Showing posts with label Simon Curtis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Simon Curtis. Show all posts

Tuesday, 26 May 2015

Woman in Gold.




This season of the Robert Burns Centre Film Club was concluded with the screening of the 2015 British/American film Woman in Gold directed by Simon Curtis who you may remember as the director of My Week with Marilyn (2011) and also the award winning 2008 TV drama starring Julie Walters A Short Stay in Switzerland. This season has included some very good movies from World Cinema, America and this season two very different films from the UK,  Still Life (2013) directed by Uberto Passolini and starring Eddie Marsan and Peter Strickland’s The Duke of Burgundy (2015) starring Sidse Babett Knudsen which in my humble opinion was the highlight of the season.
 
The young maria with her Aunt Adele Bloch-Bauer.
Getting back to Curtis’s latest outing we were informed by our host for the evening, Alec Barclay, that the movie was based on a true story and Alec gave us some very interesting background to a story that involved a famous painting and the women who eventually took the country of Austria to court in an attempt to get this valuable piece of art work back to its rightful owner.  I have replicated Alec’s introduction for your information something I believe will enhance your understanding and enjoyment of the movie adaptation:

‘Tonight’s film is based on a true story, which deals with the struggle to return valuable property looted by the Nazis during World War Two. The Nazis were highly organised in that scouts were sent into countries before they were invaded and works of art identified in private and public collections. Gestapo teams then moved in and removed the chosen works.

The film’s title refers to the portrait originally entitled ‘Adele Bloch-Bauer’. The subject was the Jewish wife of a successful Austrian banker and industrialist Ferdinand Bloch-Bauer. She was a socialite living in Vienna, the cultural centre of Austria, and achieved intellectual stimulation by surrounding herself with some of the great writers and artists of the day. Ferdinand wanted a portrait of his wife. Gustav Klimt was chosen for the work, who at that time was a successful painter at the height of his artistic powers. It is estimated that what Ferdinand paid for the finished article could have purchased a reasonable sized villa in the suburbs. Frank Whitford in his book entitled ‘Klimt’ puts the work into perspective. ‘The painting creates an impression of wealth, influence and sensuality by means of its rich and polished surface. Klimt shows Adele Bloch-Bauer not as she really was, nor even as she might have wished herself to be, but rather as her husband desired her to be seen by others. The portrait is adorned with ornament for much the same reason that she wore the gowns, furs and jewellery her husband gave her – not only to enhance her beauty but also to exhibit his taste and affluence: the painting, after all, was hung in a prominent position in the sitter’s home, where it proclaimed her husband’s artistic discernment and status. Itself one of Ferdinand Bloch’s possessions, the portrait depicts the other: his wife.’

The painting forms part of Klimt’s gold period, along with perhaps the more famous work, ‘The Kiss’. (Both these paintings reached a wide audience in the 70’s reproduced as posters and prints).  A second portrait of Adele, executed in a different style, was completed in 1912.

The work on the painting featured in the film was started around 1903/04 and took till 1907 to complete. There were around 200 working sketches produced during this time. The painting measures 54 inches by 54 inches and uses oil and gesso along with gold and silver leaf.

Affairs seemed to be common amongst the upper class in Vienna, and it was strongly rumoured that Adele and Klimt had a 12-year affair. Allegedly only her maid and physician were in on the secret. Testimony to this could be the fact that Adele appears as one of the figures in ‘The Kiss’, and also semi-clad in various other paintings. Like most notable artists, Klimt caused controversy and outrage, in his case by showing women in what was regarded to be highly provocative poses, sometimes verging on pornographic.

In January of 1925 Adele died suddenly of meningitis. Ferdinand turned her room into a shrine, the only decorations being the collection of Klimt paintings, which were the 2 portraits and 4 landscapes, and a photograph of Klimt at the bedside, along with fresh flowers. In her Will Adele had asked her husband to donate the paintings to the Belvedere, which is the Austrian State Gallery, but Ferdinand revoked this. However, the Belvedere was soon to become the keepers of the work when Hitler came to power.

As a renowned collector, Ferdinand also had some old German masters in his possession. A Doctor Friedrich Fuhrer, from the Gestapo, was tasked with collecting the Bloch-Bauer paintings. He knew that Hitler and Goering would be interested in the German work but not in the Klimt’s, so he sold the two portraits and a landscape to the Belvedere (and kept a landscape for himself). The gallery were keen to display the work, so as ‘Adele Bloch-Bauer’ was an easily recognised Jewish name, this was changed to ‘Lady in Gold’.

