Daily Archives: September 23, 2015

The Golden Coach (1952)

The Golden Coach “La Carosse dór”
Directed by Jean Renoir
Written by Jean Renoir, Jack Kirkland et al, inspired by “Le Carrosse du Saint-Sacrement” by Prosper Merimee
1952/France/Italy
Repeat viewing/My DVD collection
#261 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

[box] Aubergiste: How do you like the New World?

Don Antonio: It will be nice when it’s finished.[/box]

This film is Jean Renoir’s valentine to actors and the theater.

It is the Eighteenth Century somewhere in South America.  An Italian comedia dell’arte troupe has arrived after a long sea voyage to perform in a ramshackle theater in the capital.  Camilla (Anna Magnani), the actress who plays Columbine, has already won the heart of Don Antonio, an expert swordsman and fellow passenger.  She promptly proceeds to captivate a bullfighter and the world-weary young viceroy of the colony. Camille’s first love is her audience.

The viceroy is so smitten with her that he decides to present her with his splendid golden coach, which arrived on the same ship as the troupe and in which Camilla slept during the voyage.  This meets with disapproval from the local aristocracy which looks down on anything so common as actors.  The last act includes a showdown between Camilla’s three suitors.

This is enjoyable for the sheer spectacle of the thing and Magnani’s performance.  She seems to be having a fine time in the role alternating between her stiffer stage performances and her off-stage self.  Somehow, though, I find it lacks sufficient “oomph” in a way I can’t quite put my finger on.

Trailer

The Stranger in Between (1952)

The Stranger in Between (AKA “Hunted”)
Directed by Charles Chrichton
Written by Jack Whittingham from an idea by Michael McCarthy
1952/UK
Independent Artists/British-Filmmakers
First viewing/YouTube

[box] I love the camera and it loves me. Well, not very much sometimes. But we’re good friends. — Dirk Bogarde[/box]

This is an excellent movie about a couple of lonely souls on the road.  That one is the other’s kidnapper is almost incidental.

Merchant seaman Chris Lloyd (Dirk Bogarde) has recently returned home from the sea. One of his first actions is to murder someone.  During the movie, we gradually find out why.  Six-year-old Robbie (John Whitely) stumbles upon him and the corpse shortly after the deed has been done.  In a panic, Chris scoops up the boy and flees.  Chris is quite rough with the boy at first but soon discovers that his charge has no desire whatsoever to return home.  After awhile, the child’s biggest concern is that Chris not abandon him.

And it doesn’t take long before Chris realizes his mistake in seizing Robbie.  He has no money to feed him, or himself, and is constantly reminded that the boy is hungry and tired. He does come in handy as a lookout on a few occasions. The police are hot on Chris’s trail the entire time. Finally, the two set off on foot on an arduous cross-country journey to Scotland where Chris has a brother he hopes to stay with.  With Elizabeth Sellars as Chris’s wife and Kay Walsh as an innkeeper.

I love Dirk Bogarde and he is at his haunted, sensitive best in this movie.  There is a sequence where he tells the boy a bedtime story that I thought was really moving. The child actor is pretty good as well.  I was caught up in the suspense the entire time. This is one of those stories where you almost hope the criminal goes free.  Recommended.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TozyEzttOJc

Trailer