Film Review
The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp
is one of the remarkable films to come out of the legendary partnership
of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, two of the most important
figures in British cinema. Although it belongs to the impressive
series of wartime dramas made by Powell and Pressburger in the 1940s,
it stands apart. It isn't so much a conventional war film as a
light-hearted character study and a satirical comment on how military
ethics changed between the Boer War and WWII. Many regard this as
one of Powell and Pressburger's greatest achievements.
The film takes its title from the cartoon character Colonel Blimp
(created by David Low) who featured in the London Evening
Standard. Blimp was a caricature of the pompous, old-fashioned
army officer types who had a very visible presence in Britain at the
time and who always complained about how things only ever changed for
the worse. In the film, Blimp is personified by General
Clive Candy, an idealistic army officer who fails to change with the
times, with tragicomic consequences.
From the outset, the film's production met with fierce opposition from
Britain's War Office. Having seen the screenplay, the Ministry of
Information formed the view that the film was unpatriotic and would
have a demoralising effect on the armed services. Not only did
the film poke fun at British army officers, but it also showed a German
officer in a sympathetic light. The War Office refused to allow
Laurence Olivier to take the part of Clive Candy and made it difficult
for the film's producers to get hold of military staff and hardware for
the film. Prime Minister Winston Churchill (who had many
Blimp-like traits) was incensed by the film and tried unsuccessfully to
ban it. Although Churchill did manage to impose an export ban,
this was later removed when the film proved to be successful in the
UK. Another problem was the shortage of colour film, which
compelled Pressburger to remove around 20 minutes of material,
resulting in the loss of the flashback narrative structure. The
film was restored in 1986 by the British National Film Archive.
The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp
is a sublime example of British cinema with many strong selling points
- a great screenplay, impeccable direction, imaginative art design,
gorgeous colour photography, etc. What makes the film so
memorable, and so enjoyable, are the performances, particularly those
of Roger Livesey and Anton Walbrook. Far from being a figure of
fun, Livesey's Clive Candy is an immensely complex character of great
charm and nobility. Walbrook's Theo Kretschmar-Schuldorff is just
as well played, but with an extra note of pathos which makes some of
his scenes exquisitely poignant. Deborah Kerr also has a strong
presence in the three very distinct roles she plays in the film.
All three actors would appear in subsequent Powell-Pressburger
productions - Livesey in
I Know Where I'm Going!
(1945) and
A Matter of Life and Death
(1946), Walbrook in
The Red Shoes (1948)
and Kerr in
Black Narcissus (1947).
Watching the film today, the antipathy that was shown by the War Office
towards it appears to be unfathomable.
The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp
is manifestly one of the most patriotic films that Powell and
Pressburger made. The values of Clive Candy - traditional British
values of fair play, honour and decency - are shown in a positive
light, not ridiculed. The point the film is making is that whilst
we should try to live up to these values whenever we can, there are
circumstances when this is impossible. If the Nazis are
prepared to use any means to secure victory, we would be foolish to
adhere to a moral code which will only result in our
defeat. For all its charm and humour,
The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp
is actually a remarkably effective piece of wartime propaganda, using
reasoned arguments rather than the usual didactic (and often
xenophobic) approach employed by the War Office.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Michael Powell film:
A Canterbury Tale (1944)
Film Synopsis
London, 1943. Humiliated in a Home Guard training exercise by an
impulsive young army officer, General Clive Wynne-Candy casts his mind
back forty years to the time when he too was a dashing man of
action. In 1902, just after serving in the Boer War, Clive Candy
defies his superiors by going off to Germany to single-handedly deal
with an agent who is spreading anti-British propaganda. Very
soon, Clive runs into difficulties. He falls in love with his
informant, Edith, offends the entire Germany army and ends up having to
fight a duel with a German officer he has never met before, Theo
Kretschmar-Schuldorff. Fortunately, the dispute is resolved
amicably, although Clive loses Edith to Theo. During World War I,
Clive encounters a nurse who has the exact likeness of Edith.
Convinced this woman is his ideal, he pursues her on his return to
England and marries her. When his next war comes along twenty
years later, Clive is an old man, but he is still determined to do his
bit for his country. Unfortunately, times have changed and the
values he sets so much store by make him an object of
ridicule...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.