinguished Austrian
actor who had previously starred in
The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp
(1943), and Marius Goring, who had appeared in
The Spy in Black (1939) and
A Matter of Life and Death
(1946). In one of his most memorable roles, Walbrook is the
personification of the artist who sees himself as God, brutally
suppressing his humanity in an obsessive pursuit for artistic
perfection. Goring is an unusual choice for a romantic lead
but he conveys brilliantly the terrible inner conflict between creative
ambition and romantic love.
The sumptuous and very stylish look of
The Red Shoes - quite unlike
anything in British cinema at the time - is the product of Jack
Cardiff's glorious colour photography and a stunning production design
by the acclaimed German art director Hein Heckroth. The
centrepiece of the film is an unbroken 17 minute ballet sequence - the
Red Shoes ballet - which is a small
masterpiece of dazzling surreal fantasy. This inspired and,
highly complex, ballet sequence was choreographed by Robert Helpmann,
with a beautifully evocative score by Brian Easdale.
It's hard to imagine, given its standing today, but when
The Red Shoes was first released in
the UK it fared very badly. This was mainly because its
distributors, the Rank Organisation, were doubtful of its merit and so
did very little to promote it. However, its fortunes changed
drastically when it reached the United States, where it was both a
critical success and an instant box office hit. Subsequently, it
became one of the highest earning films ever made in Britain.
The Red Shoes was nominated for
five Oscars in 1949, including Best Picture, and won two - in the
categories of Best Art Direction (Color) and Best Music. Since
its initial release, the film's reputation has steadily increased and
today it is recognised as one of the true great masterpieces of British
cinema.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Michael Powell film:
The Small Back Room (1949)
Film Synopsis
Boris Lermontov, the manager of a world famous ballet company, expects
nothing less than total commitment from those he employs. His
latest protégés show great promise - Victoria Page, an
aspiring young ballerina, and Julian Craster, an ambitious
composer. After a successful début, Victoria is offered
the leading role in Lermontov's production of a new ballet,
The Red Shoes, for which Craster is
to write the entire score. The ballet is concerned with a peasant
girl and a pair of magical red shoes. When the girl puts the
shoes on, they take over her life and she ultimately dances herself to
death. When it opens in Monte Carlo, the ballet is an immense
success, but Lermontov is furious when he discovers that Victoria and
Julian have fallen in love and intend to marry...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.