Read The Oxford History of World Cinema Online
Authors: Geoffrey Nowell-Smith
and on television. There is the 'modernist' Duhamel and Jansen version. And a laser disc
also exists of a further restoration with a recorded organ score by Carter. In the case of
Metropolis popular attention has been grabbed by the Moroder version with its synthetic
mix of disco styles and new songs performed by various pop artists, but the film has been
presented several times with a version of the original Huppertz score adapted and
conducted by Berndt Heller, and with semi-improvisatory scores performed live by avant-
garde ensembles. It is not possible to make hard-and-fast choices between the different
approaches taken in these cases. Anderson has argued persuasively in favour of the
presentation of a film like Intolerance in proper viewing conditions with the music
originally designed for it, but even she has admitted that such meticulous restorations can
have more historical than aesthetic interest. Meanwhile a case can also be made for the
enlivening use of 'anachronistic' music, particularly for unconventional films, though the
case of Metropolis shows that the use of trendy pop-music scores can make the film itself
look dated when the music itself begins to date and progressive styles of jazz and
minimalism can provide a more effective counterpoint to the film.
It is good to face so many possibilities, even if they stand in such confusing array. The
simple fact is that music for silent films was ever-changing, because live, and to be truly
'authentic' must continue to change. Moreover, it is probably futile to expect that the
musical traditions of silent cinema will ever be fully restored; for one thing, we simply
cannot watch the films in the same way as our ancestors, after so many decades of
experience with sound films, and after so much of the original repertoire has either been
forgotten or has lost any semblance of freshness. The best that can be hoped for, perhaps,
is that from time to time we will be able to return to the theatre to hear a live
accompaniment, whether old or new, that makes an effective match to the film and is
sensitively performed; when this happens, we are better able to imagine the silent
cinema's past glories, and to experience it as an art still vital, a century after it all began.
Bibliography
Anderson, Gillian ( 1990), "No Music until Cue".
Erdmann, Hans, and Becce, Giuseppe ( 1927), Allgemeines Handbuch der Film-Musik.
Gorbman, Claudia ( 1987), Unheard Melodies.
Marks, Martin ( 1995), Music and the Silent Film.
Rapée, Erno ( 1924), Motion Picture Moods.
----- ( 1925), Encyclopedia of Music for Pictures.
Ernst Lubitsch (1892-1947)
Marie Prevost and Monte Blue in Ernst Lubitsch's The Marriage Circle ( 1923)
The son of a Jewish tailor, Lubitsch joined Max Reinhardt's Deutsches Theater in 1911 as
supporting actor, and had his first starring part in a film farce, Die Firma heiratet ( 1914).
The role, an absent-minded, accidentprone, and over-sexed assistant in a clothing shop,
established him as a Jewish comedy character. Between 1914 and 1918 he acted in about
twenty such comedies, the majority of which he also directed (among the ones to have
survived are Schuhpalast Pinkus, 1916; Der Blusenkönig, 1917; and Der Fall Rosentopf,
1918).
Lubitsch was the most significant (German film talent to emerge during the war, creating
a type of visual and physical comedy familiar from pre-war Pathé Films, but situated in a
precise ethnic milieu (the German-Jewish lower middle class) and mostly treating the
staple theme of much early German cinema: social rise. After 1918, Lubitsch specialized
in Burlesque spoofs of popular operettas ( Die Austernprinzessin, 1919), of
Hoffmannesque fantasy subjects ( Die Puppe, 1919), and of Shakespeare ( Romeo und
Julia im Schnee and Kohlhiesels Töchter, both 1920). Centred on mistaken identities
( Wenn vier dasselbe tun, 1917), doubles ( Die Puppe, Kohlhiesels Töchter), and female
cross-dressing ( Ich möchte kein Mann sein, 1918), his comedies feature foppish men and
headstrong women, among them Ossi Oswalda ( Ossis Tagebuch, 1917) and Pola Negri
( Madame Dubarry, 1919).
Working almost exclusively for the Projections-AG Union, Lubitsch became the preferred
director of Paul Davidson, who from 1918 onwards produced a series of exotic costume
dramas ( Carmen, 1918; Das Weib des Pharao, 1922), filmed plays ( Die Flamme, 1923),
and historical spectacles ( Anna Boleyn, 1920) which brought both producer and director
world success. The 'Lubitsch touch' lay in the way the films combined erotic comedy with
the staging of historical show-pieces (the French Revolution in Madame Dubarry), the
mise-en-scène of crowds (the court of Henry VIII in Ann Boleyn), and the dramatic use of
monumental architecture (as in his Egyptian and oriental films). But one could also say
that Lubitsch successfully cross-dressed the Jewish schlemihl and let him loose in the
grand-scale stage sets of Max Reinhardt.
Lubitsch's stylistic trademark was a form of visual understatement, flattering the
spectators by letting them into the know, ahead of the characters. Already in his earliest
films, he seduced by surmise and inference, even as he built on the slapstick tradition of
escalating a situation to the point of leading its logic ad absurdum. Far from working out
this logic merely as a formal principle, Lubitsch, in comedies like Die Austernprinzessin (
1919) or Die Bergkatze ( 1921), based it on a sharply topical experience: the escalating
hyperinflation of the immediate post-war years, nourishing starvation fantasies about the
American way of life, addressed to a defeated nation wanting to feast on exotic locations,
erotic sophistication, and conspicuous waste. What made it a typical Lubitsch theme was
the mise-en-scène of elegant self-cancellation, in contrast to other directors of exotic
escapism, who dressed up bombastic studio sets as if to signify a solid world. Lubitsch, a
Berliner through and through, was also Germany's first, and some would say only,
'American' director. He left for the United States in 1921, remaking himself several times
in Hollywood's image, while, miraculously, becoming ever more himself.