 After the war all the Klimt’s were reunited in the Belvedere, where they stayed for many years, with the ‘Lady in Gold’ becoming the Austrian equivalent of the ‘Mona Lisa’ and attracting many visitors. The painting was eventually sold to Ronald Lauder in 2006 for $135 million”.[1]
 
Maria and her husband attempt to escape the Nazis.  
The film not only deals with the struggle Adele’s niece Maria had in trying to recover what once belonged to her family but also goes back to when Maria Altman was a very young girl and takes you through her life starting in Vienna, demonstrating how the German National Socialists were accepted by the Austrians, the treatment of the Austrian Jewish families and how the Nazis took their belongings, valuables and their apartments, leading to Maria’s eventual escape to America with her husband leaving behind her beloved mother and father. This period of history is cleverly intercut with the present day where we find Maria living in Los Angeles and working in her dress shop. Its not until she discovers letters in her dead sisters belongings, which reveal an unsuccessful attempt to get the famous painting back, that she enlists the help of an inexperienced young lawyer, Randol (Randy) Schoenberg, to make a claim to the art restitution board in Austria which will eventually take this elderly Jewish lady on a ten year legal journey. 
Maria with her Lawyer Randy Schoenberg. 

Hubertus Czernin the Investigative Journalist. 

The film feature’s exceptional performances from Helen Mirren as Maria Altmann, Ryan Reynolds as Schoenberg with German actor Daniel Bruhl as the left leaning Austrian Investigative Journalist Hubertus Czernin. Also in significant, but small roles are Curtis’s wife Elizabeth McGovern and Jonathan Pryce. Some critics have accused the film of being dull but I found it quite the opposite in that it was a very interesting and thought-provoking film. Perhaps these critics did not have the benefit of Mr Barclay’s introduction?

The real Maria Altmann in front of 'that painting'


[1] Alec Barclay Introduction to Woman in Gold at the RBC 27th May 2015.

Thursday, 12 January 2012

My Week with Marilyn


Marilyn Monroe.

On August 5th 1962 at 4:25 am a Los Angeles Police Department police sergeant received a call from a psychiatrist proclaiming that American’s greatest female sex symbol and star was found dead at her home. Marilyn Monroe was 36 years old; the recorded cause of death was ‘acute barbiturate poisoning resulting from a probable suicide’. Her demise, similar in respect to James Dean’s fatal car crash, essentially froze her immense stardom and flawless beauty in time as an icon of her era leading to the subsequent cult appreciation of her image as distinct from her films. Monroe was, and still is, part of the Hollywood mythology that was the American dream.

Michelle Williams as Monroe.
Monday nights RBC Film Club showing of My Week with Marilyn (2011) is a fine example of the continuing fascination with this great star. Introduced by Audrey Young who skilfully filled in the background to give us a better understanding of what we were about to see.  In 1956 Marilyn came to the Pinewood Studios in Buckinghamshire England to star in The Prince and the Showgirl (1957) an American film co-starring Laurence Olivier who was also the films director and producer. It was written by Terence Rattigan who based the script on his play The Sleeping Prince, which incidentally was the original name of the film. Monroe plays Elsie Marina a young showgirl who captivates the Prince Regent of Carpathia (Olivier). Although the wealthy Prince is a stickler for formality, he is a lonely man so he invites the showgirl to his Embassy for a very late supper. Although it has been stated that Olivier did not get on very well with his Hollywood star because of her unpredictable ways, he praised her as "a brilliant comedienne, which to me means she is also an extremely skilled actress" and that "Marilyn was quite wonderful, the best of all." Critics hailed Marilyn’s performance and the movie was nominated for five BAFTA Awards including Best Foreign Actress for Monroe.


Kenneth Branagh as Olivier.
That Monroe pose.
My Week with Marilyn is a British drama directed by Simon Curtis, who was responsible for the award winning 2008 TV drama A Short Stay in Switzerland, which starred Julie Walters. Colin Clark, the 23-year-old son of the art historian Sir Kenneth Clark, worked as third assistant director on the original 1957 movie and wrote two books on his experiences the first in 1995 called The Prince, The Showgirl and Me, the second entitled My Week with Marilyn. It was this second memoir written in 2000 that Adrian Hodges adapted to form the basis for Monday night film. It allegedly focuses on Colin Clark’s relationship with Monroe during a week he spent alone with her after her husband Arthur Miller went back to America.

Its difficult to put into words how enjoyable I found this splendidly accurate 1950’s period piece, certainly a credit to Britain’s marvelous acting talent who as good as they were, were impressively over shadowed by the American actress Michelle Williams who may not have Monroe’s voluptuous curves, but convincingly portrays both her child like vulnerability and her star status, a pitch perfect and mesmerising performance that disserves recognition as the awards season approaches. Also it’s difficult to separate Kenneth Branagh from Laurence Olivier obviously a part he was born to play. Eddie Redmayne plays the wide-eyed Clark with youthful enthusiasm and as I said previously we get top class performances from many other well-known actors. It’s an emotional and moving look at one of the cinemas most enduring icons and I would whole-heartedly recommend this film to lovers of good quality cinematic entertainment. If you don’t catch it in your local film theatre the DVD is due for release on the 12th March 2012.

The Prince and the Showgirl.