Douglas
Sirk in America
The acclaim for Todd Haynes' recent film Far
from Heaven has brought the spotlight back onto the work
of director Douglas Sirk. Far from Heaven
is essentially an homage to Sirk's glossy melodramas of the 1950s,
particularly All That Heaven Allows
whose story line it leans upon heavily and whose style it captures
effectively.
All That Heaven Allows was
only one of more than twenty Sirk pictures made for Universal during
a decade in which widescreen, color film-making became the norm. At
the time, however, Sirk received little respect. Although popular
with film-goers, his films were generally classified as women's
pictures or "weepies" by film critics of the time and seen
as little more than pot-boilers intended to showcase some of
Universal's top stars of that era - actors such as Rock Hudson, Lana
Turner, Jane Wyman, Robert Stack, and Dorothy Malone.
It was nearly a decade later before re-evaluation of Douglas Sirk
began. Andrew Sarris was one of the first influential American
critics to recognize that Sirk's dramatic, sometimes ostentatious
use of color, lighting, prop, and costume was more than simply a
visual style. Rather, it was Sirk's own method of commenting on the
film content, drawing our attention to its truths and absurdities in
a way that is both eye-catching visually and thought-provoking in
its directness. The more one watches Sirk's films from this period,
the more one can appreciate the effectiveness of Sirk's approach.
These films are melodramatic; their basic stories almost
predictable; and their stars sometimes considered among the more
superficial of the time. It would be easy to dismiss them, yet once
seen, they draw one back for repeated viewings because there is
always something new to discover. It was Sirk's great gift to be
able to deliver solid entertainment while accenting the visual
components of the film medium as a way to comment on the
narrow-mindedness of the social order of the times, particularly the
tendency for one level of society to look down upon another. Many of
his films focused on families or individuals affluent in a material
sense, but emotionally or sexually starved at the same time. The
endings of Sirk's films are seldom neat in a traditional Hollywood
sense. Usually something gives, and it's either the accepted social
norms or the happiness of the protagonists.
The Pre-Universal Period
Douglas Sirk was born Claus Detlev Sierk in Denmark in 1897 or 1900
(sources vary). After a career in the theatre and film in Germany
during the 1920s and early 1930s, he left Germany, eventually coming
to America where he signed a contract as a writer for Columbia in
1942. Nothing came of this right away, but Sirk soon found himself
involved in directing several low budget films for the poverty row
studios or smaller independent producers. The first of these was
Hitler's Madman (1942, PRC),
which tells the story of the assassination of Nazi Richard Heydrich
by the Czechs and the Nazi reprisals that resulted. John Carradine
was the most well-known cast member in a film that was as detailed a
look at Nazism as any made in America. Sirk's other wartime film was
Summer Storm (1944, UA), which
offered juicy roles to both Linda Darnell and George Sanders in a
version of Chekhov's "The Shooting Party". In 1946, George
Sanders also appeared in Sirk's next film, A
Scandal in Paris (UA) - a model of wit and romance
(sometimes known nowadays as Thieves'
Holiday) that also offered a field day for character
actor enthusiasts with the likes of Akim Tamiroff, Gene Lockhart,
Vladimir Sokoloff, and Alan Napier among the cast. In the late
1940s, Sirk turned to crime - as a subject for his films, that is.
Lured (1947, UA) and Sleep,
My Love (1948, UA) are both usually classified as films
noir although with their Victorian settles, neither fit the standard
modern urban milieu of the traditional noir. Lured
was a good showcase for the non-comedic talents of Lucille Ball
while Sleep, My Love features
Claudette Colbert, Don Ameche and Robert Cummings expertly
maneuvered through the familiar plot of the man who tries to drive
his wife crazy. It is also a film that has some hints of the style
of the glossy melodramas to come from Sirk. Shockproof
(1949, Columbia) was more noir, this time starring Cornel Wilde and
with a script co-written by Samuel Fuller. Slightly
French (1949, Columbia) - a fairly conventional musical
with Dorothy Lamour and Don Ameche - rounded out the decade.
Kino Video has made one of Sirk's 1940 films available on DVD with
plans for one other. Lured is
currently available and is recommended. The DVD is mastered in the
OAR from what appears to be a rather good print. There is some
speckling, but the image is bright and clear with good contrast.
