Film Review
Robert Wiene's
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari
(1920) is a landmark in German cinema, its boldly expressionistic
design providing a horrifying visual representation of the mental
states of the protagonists in a world consumed by fear and
mistrust. German expressionism found its way into other art forms
of the time but it is in cinema that it had its greatest impact, a
visual style that would influence numerous filmmakers and bring a
chilling edge of reality to genre films such as thrillers and horror
movies. It is the power of cinematic expressionism to depict the
tortured mental landscape of an individual which Wiene uses so
brilliantly in his follow-up to
Caligari
-
Raskolnikow, perhaps the
starkest and most disturbing screen adaptation of Fyodor Dostoyevsky's
novel
Crime and Punishment.
In common with virtually every film version of Dostoyevsky's great work
of literature, Wiene's film trims down the narrative to its bare bones
and spends most of its time dwelling on the main character's
destructive angst as he wrestles with his guilt and fear after
committing a terrible double murder. A leading light of the
Moscow Art Theatre, Gregori Chmara portrays Raskolnikow as a soul in
torment, with every gesture and facial movement of his controlled
performance emphasised by revealing close-ups . As in Wiene's subsequent
Orlacs
Hände (1924), the central protagonist is set up to be a
tragic victim of fate, incapable of escaping the destiny that has been
allotted him. It is indeed strange that in the final shot
Raskolnikow is framed as a martyr, and how strikingly he resembles
Maria Falconetti in Carl Dreyer's
La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc
(1928).
Sonja, the virtuous prostitute who guides Raskolnikow to his
redemption, is a solitary beacon of solace in a world that is visibly
warped in its malevolence, the excessively skewed sets and
preponderance of heavy, suffocating shadows providing the starkest
visual representation of a mind drifting towards insanity. The
film owes its look mostly to André Andrejew, an early assignment
in his high-profile career as an art director. Having made his
name in Germany, on films that included G.W. Pabst's
Pandora's
Box (1929), Andrejew worked for a time in France, where his
visual flair was only fully exploited on Maurice Tourneur's
La Main du diable (1943).
After the war, he settled in America and found work in Hollywood, the
slum set of Jean Negulesco's
Britannia Mews (1949) being
possibly the crowning achievement of his career. In the simple
but eerily stylised sets of
Raskolnikow,
Andrejew shows us something terrible - what it must be like to see the
world through the eyes of a man who is losing his grip on reality.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Rodion Raskolnikow is a young Russian student who has written a
treatise which argues that there are certain people who should not be
bound by the laws of ordinary men and can commit murder if it is for
the greater good. He puts this theory into practice when he
brutally kills a mean old pawnbroker and her sister. Even though
another man, a house decorator, is arrested for the murders,
Raskolnikow fears his crime will be discovered and becomes anxious when
the investigating magistrate shows that he suspects him. He
strikes up a friendship with Sonja, the streetwalking daughter of a
retired government official he befriended earlier. When the
latter dies, impoverished by drink, Raskolnikow helps to pay for the
funeral, an act which antagonises his own sister. After he has
confessed his crime to Sonja she insists that he must hand himself over
to the authorities...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.