If his furst cakkubg card was Rosita ( 1923), an underrated vehicle for Mary Pickford's
ambitions to become a femme mistaken identities. The Marriage Circle ( 1923),
Forbidden Paradise ( 1924), Lady Windermere's Fan ( 1925), and So This is Paris ( 1926)
are gracefully melancholy meditations on adultery, deceit, and self-deception, tying
aristocratic couples and decadent socialites together to each other, in search of love, but
settling for lust, wit, and a touch of malice. After some Teutonic exercises in
sentimentality ( The Student Prince, 1927; The Patriot, 1928), the coming of sound
brought Lubitsch new opportunities to reinvent his comic style. Prominent through his
producerdirector position at Paramount Studios, and aided by the script-writing talents of
Ernest Vajda and Samson Raphaelson, Lubitsch returned to one of his first inspirations;
operetta plots and boulevard theatre intrigues, fashioning from them a typical 1930s
Hollywoodémigré genre, the 'Ruritanian' and 'Riviera' musical comedies, starring mostly
Maurice Chevalier, with Jeanette macDonald, or Claudette Colbert ( The Love Parade,
1929; The Smiling Lieutenant, 1931; The Merry Widow, 1934). Segueing the songs deftly
into the plot lines, and brimming with sexual innuendoes, the films are bravura pieces of
montage cinema. But Lubitsch's reputation deserves to rest on the apparently just as
frivolous, but poignantly balanced, comedies Trouble in Paradise ( 1932), Design for
Living ( 1933), Angel ( 1937), and Ninotchka ( 1939). Invariably love triangles, these
dramas of futility and vanitas between drawing room and boudoir featured, next to
Melvyn Douglas and Herbert Marshall, the screen goddesses Marlene Dietrich and Greta
Garbo, whom Lubitsch showed human and vulnerable, while intensifying their
eroticallure. During the 1940s, Lubitsch's central European Weltschmerz found a suitably
comic-defiant mask in films like The Shop around the Corner ( 1940) and To Be or Not to
Be ( 1942), the latter a particularly audacious attempt to sabotage the presumptions not
only of Nazi rule, but of all tyrantical holds on the real: celebrating, as he had always
done, the saving graces and survivor skills of makebelieve.THOMAS
ELSAESSERSELECT FILMOGRAPHY Schuhpalast Pinkus ( 1916); Ich möchte kein
Mann sein ( 1918); Die Austernprinzessin ( 1919); Madame Dubarry ( 1919); Anna
Boleyn ( 1920); Die Bergkatze ( 1921); Das Weib des Pharao ( 1922); The Marriage
Circle ( 1923); Lady Windermere's Fan ( 1925); So This is Paris ( 1926); The Love Parade
( 1929); Trouble in Paradise ( 1932); Design for Living ( 1933); The Merry Widow
( 1934); Angel ( 1937); Ninotchka ( 1939); The Shop around the Corner ( 1940); To Be or
Not to Be ( 1942)
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Carringer, Robert, and Sabath, Barry ( 1978), Ernst Lubitsch: A Guide to References and
Resources.
Prinzler, Hans Helmut, and Patalas, Enno (eds.) ( 1984), Lubitsch.
Weinberg, Herman G. ( 1977), The Lubitsch Tough: A Critical Study.
Greta Garbo (1905-1990)
Born Greta Gustafsson, daughter of a Stockholm sanitary worker, Garbo had an unhappy,
impoverished childhood. She entered films via advertising, and after making a comedy
short was discovered by Mauritz Stiller, who renamed her and cast her in Gösta Berlings
saga ( 1924). He also remoulded her. Her advertising films had shown a plump, bouncy
teenager, but stiller drew from her something cool and remote. She was touchingly
vulnerable as a middle-class girl reduced to prostitution in Pabst's Die freudlose Gasse
( 1925), after which she left for Hollywood. Louis B. Mayer had seen Berling and wanted
Stiller, reluctantly he signed the director's young protégée as well.
At a loss what to make of Garbo, MGM dubbled her 'the Norma Shearer of Sweden' and
put her into The Torrent ( 1926), a trashy melodrama that Shearer had turned down. With
the first rushes they realized what they had - not just an actress but a mesmerizing screen
presence. Stiff, bony, and awkward in everyday life, Garbo was transformed on screen
into an image of graceful eroticism. Stiller, his Hollywood career a disaster, returned to
Sweden and an early death while Garbo, distressed by the loss of her mentor, was
propelled to the heights of stardom.
Flesh and the Devil ( 1926), directed by Clarence Brown and co-starring John Gilbert,
confirmed her unique qual0 ity. The urgency of her love scenes with Gilbert (with whom
she was involved off-screen) conveyed a hunger bordering on despair, an avid, mature
sexuality never before seen in American films, and a revelation to audiences used to the
vamping of Pola Negri or the coy flirtings of Clara Bow. Borwn's cinematographer was
William Daniels, who shot nearly all Garbo's Hollywood films and devised for her a
subtle, romantic lighting, rich in expressive half-tones, that did much to enhance her
screen image.
Garbo's combination of sexual need and soulful resignation defined her as the archetypal
Other Woman, fated to play sirens and adulteresses. She twice portrayed one of the
greatest, Anna Karenina, the first time in Love with Gilbert as Vronsky. The rest of her
silent films were unworthy of her, though she had already proved her ability to transcend