Film Review
Knight Without Armour is the
only film which the renowned Belgian film director Jacques Feyder made
in Great Britain.
He had previously worked on a few Hollywood productions -
notably the Greta Garbo vehicle
The Kiss (1929)
- although the majority of his films were made in France.
Knight Without Armour brings
together two iconic actors of the 1930s, Marlene Dietrich and Robert
Donat. The film was based on a novel by James Hilton, re-written to
given Dietrich a much more significant part in the story.
Compared with Feyder's better known French language films -
Visages
d'enfants (1925) and
La Kermesse héroïque
(1935),
Knight Without Armour
now looks painfully dated, marred by its over-ambitious action
sequences, tacky sentimentality and some ludicrously stilted
dialogue. Feyder's direction is competent, but hardly inspired,
and the absence of any chemistry between the film's lead actors robs
the film of any real emotional impact.
The film feels like an awkward melange of Hollywood melodrama and British adventure
thriller. There are one or two impressive sequences (the
skilfully shot darker scenes which convey the insane bloodiness of the
Russian revolution), but overall the film lacks the impact and charm of
Feyder's other films of this era.
© James Travers 2007
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jacques Feyder film:
Les Gens du voyage (1938)
Film Synopsis
1913. Fothergill, a British journalist facing expulsion from
Russia, accepts the offer of a friend to work as a spy. Under the
name Peter Ouranoff, he infiltrates a group of revolutionaries, but is
arrested after an attempt to blow up the government minister
Vladinoff. He ends up in a prison in Siberia, just as war breaks
out in Europe. In 1917, Fothergill is freed by the triumphant
revolutionaries, but is soon caught up in a bloody conflict between the
Red and White armies. Meanwhile, Vladinoff's daughter, Alexandra, has been
arrested and faces execution...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.