Film Review
Satisfactory film adaptations of Ernest Hemingway's stories are so hard
to come by that it is tempting to conclude that he belongs to that rare
category of unfilmable writers. Whilst there have been many
acclaimed films based on Hemingway's work -
A Farewell to Arms (1932),
For Whom the Bell Tolls (1943),
To Have and Have Not (1944),
The Old Man and the Sea (1958) -
few, if any, stay true to the author's intentions and most were
rejected outright by Hemingway.
The
Snows of Kilimanjaro is one of the few Hemingway adaptations
that started out with the intention of being as faithful as possible to
its original source - a short story of the same title first published
in 1936 - but it ended up (as ever) being botched by interference from
the studio executives.
It was Darryl F. Zanuck, top dog at at 20th Century Fox, who objected
to Casey Robinson's original ending to the
film, one which closely mirrored that of Hemingway's
original story. The idea that the main character in a Hollywood
film could die in the last reel was anathema to Zanuck, so Robinson was
obliged to discard the darkly poetic denouement which made sense of the
whole piece and replace it with a rather pointless happy ending, on the
assumption that this is what cinema audiences were paying to
watch. Hemingway was naturally bewildered by this bastardisation
of his work, and was equally dissatisfied with the inclusion of plot
strands which were not in his story and which appear to have been
lifted from his other work. The legend goes that the writer was
so displeased with the film that he rang up the studio boss personally
to tell him that it was a compilation of his work and should have been
released under the title
The Snows
of Zanuck.
Whilst the Hemingway purists will no doubt hate the film, it is not
without merit. Director Henry King claimed that, of the hundred
or so films he made, this was his favourite, and certainly he gets the
most out of Casey Robinson's taut, well-structured screenplay.
Leon Shamroy's lush Technicolor location photography gives the film its
exotic richness, which Bernard Herrmann's evocative score marvellously
accentuates. It's a shame that the film relies so heavily on
matte shots (presumably because the budget would not stretch to allow
the stars to travel to the film's far-away locations) as these have
aged the film and reduce its visual power considerably.
Fortunately, strong performances from the three lead actors make up for
this and the truly awful visual effects near the start of the film are
soon forgotten.
In one of his more substantial early roles, Gregory Peck gives a
convincingly tortured portrayal of a man who is not only facing death
but the even grimmer prospect that his entire life has been a total
failure. Peck apparently based his portrayal on Hemingway's
contemporary F. Scott Fitzgerald, the troubled consumptive writer who
may conceivably have inspired the original story. Ava Gardner and
Susan Hayward make an effective contrast as the two women in the main
character's life, the overt sensuality of the former played against the
measured restraint of the second. Whilst the dialogue doesn't
always ring true (and some of it sounds jarringly pretentious), all
three actors give it their best shot and bring an exquisite poignancy
to the film's more dramatic sequences. Ernest Hemingway was
entirely justified in disliking the film, but it does at least reflect
something of the writer's genius for unfussy storytelling and his
compassion for his fellow man.
© James Travers 2012
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Film Synopsis
Harry Street is on Safari in Africa with his wife Helen when he falls
ill with a gangrenous wound. As he waits helplessly for medical
assistance to arrive, Harry looks back on his life and soon realises
how little he has accomplished in his chosen profession as a
writer. How quickly he abandoned his high ideals and became a
hack purveyor of pulp fiction. It was whilst he was living in
Paris that he had his first success, around the time he met Cynthia
Green, his one true love. Harry recalls the pain he felt when
Cynthia walked out on him, not long after she lost their unborn child
in an accident. He recalls their final tragic meeting, under
gunfire during the Spanish Civil War. Harry then remembers
meeting Helen, who looked so like Cynthia that he perhaps always
mistook her for his first love. Throughout his life, Harry never
seemed to find what it was he was looking for, that essential quality
of truth, either as a writer or as a lover. Perhaps the
realisation has come too late...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.