Film Review
The distinguished American-Ukrainian film director, screenwriter and
producer Anatole Litvak began his rich and interesting career as far
back as the 1930s. Working in Russia, Germany, France and the
United Kingdom, Litvak's extensive filmography includes such timeless
classics as
Mayerling (1936),
All This and Heaven Too (1940),
Sorry Wrong Number (1948) and
The Snake Pit (winner of the Best
Film award at the Venice Mostra in 1949). In many of his films,
Litvak would often draw on his own experiences, incorporating themes
relating to the Russian Revolution and Nazism; this is particularly
evident in some of his later work:
An Act of Love (1953),
Anastasia
(1956),
The Journey (1959)
and
The Night of the Generals
(1967).
After his productive spell in Hollywood, Litvak directed two thrillers
in France -
Five Miles to Midnight
(1962),
The Lady in the Car with
Glasses and a Gun (1970) - but the 24th May 1961 saw the release
of a romantic drama entitled
Goodbye
Again, released in Europe as
Aimez-vous
Brahms? Filmed in Paris, this prestigious American-French
production was based on a best-selling novel by the celebrated writer
Françoise Sagan (of
Bonjour
tristesse fame). A compelling, well-constructed piece of
film drama,
Goodbye Again is
among Litvak's better late films. It was entered for the
Palme d'or at the 1961 Cannes Film
Festival, but lost out to Luis Buñuel's
Viridiana
and Henri Colpi's
Une aussi longue
absence.
The film may not be as imaginatively scripted as it might have been
(screenwriter Samuel Taylor stays doggedly faithful to the original
novel) but it is sumptuously crafted and offers up a remarkable
ensemble of fine actors of this era. Armand Thirard's gorgeous
black and white photography is suitably atmospheric and perfectly
evokes all the enchantment of Paris, City of Lights. Costumes
were provided by none other than Christian Dior, whilst Georges Auric
turns in one of his finest screen compositions, one that is heavily
influenced by Johannes Brahms's Third Symphony. Litvak's
direction may be attentive to the rapidly changing moods and to the
electrifying ambiance of Paris, but it is typically restrained and
never distracts from the unfolding narrative. One effective
stylistic touch is the satisfying symmetry of the poignant climactic
sequence in relation to the opening scene.
Goodbye Again is carried by a
triumvirate of great film actors who bring immense pathos to the
proceedings. Having been banished from Hollywood for seven years
on account of her amorous escapades with Italian director Roberto
Rossellini, the Swedish born screen legend Ingrid Bergman was honoured
with a second Best Actress Oscar in Litvak's
Anastasia. Five years later,
now rated the fourth greatest actress in American cinema history,
Bergman triumphs in another Latvik film, as Paula Tessier, a Parisian
interior designer torn between two lovers, her long-time unfaithful
consort and a much younger lawyer. Magnetic as ever, Bergman
oozes anxiety, compassion, dignity but most of all the moving
vulnerability we saw in her early films.
In spite of the language barrier and a disagreement with Litvak over
the way in which his character was to be portrayed, French cultural
icon Yves Montand is effectively cast opposite Bergman, somehow
managing to be both appealing and repellent as Roger Desmarest, Paula's
philandering boyfriend. Just released from Alfred Hitchcock's
Psycho
(1960), Anthony Perkins excels again in an altogether different role,
as the charming and amusing Philip Van der Besh. Perkins, who
suggested the film's title, demonstrates his versatility as an actor
and was a worthy recipient of the Best Actor award at the 1961 Cannes
film festival.
The distinguished supporting cast includes Jessie Royce Landis (showing
her flair for snobbish parts as the fastidious Mrs Van der Besh),
French actor Pierre Dux and American singer- actress Diahann
Carroll. Fashion model Jocelyn Laine, Jean Clarke and the future
Angélique,
Michèle Mercier, also put in brief appearances. Yul
Brynner (the male lead in Litvak's
Anastasia),
Jean-Pierre Cassel and Françoise Sagan herself show up in small
cameo roles.
Although the prudish American critics and audiences were generally
unenthusiastic about the film's content at the time,
Goodbye Again was a considerable
hit in Europe. To its credit, the film retains much of the mood
and loose morality of Sagan's book and especially benefits from its
depth of the characterisation, which makes this a more sophisticated
variation on a familiar theme. It is hard to imagine that such a
frank and perceptive study in human relationships could have been made
in Hollywood at this time, so Litvak was helped by the fact that the
film was made in France. This could explain why the film has worn
better than most 1960s romantic dramas and why it has such a powerful,
gut-wrenching resonance today.
© Willems Henri (Brussels, Belgium) 2013
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Next Anatole Litvak film:
Le Couteau dans la plaie (1962)