Blacks and whites are true with quite good shadow detail. The sound
is acceptable for an unrestored film of this age. There is some hiss
from time to time, and dialogue is briefly lost at a couple of
splices. Unfortunately this is one of Kino's earlier releases when
there was little attempt to include any supplemental information (in
this case, none at all). A Scandal in
Paris has been available on VHS from Kino for several
years and a DVD version is planned for later in 2003. None of the
other Sirk films from this period have even been available on either
VHS or laserdisc, so any imminent DVD releases seem unlikely.
The Universal Period
From 1950 to 1959, Douglas Sirk directed 22 films - one for United
Artists and the rest for Universal, the company with which his
reputation is most often associated. The decade started slowly for
Sirk with a standard undersea drama, Mystery
Submarine (1950, Universal, with Macdonald Carey and
Marta Toren), and then the sometimes overly earnest The
First Legion (1951, UA) with Charles Boyer as a priest
dealing with an apparent miracle in his hometown. Thunder
on the Hill (1951, Universal, Claudette Colbert tries to
prove a convicted murderess innocent) was more like it with some of
the hints of style that would be become standard by mid-decade, but
The Lady Pays Off (1951,
Universal, with Linda Darnell and Stephen McNally) and Weekend
with Father (1951, Universal, with Van Heflin and
Patricia Neal) were both strictly programmers. The years 1952 and
1953 were both years of films mixing promise and standard fare. No
Room for the Groom (1952, Universal, with Tony Curtis as
a former soldier returning home to unexpected company), Has
Anybody Seen My Gal? (1952, Universal, with Charles
Coburn in fine form), and Meet Me at the
Fair (1952, Universal, minor musical with Dan Dailey)
were all in the latter category, but Take
Me to Town (1953, Universal, with Ann Sheridan as a
singer on the run) was Sirk's first real drama in color to display
his visual flare. He followed this up with the potent All
I Desire (1953, Universal, with Barbara Stanwyck as a
women who first strays then returns to her family). Taza,
Son of Cochise (1954, Universal, with Rock Hudson) was
Sirk's only foray into western territory, but energetic and
generally successful if you can accept Rock Hudson as a native
American.
Then came Magnificent Obsession
(1954, Universal) - the first of the films usually included when
Sirk's trademark melodramas are discussed. The story had previously
been filmed by Universal in 1935 with Irene Dunne and Robert Taylor.
Now with Rock Hudson and Jane Wyman playing the leads (and Agnes
Moorehead in support), Sirk ramped up the melodrama even more and
contrasts Jane Wyman's blindness with colour so vibrant that it has
to be seen to be believed. After a questionable outing about Attila
the Hun (Sign of the Pagan
[1954, Universal, with Jeff Chandler and Jack Palance]) and a
surprisingly entertaining costumer in Ireland with Rock Hudson (Captain
Lightfoot [1954, Universal]), Sirk reunited with his Magnificent
Obsession cast headliners to make All
That Heaven Allows (1955, Universal). This film is
probably the piece-de-resistance of Sirk's career - a rich tapestry
of pretension, gossip, and small-mindedness that is ignited by a
woman's simple desire for emotional and sexual fulfillment. Her only
"error" is to seek that fulfillment from a union that goes
against all that is socially acceptable in her small town.
Sirk would direct eight more films for Universal with at least four
of them mining much of the same thematic territory as Magnificent
Obsession and All That Heaven
Allows. Written on the Wind
(1956, Universal) finds Rock Hudson, Robert Stack, Dorothy Malone,
and Lauren Bacall entangled in an epic tale of money, back-biting,
love, and nymphomania in the Texas oil fields. Battle
Hymn (1957, Universal, with Rock Hudson and Martha Hyer)
sees a clergyman return to military service in Korea, while The
Tarnished Angels (1957, Universal) reunites Rock Hudson,
Robert Stack, and Dorothy Malone in an adaptation of William
Faulkner's "Pylon". Finally, Imitation
of Life (1959, Universal, with Lana Turner and John
Gavin) was Sirk's sumptuous take on the story that had previously
been filmed to good effect by John Stahl in 1934 with Claudette
Colbert and Louise Beavers. Interspersed with these films were
lesser fare such as There's Always
Tomorrow (1955, Universal, staid Fred MacMurray finds
himself tempted by old flame Barbara Stanwyck), Interlude
(1957, Universal, June Allyson comes between a composer and his
wife), and A Time to Love and a Time to
Die (1958, Universal, John Gavin in an Erich Maria
Remarque story of doomed love during WW2). Although uncredited, Sirk
is also believed to have had a significant hand in the direction of
Never Say Goodbye (1956,
Universal, Rock Hudson and his long separated wife attempt to
reunite).
