Film Review
Luchino Visconti's portrait of a dynastic German family succumbing to Nazi evil and reaping
the consequences is a shocking yet totally absorbing work, arguably the director's most
overtly political and controversial film. The character of Martin von Essenbeck
(magnificently portrayed by Visconti's protégé Helmut Berger) is the pure
personification of evil - a drug-addicted paedophilic bisexual whose every act is a provocation
against nature and the established order. He comes to symbolise Nazism in all its
grim brutality and inhuman perversion, the physical manifestation of the very power which
draws the von Essenbecks to their doom, like moths drawn to a candle. Konstantin,
Sophie and Frederick all believe they can further their wealth or their position by allying
themselves with the Nazi cause, but none of them know what they are dealing with, until
it is revealed in the face of Martin, at the end of the film.
With its dark Gothic sets and moody photography, The Damned shows Visconti at his
most joyously operatic. Intentionally melodramatic and rather stylised, this is
a far cry from the staunch realism of the director's earlier films, yet it is just as
effective. Most shocking is the sequence where a battalion of the SA
(the popular Fascist front) is slaughtered by the SS immediately after an evening of debauched
drinking and gay orgies. These scenes (representing the Night of the Long Knives),
deliberately provocative in their relentless intensity, yet having the character of a
lurid dream sequences, are what most define this film. They show a Germany which
is drowning in the mire of its own sickening decadence being purged by an unthinking fascist
brutality. It is immediately apparent what the fate of the von Essenbeck family
will be. They misguidingly think they can turn this power to their advantage; in
truth it will exploit them and obliterate them when they cease to have any further use.
The Damned is one of cinema's most explicit portrayals of human corruption by and
complicity with evil. Whilst it is easy to fault the film for its theatrical excesses
and lack of narrative coherence, it leaves a deep and lasting impression on its spectator.
The film's opening sequence resembles more a scene in Hell than a steel foundry and provides
an appropriate metaphor for the fate in store for anyone who believes he can profit from
an evil as great as Hitler's rampant Nazism.
© James Travers 2004
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Next Luchino Visconti film:
Ludwig (1972)
Film Synopsis
Germany, 1933. As the Nazis' grip on their country increases, a family of wealthy
industrialists strive to turn the situation to their advantage. Shortly after he
announces his retirement, the head of the von Essenbeck family, Joachim, is killed.
His murder is blamed on the Communist sympathiser, Herbert, who flees, leaving behind
his wife and two young daughters. With the support of von Essenbeck's ambitious
daughter, Sophie, Frederick Bruckmann takes control of the family's vast steel making
enterprise, hoping to win favours from the Nazis along the way. Bruckmann is opposed
and ultimately betrayed by the other von Essenbecks, who are motivated by greed, ambition
or revenge. In the end, the family company passes to Martin, an unhinged sexual
deviant who has sold himself, body and soul, to the Nazis.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.