Film Review
Alfred Hitchcock's last silent film,
The
Manxman, is widely regarded as one of his best, and it was
certainly one of his most successful films of this era, although
Hitchcock himself was disappointed with the film. Whilst the
subject is atypical for the director - a predictable melodrama
involving the familiar ill-fated love triangle - it bears his
unmistakable imprint, most noticeably in the skill with which he tells
the story with carefully constructed images rather than relying on
inter-titles.
With its extensive use of real exterior locations (the film is set on
the Isle of Man but, for budgetary reasons, was shot in Cornwall),
The Manxman has a realism which was
virtually unknown in British cinema at this time, and this adds to its
immense charm and poetry. The location shots of fishermen and
their families (reminiscent of we see two decades later in Visconti's
La
Terra trema) create the impression of a close-knit island
community where secrets are hard to keep, something which intensifies
the claustrophobic mood and heightens the tension. As in several
of Hitchcock's films, a dark secret is at the heart of the
narrative. Here the secret is an illegitimate pregnancy which, if
exposed, will ruin the lives of those involved.
The Manxman is an inspired
adaptation of a well-known, albeit pretty indigestible, novel of the
same name by Sir Hall Caine, which had also been made into a stage play
and an earlier film of 1916, directed by George Loane Tucker. The
film's principal players were chosen with great care and each gives a
performance that is charged with truthfulness and
poignancy. The male rivals were played by Carl Brisson and
Malcolm Keen, who had appeared in previous Hitchcock films -
The
Ring (1927) and
The Lodger (1926)
respectively. Anna Ondra, one of Hitchcock's first blonde
heroines, plays the female lead, Kate, with great conviction and,
despite the character's flawed nature, succeeds in making her
sympathetic. Ondra was a favourite of Hitchcock and would star in
his next film,
Blackmail (1929), although her
strong Polish accent meant that her spoken lines would have to be
dubbed by another actress.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Alfred Hitchcock film:
Murder! (1930)
Film Synopsis
Pete Quilliam and Philip Christian have been the closest of friends
since childhood, growing up together on the Isle of Man. Whilst
Pete earns a modest income as a fisherman, Philip has embarked on a
promising career as a lawyer and hopes to become the island's chief
magistrate. Pete is in love with a bargirl named Kate Cregeen,
but her father Caesar refuses to allow him to marry her. Intent
on making his fortune, Pete heads off to Africa, having promised to
make Kate his wife on his return. With Pete away, Philip
begins to spend more time with Kate, and the two soon realise that they
are in love. When a letter arrives with the news that Pete has
been killed, Kate tells Philip that they are now free to marry.
But before they can do so, Pete makes an unexpected return and, now a
wealthy man, he claims Kate as his bride. Some months later, Kate
confides in Philip that she is bearing his child and cannot go on
deceiving her husband. Philip is torn between his love for
Kate and his loyalty to his old friend, to say nothing of his career
aspirations...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.