Film Review
Das Cabinet des Dr Caligari
(1920) was never going to be an easy act to follow but its director,
Robert Wiene, made a reasonable stab at it with his next foray into
expressionist horror,
Genuine, die
Tragödie eines seltsamen Hauses, released seven months
later. Better known by its slightly misleading English title,
Genuine the Vampire, this stylised
horror film features a monstrously beguiling female, played by American
actress Fern Andra, who perfectly embodies the screen siren or
femme fatale that would soon become
one of cinema's most enduring icons. Although Wiene's female
fiend is more vamp than vampire she is one of the most terrifying
creations that the horror genre yielded in the silent era, every bit as
deadly as Murnau's Nosferatu, but infinitely more alluring.
Genuine the Vampire shares the
aggressively expressionistic design of
Caligari (on both films, the wildly
distorted sets, decorated with dizzying swirls and jagged patterns,
were created by the painter Walther Reimann), but the style of acting
is far more exaggerated. In some scenes, the actors resemble
statues that have been brought to life, their movements jerky and
deliberate, adding to the impression that what we are witnessing isn't
real life but a dream. The plot has a vagueness, a lack of
coherence and logic about it that is also suggestive of a confused
dream experience. Freudian symbolism abounds, the most evident
being Genuine's slow vertical ascent from her underground prison.
Of course Genuine, the object of desire to which all men are drawn as
surely as moths to a naked flame, is not a woman but the
personification of Death.
As is fundamental to expressionistic art,
Genuine the Vampire attempts a
visual represention of those dark neuroses and deadly desires that
plague our subconscious minds and govern our conscious behaviour.
Whilst the film is a striking example of expressionistic cinema, one of
the most daring of its time, its combination of lurid erotica and
graphic horror was too much for a 1920s cinema audience. Since
its unsuccessful first showing, it has been all but forgotten, buried
in the shadow of Wiene's most popular film.
Genuine the Vampire may not have
the enduring appeal of
Caligari,
but it is just as hauntingly expressive of the madness that lies at the
centre of our being - the same vortex of terror that fuels all our
fantasies, dreams and neuroses, and which Edvard Munch captured so
perfectly in his famous painting
The
Scream.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
A young artist named Percy has completed a painting of Genuine, a high
priestess with an irresistible allure. Since, he has become
withdrawn, preferring the company of his creation to that of his
friends. Whilst reading a book which recounts Genuine's real-life
exploits, the artist falls asleep and the high priestess steps out of
her picture frame. After a war in which her own people are
conquered by another tribe, Genuine is carried off and sold into
slavery. She is bought by a reclusive old man named Melo, who
imprisons her in a richly adorned room in the basement of his grand
house. Despite Genuine's desperate appeals to be set free, Melo
refuses to let her go. The odd behaviour of Melo has aroused the
suspicion of the townsfolk. His barber is summoned by the judge
to answer questions, and in his place he sends his nephew Florian to
attend to the old man. By now, Genuine has managed to escape from
her subterranean prison. She compels Florian to cut Melo's throat
whilst shaving him and then sets about seducing him. Genuine
orders Florian to prove his love for her by killing himself. The
young man manages to escape from the temptress, just before Percy,
Melo's grandson, arrives at the house. Genuine wastes no time
luring her second victim to his doom...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.