Film Review
After their hugely successful pairing in
Gilda
(1946), Rita Hayworth and Glenn Ford are brought together for another
sordid tale of passion and intrigue. The setting for this eagerly
awaited rematch is not a film noir thriller but a Technicolor
adaptation of Prosper Mérimée's novel
Carmen, which provided the basis
for Georges Bizet's popular opera of the same title.
Having directed
Gilda with
such style, Charles Vidor appears to have been completely thrown by
Mérimée's tale of a free-spirited gypsy girl and her
jealous lover. His take on
Carmen
is a bloodless, half-hearted affair, lacking in both charm and
inspiration, and is saved only by Hayworth's overtly sensual
screen presence. In every other department, particularly the
writing, set design and camera work, the film is a major let down. Glenn Ford
is a fine actor but here he appears woefully miscast as the vengeful
Don José, and it is a wonder that the film has any dramatic
impact at all.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In the early 1800s, Don José Mizarabengoa, an ambitious young
dragoon guard, takes up a post in a garrison in the Spanish town of
Seville. Ignoring the advice of his corporal, Don José
takes an interest in a notoriously flirtatious gypsy named
Carmen. When he accidentally kills his colonel in a fight over
Carmen, Don José has no choice but to flee with the object of
his desire and join her band of outlaws. Having killed Carmen's
husband in a duel, Don José insists on marrying her. But
he will not keep her for long...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.