Film Review
There has been a significant (and long overdue) reappraisal of the work
of Preston Sturges in recent years. In the 1930s and 1940s,
Sturges was a major creative force in Hollywood, winning acclaim as
both a screenwriter and a director for his raucous, idiosyncratic
comedies, yet his name and his work fell into obscurity in the decades
that followed. Although he made barely a dozen films, he is
regarded today as one of the few genuine
auteur filmmakers working in
Hollywoood in the 1940s. His films show a genius for quickfire
comedy which is on a par with that of his idol, Ernst Lubitsch, but
they also have a modernity and realism which gives them an enduring
widespread appeal.
Sullivan's Travels is
Sturges's masterpiece, a brilliant satire on the filmmaking business
which is just as relevant today as it was when it was made, in the
early 1940s. The film asks us to consider what the primary role
of cinema should be - is it to inform and educate or simply to
entertain? At the time, many filmmakers who had built their
reputations on the entertainment side of the equation - Frank Capra
being an obvious example - were beginning to drop elements of social
commentary in their films. In his film, Sturges challenges the
value of this and concludes that cinema's main
raison d'être is to help
lighten the burden of ordinary men and women, not to remind them of the
misery that surrounds them.
After Sturges's faultless screenplay and direction, the thing which
makes
Sullivan's Travels so
memorable is the on-screen chemistry between its two attractive leads,
Joel McCrea and Veronica Lake. The two actors spark off each
other perfectly, and in a few scenes we are reminded of another great
cinema double act, Charlie Chaplin and Paulette Goddard in
Modern Times. At the time,
Lake was six months pregnant, which created a major headache for her
costume designer Edith Head. Reportedly, Lake had a very strained
relationship with McCrea, who refused ever to work with her again after
this film.
The approach that Sturges uses to make his point is, to put it mildly,
eccentric, but extraordinarily effective. The film contains some
of the finest comedy of any of Sturges's films - most famously the
hilarious chase sequence at the start of the film, which owes a lot to
the
Keystone Kops and other
comedy classics of the silent era. But it also contains some of
the most depressing sequences imaginable - harrowing images of early
1940s depression, with homeless wretches huddled together in doss
houses and soup kitchens, and prisoners condemned to hard labour and
unspeakable brutality.
This dramatic switch from outrageous farce to devastating tragedy
demonstrates Sturges's extraordinary talent for writing and
directing. In the hands of a lesser director, such dramatic mood
swings would feel contrived, but Sturges manages it with the skill of a
master storyteller. Just as the caricatured portrait of his
Hollywood milieu makes us laugh out loud, so are we deeply moved by the
images of hardship and suffering that we are also shown. Yet the
point of this film is not to make a profound comment on the unfairness
of American society, but simply to show what a difference cinema can
make to the lives of people of all backgrounds. Whether or not
you agree with Sturges's conclusion, he makes his case with great
sincerity and style, whilst treating us to a film that is one his most
entertaining.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Preston Sturges film:
The Lady Eve (1941)
Film Synopsis
John L. Sullivan is a successful Hollywood film director. His
lightweight comedies, such as
Ants
in Your Pants of 1939, have made him a rich man. But now
he is smitten with the urge to make a different kind of film - one
about real human suffering, with an important message for
society. Before he can make such a film, Sullivan has to
experience for himself the misery of the poor and dispossessed, and so
he intends to take to the streets and live like a tramp for several
weeks. Naturally, his studio bosses are appalled by this at
first, but having failed to dissuade Sullivan, they wake up to the
publicity value of such an escapade. So, closely followed by a
caravan packed with studio staff, Sullivan sets out on his great new
adventure, oblivious to the perils that lie ahead...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.