Daily Archives: May 24, 2013

A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1935)

A Midsummer Night’s DreamMidsummer Night's Dream Poster
Directed by William Dieterle and Max Reinhardt
1935/USA
Warner Bros.

First viewing

 

 

 Puck: Lord, what fools these mortals be!

This big-screen adaptation of the popular Shakespearean comedy has its plusses and minuses.  The story takes place on the eve of the marriage of the Duke of Athens to the Queen of the Amazons.  Four young lovers congregate in a wood on the same night some rustics are rehearsing for a performance at the wedding feast.  The king and queen of the fairies and their minions amuse themselves by playing tricks on the mortals and each other.  With an all-star cast, including Olivia de Havilland in her stage debut as Hermia, Dick Powell as Lysander, James Cagney as Bottom, Joe E. Brown as Flute, Mickey Rooney as Puck, and Anita Louise as Titania, Queen of the Fairies.

Midsummer Night's Dream 1

This film was not a box-office success and I can see why.  It takes some getting used to.   The production is absolutely beautiful and brilliantly conveys the enchanted world of the fairies.  The film is gloriously scored to Mendelssohn’s incidental music for the play, as orchestrated by Erich Wolfgang Korngold.   The cinematography by Hal Mohr and art direction by Anton Grot are spectacular.

In my opinion, the performances are much less successful.  This film was based on a Max Reinhardt production at the Hollywood Bowl and I attribute some of the truly weird acting choices to Reinhardt.  For example, the fairy characters, and especially Puck, shriek, laugh, and make strange noises to convey their other-worldliness.   It is very odd.  Mickey Rooney’s performance was downright irritating, almost embarrassing, for me.  Cagney and the other rustics are pretty good.  Of the lovers, de Havilland is the standout.

The film won Oscars for editing and cinematography.  Hal Mohr had not been nominated and was the first and only recipient to win an award based on a write-in vote.  It was also nominated for Best Picture.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YEqx-aTbwlA

General Release Trailer

The Black Room (1935)

The Black RoomBlack Room Poster
Directed by Roy William Niell
1935/USA
Columbia Pictures Corporation

First viewing

 

Baron Gregor de Bergmann: Perhaps you will come back from the dead to kill me?
Anton de Bergmann: [Dying words] Even from the dead!

A chance to see Boris Karloff in not one but two roles in this gothic horror tale.  The story is set in an unidentified Eastern European country in the 18th or 19th Century.  Twins are born to a baron.  This is seen as a bad omen as the baron’s house was founded when a younger twin murdered an elder twin.  Legend has it that the lineage of the house will die off the same way when a younger twin kills the elder in the Black Room.  This room is sealed.

The boys, Gregor and Anton (both played by Boris Karloff) grow up, one evil and the other good.  Gregor, the evil twin, inherits the title; Anton has a paralyzed right arm and leaves the castle unable to bear the strain of the prophecy.  Years later, the deeply unpopular tyrant/murderer Baron Gregory summons Anton back to the castle, begging for his assistance.   So begins a tale of inexorable fate.  Also starring Marian Marsh as the love interest for both twins and a local soldier.

Black Room 1

It is fun to watch Karloff tackle these roles.  He not only delineates the good and evil twins admirably but also portrays one imitating the other.  All three characters are quite different. Otherwise, the movie is entertaining, if not earthshaking, and has a nice ironic ending.

Clip – Gregor AKA Boris Karloff on pears