Film Review
Saboteur is the first of
Alfred Hitchcock's wartime propaganda films during World War II.
By the time he made this film, Hitchcock had established himself as one
of the foremost directors in Hollywood, achieving success with
Rebecca (1940) and
Suspicion (1941).
Despite the impact he had made, the director felt undervalued by his
producer David O. Selznick and was grateful when Selznick loaned him
out to Frank Lloyd and Jack H. Skirball at Universal Pictures to make
Saboteur, a big budget
adventure-thriller of the kind he was so adept at making.
As it turned out, the making of
Saboteur
was anything but plain sailing. The Japanese attack on Pearl
Harbour happened just before shooting was to begin, so many of the
planned exterior locations could not be used. Instead, these
sequences had to be shot, less convincingly, in the studio
backlot. Another difficulty was the choice of lead actors.
Hitchcock had hoped to cast Gary Cooper and Barbara Stanwyck in the
lead roles, but instead Universal foisted the far less well-known
Robert Cummings and Priscilla Lane on him - they were to have played
opposite one another in a film that had just been cancelled. If
Saboteur has one failing, it is the
lack of charismatic lead actors with whom the audience can identify -
and this stems from Hitchcock's evident antipathy for his lead actors
in this film.
Saboteur has a structure that
is common to several Hitchcock films: an innocent man is wrongly
accused of a crime and goes on a long and convoluted run-around to
clear his name. In fact, it is virtually a remake of Hitchcock's
earlier
The 39 Steps (1935),
and has close similarities with his later
North by Northwest
(1959). One of the most interesting aspects of this
film is that the villains are portrayed as respectable figures in
American society. This is a recurring motif in Hitchcock's films:
the notion that evil does not easily show itself and often hides
behind a mask of respectability. This may reveal something
of Hitchcock's own neuroses. In his films, he clearly identifies
himself with the ordinary honest man who becomes the outsider - a man
who has to fight tooth and nail to prove himself to an overly
judgemental world in which the real villains find it remarkably easy to
hide themselves. Did Hitchcock, the unrivalled Master of
Suspense, suffer from an inferiority complex and felt he constantly had
to demonstrate his worth?
What anyone who watches
Saboteur
is most likely to remember is the spectacular final sequence on the
Statue of Liberty - a classic Hitchcockian set-piece which is perfectly
executed. This was shot on a full-size replica of part of the
statue and gives the film a genuinely thrilling climax which Hitchcock
rarely surpassed in anything he made subsequently. Particularly
impressive is the shot in which the villain (well played by Norman
Lloyd) falls to his death. This posed a technical challenge that
was solved with great ingenuity. The camera begins with a
close-up on the actor, who is sitting on a rotating black swivel chair
on a black set (so that the exterior background can be matted in
later). The camera is then suddenly yanked up to the studio
ceiling, to create the illusion of the villain falling a huge
distance. The same technique has been used many times since and
is still widely employed today.
Although it has many memorable sequences and is an enjoyable film to
watch,
Saboteur
is not regarded as favourably as many of Hitchcock's thrillers.
It is
a film that is uneven, both structurally and stylistically, and
somewhat lacking in narrative focus. A bigger defect is the
film's
moralistic and clunky dialogue - this may have served its propaganda
purpose during WWII but today it feels painfully unsubtle and
patronising. These faults are to some extent diminished by the
unflagging brilliance of Hitchcock's direction and the excellent
production values, particularly the stunning art design and
cinematography, which bring a tense, claustrophobic film noir feel that
maintains a sense of menace throughout. There's also plenty of
Hitchcock's quirky humour to lighten the mood, notably the sequence
with the bizarre assortment of circus folk, which manages to be both
funny and poignant, although somewhat out of place in this film.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Alfred Hitchcock film:
Shadow of a Doubt (1943)
Film Synopsis
During World War II, Barry Kane finds himself wrongly accused of
starting a fire which kills a man at an aircraft factory in
California. Kane believes he knows the identity of the real
saboteur, a man named Fry, and goes on the run to find him and bring
him to justice. Unbeknown to him, Fry is part of a large network
of dangerous Nazi agents who are well assimilated into American society
and whose campaign of terror has only just begun...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.