After Imitation of Life, Sirk
retired to Germany where he was generally inactive in film with the
exception of some work for the Munich Film School in the latter half
of the 1970s. He died in Switzerland in 1987.
The Universal part of Sirk's career is fortunately partially
represented on DVD. The Criterion Collection has issued two fine
discs for All That Heaven Allows
and Written on the Wind that
are highly recommended. Both films are available in new anamorphic
widescreen digital transfers. All That
Heaven Allows is the slightly more vibrant- and
accurate-looking of the two colour presentations. Its supplement
package is more extensive also, including the BBC documentary Behind
the Mirror: A Profile of Douglas Sirk; a Fassbinder essay
Imitation of Life: On the Films of
Douglas Sirk; a still gallery; and the original
theatrical trailer. Written on the Wind
contains only a Sirk filmography that includes various stills and
posters, and trailers for both Criterion releases. Universal itself
has just issued a DVD of Imitation of
Life. The image quality (1.85:1 anamorphic) is not quite
in the same league as the Criterions. It's an issue of variability.
Sometimes it looks very sharp, but at others it's soft and
occasionally subject to dirt and debris. The only supplement is the
theatrical trailer. A number of Sirk's other 1950s films have
appeared on VHS although none ever made it to laserdisc. One might
hope that a good response to Imitation of
Life will encourage Universal to put more Sirk out on
DVD.
Anyone looking to sample the best of Sirk should look for the four
existing DVDs and the one forthcoming. While awaiting further Sirk
to appear on DVD, take a look at the existing VHS versions of A
Scandal in Paris, Magnificent
Obsession, Battle Hymn,
The Tarnished Angels, and All
I Desire.
New Classic Release
Announcements and Rumors
There's not a whole raft of new items this time around, but what
there is "is cherce" (with apologies to Spencer Tracy in
Pat and Mike). Thanks also to
several readers who provided a few welcome tips.
In Criterion news, April 29th will see the release of The
Adventures of Antoine Doinel - a five disc set of
Francois Truffaut films beginning with The
400 Blows (1959) and continuing through the 60s and 70s
with Stolen Kisses, Bed
and Board and Love on the Run,
and the short film Antoine and Colette.
The set will include documentaries, interviews, archival materials,
newsreel footage and trailers and retail for $99.95. Also coming on
that date is Federico Fellini's 1952 comedy The
White Sheik (original 1.37:1 aspect ratio and Italian
mono, new interviews and trailers). Criterion has also acquired
several films of renowned Japanese filmmaker Yasujiro Ozu. Among the
Ozu films slated for DVD release in the fall of 2003 and later in
2004 are such classics as Early Summer
(1951), Tokyo Story (1953),
and Floating Weeds (1959).
Finally, due to contract restrictions, Godard's Band
of Outsiders (1964) is not expected to be available in
Canada. For those that may not be aware, Shanghai
Express (1932, Paramount, with Marlene Dietrich), and
long on Criterion's release list, has been indefinitely postponed
due to problems with film elements.
Fox has confirmed a new wave of war films for May 20th release. All
will be presented in their original theatrical aspect ratios and
will include trailers: The Blue Max
(1966, George Peppard and James Mason), The
Desert Fox (1951, James Mason), The
Enemy Below (1957, Robert Mitchum, includes The
War Situation, U-Boat Captured
by Biplane and Inside the
German U-boat Base at Lorient, France MovieTone News
clips), 13 Rue Madeleine
(1946, James Cagney, includes Captured
Pictures Show How Nazi V-2 Rockey Was Born MovieTone News
clip), Heaven Knows Mr. Allison
(1957, Robert Mitchum and Deborah Kerr, includes Tarawa:
Marines Toughest Battle!, King
and Nimitz View Scenes of Saipan Victory and Japs'
Raid on Saipan MovieTone News clips), and Sink
the Bismarck! (1960, Kenneth More). An audio commentary
(possibly by Scott Eyman who did such a fine job on a similar effort
for Criterion's recent Trouble in
Paradise) is rumored to be in the works for John Ford's
My Darling Clementine (1946).
