Film Review
And there was worse! The conquering Napoleon chose this inopportune
moment to invade Austria and, preferring their own stinky borscht to croissants
and other tasty French delicacies, the Russians felt they had to take a stand.
Now Boris is a natural born coward and die-hard pacifist, the last man to
get himself involved in a nasty set-to with the French. (Are croissants
and petits-fours really
that bad?) But war is war and Boris
has no choice but to do his bit to save mother Russia from the nightmarish
prospect of French cuisine. As it turns out, Fate is kind to Boris.
Not only does he survive a bloody skirmish against the French, he ends up
being feted as a hero after accidentally killing four enemy generals.
It gets better. Thinking he will die in a duel after robbing a countess
of her virtue, Boris extorts a promise of marriage from Sonja (luckily, her
odoriferous husband has passed away by this point in the narrative).
Miraculously, Boris survives the duel and he and Sonja are soon wed, philosophising
like they have never philosophised before and eating ice because they are
too poor to afford real food. When Napoleon's armies invade Russia,
Sonja decides that drastic measures are called for. Having formulated
an intellectual justification for taking another person's life that overrides
all a priori rational assumptions underpinning the morality of premeditated
murder within a conceptual framework in which epistemological contradictions
are subordinated to a contextual understanding of the essential dichotomy
of subjective empiricism that both encapsulates and transcends all human
experience (or something along these lines), Sonja decides to kill Napoleon.
Boris is lost for words.
Love and Death is the crowning achievement of Woody Allen's first
'wild and wacky' phase as a film director. A riotous spoof on classic
Russian literature that is funny even if you have never read Dostoyevsky
and Tolstoy, uproariously hilarious if you have, it is the film in which
Allen hones his almost unrivalled flair for physical and verbal comedy to
a fine art, shamelessly stealing from his heroes as he does so. Allen's
humour is obviously influenced by the comedy giants of yesteryear - Groucho
Marx, Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin - whilst his self-indulgent homage
(implausibly) includes numerous references to the work of Ingmar Bergman
and Sergei Eisenstein. Allen's writing and directing have by now caught
up with his prodigious talent as a comic performer and as he enters his 'early mature'
phase (his next film will be the highly acclaimed
Annie Hall) Allen is at his most
likeable and compelling. Amidst all the tomfoolery and madcap comedy
hi-jinks,
Love and Death contains in embryo form many of the themes
that would become essential to Allen's oeuvre in later years - it feels like
a generously stuffed springboard to the great films that were yet to come.
War and Peace,
The Brothers Karamazov and
Crime and Punishment
are among the great literary works that Woody Allen pokes fun at, aided and
abetted by his perfect sparring partner Diane Keaton, with whom he now forms
one of cinema's greatest comedy double acts. Here, Keaton and Allen
are performing at the same level and take an equal hand in fielding the seemingly
endless barrage of gags, which range from mind-bending pseudo-philosophical
exchanges that are excruciatingly funny (even if they give you a migraine),
to inane sight gags of the 'bang me repeatedly on the head with a vase' ilk
that you'd expect to see in a film comedy of the 1920s. More than anything,
it is the Allen-Keaton partnership, the fusion of too immensely talented
comedy performers, that makes
Love and Death Woody Allen's most relentlessly
funny film. It's obvious that Princess Leia was a fan - she clearly stole her
hairstyle from Keaton (to say nothing of her disdainful frigidity).
The Ingmar Bergman references are the icing on the cake (or, if your personal
circumstances are like Boris's, the ice on the ice). In an obvious
steal from
The Seventh Seal
(1957), Death appears as a scary old man in a sheet (this time a white one),
his job being to collect the unlucky ones and take them on a long walk across
open countryside (
terrifying). The very last shot of Keaton
is framed precisely to match the famous 'duality shot' from
Persona (1966), whilst other stand-out
images from Eisenstein's
Battleship
Potemkin (1925) keep flashing up on the screen throughout the surprisingly
well-choreographed battle scenes. (The film was shot in France and
Hungary, an uncomfortable experience that put Allen off directing a movie
outside the US for many years.) Like his literary allusions, Allen
doesn't expect you to recognise all these nods to his personal cinematic
icons, but of you do the film is undoubtedly much richer and a great deal
more entertaining. And there's no shortage of 'Woody Allenisms' in
the text - enough to pad out at least three anthologies of quotations.
On the 'G subject', Allen is uncharacteristically agnostic. "If it
turns out that there
is a God, I don't think that he's evil. I think
that the worst you can say about him is that basically he's an underachiever."
No one could ever accuse Woody Allen of being an underachiever.
Love
and Death is an absolute delight.
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Woody Allen film:
Annie Hall (1977)
Film Synopsis
A condemned man, about to be executed for a crime he did not commit, Boris
Grushenko looks back on his short life, conscious that Death is even now
beating a path in his direction. Born into a Russian peasant family,
he had a happy childhood in spite of the fact that most of the people around
him were physically repugnant, mentally deficient and stank. Death
popped in to see him one day, but it was more a chance encounter than a social
visit. How he pined for his second cousin twice removed, Sonja, with
whom he could enjoy deep meaningful discussions about the meaning of meaning
whilst lusting after her even more meaningful physical adornments!
Boris wanted nothing more than to marry Sonja and take their wild orgies
in philosophical discourse to a whole new level, but, alas, she chose to
marry an ugly herring merchant who thought only of fish.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.