The April offering in Fox's Studio Classics Series, Love
Is a Many-Splendored Thing (1955), will be presented in
2.55:1 anamorphic widescreen and Dolby 2.0 stereo. Extras include
audio commentary by Michael Lonzo, Sylvia Stoddard and John
Burlingame, a William Holden biography, MovieTone News clips, and
trailers.
Warner Brothers has scheduled a May 13th release date for three war
films including the first Errol Flynn film from a major studio, and
a good one - Objective Burma
(1945, directed by Raoul Walsh). The other two are Operation
Pacific (1951, fine John Wayne WW2 actioner) and Battle
Cry (1955, Raoul Walsh directs from the Leon Uris novel).
The latter is a Cinemascope film that will be released in a 2.55:1
anamorphic version. Trailers are expected to be the only supplements
in each case. Gay Purr-ee
(1962, animation with the voices of Judy Garland and Robert Goulet)
is believed to be in WB's plans for this spring and rumor has it
that Roger Ebert has recorded an audio commentary for Casablanca
further fueling speculation that a Casablanca
SE is in the works for later this year. WB's February
release of The Cardinal (1963)
will be a double-disc set with an anamorphic 2.35:1 widescreen
transfer of the movie sporting a newly remastered DD 2.0 surround
audio track. The extras will include a two-hour documentary entitled
Otto Preminger: Anatomy of a Filmmaker,
a 1963 making-of featurette, and a trailer. King
of Kings (1961, with Jeffrey Hunter) will be presented in
anamorphic 2.35:1 widescreen with a new DD 5.1 audio track. The
extras will include a making-of featurette, two vintage premiere
newsreels, and a trailer.
Paramount has a nice beefy list of western titles for release in
April (and being from Paramount, we can count on anamorphic,
widescreen transfers where appropriate): Big
Jake (1971, under-rated John Wayne), Copper
Canyon (1950, smooth Ray Milland), Gunfight
at the OK Corral (1957, tense Burt Lancaster and Kirk
Douglas), Little Big Man
(1970, evergreen Dustin Hoffman), The
Lonely Man (1957, moody Anthony Perkins), A
Man Called Horse (1970, suffering Richard Harris), Nevada
Smith (1966, persistent Steve McQueen), and Rio
Lobo (1970, vengeful John Wayne). Also on the agenda are
guilty pleasure The Carpetbaggers
(1964, Alan Ladd's last film) and Le Mans
(1971, with Steve McQueen).
Universal (in a similar move to their past ultimate edition release
of Meet Joe Black [1998] when
they also included the original version Death
Takes a Holiday [1934]) will release the recent The
Truth About Charlie (2002) in a two-disc set along with
the original Charade (1963,
with Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn). The April 1 release will
apparently include anamorphic transfers and an audio commentary as
well as other supplements. Even better, on May 6, we get a whole
wave of classic material, dominated by James Stewart and director
Anthony Mann: Night Passage
(1957) and double features of Bend of the
River (1952)/The Far Country
(1955), The Rare Breed (1966)/The
Redhead From Wyoming (1952), and Destry
Rides Again (1939)/Winchester
'73 (1950). Other titles are: Law
and Order (1953, Ronald Reagan), Come
September (1961, Rock Hudson), Duel
at Silver Creek (1952, Audie Murphy), and Bedtime
Story (1964, Marlon Brando). No specifications have been
released as yet, but one could at least hope for inclusion of the
audio commentary that James Stewart did for the laserdisc release of
Winchester '73. All of the May
releases will apparently be priced at a reasonable $19.95.
Disney's packed two-disc special edition release of 20,000
Leagues Under the Sea (1954) is currently scheduled for
May 13th (see
the
January 24th My Two Cents column here at The Digital
Bits for complete details) and Disney's 1950 version of
Treasure Island is expected
April 29th.
Rumored releases for later in 2003 include Robert Flaherty's Man
of Aran (1934) and Louisiana
Story (1948), both from Home Vision, and Jean Vigo's L'Atalante
(1934) from New Yorker Video.
Barrie Maxwell
barriemaxwell@thedigitalbits.com |