Film Review
The Pleasure Garden is the
first full-length film which Alfred Hitchcock was able to
complete. He had cut his directorial teeth on the appropriately
named
Number 13 (1922), a
film that was abandoned partway through production, and then on the
short
Always Tell Your Wife
(1923). Although Hitchcock's filmmaking career didn't take off
until
The Lodger (1927),
The Pleasure Garden bears his
inimitable stamp and clearly presages the many great films which were
to follow.
It was Michael Balcon, arguably the most important film producer in the
history of British cinema, who gave Hitchcock the opportunity to direct
The Pleasure Garden.
Hitchcock had previously impressed Balcon with his work as art
director, screenwriter and assistant director and Balcon, a man with a
keen eye for talent, would help to ground Hitchcock in his career as a
director.
The Pleasure Garden was the
first of two films which Hitchcock made as a collaborative venture
involving Balcon's newly formed British company Gainsborough Pictures
and the German company Emelka - the other film being
The Mountain Eagle (of which no
print currently exists). Both films were shot in Munich, although
The Pleasure Garden also had
some location work in Italy. Neither
The Pleasure Garden nor
The Mountain Eagle was at all
successful, and Hitchcock was very dismissive of both films in later
years, preferring to cite
The Lodger,
his first commercial and critical success, as his first real film.
The Pleasure Garden is typical
of its era - a crowd-pleasing moralistic melodrama that combined exotic
locations, glamorous characters and dog-themed humour. What the
plot lacks in depth and originality, Hitchcock makes up for with his
imaginative direction and camerawork. His penchant for suspense
is apparent in the film's dramatic editing, with frequent cuts between
characters and situations serving to gradually build tension towards
its eventful climax.
There are many of the themes and motifs which would recur in later
Hitchcock films. The most recognisable of these is the tendency
for male characters to dominate, exploit and destroy female
characters. Duplicity and deceit, two of the main themes of
The Pleasure Garden, would become
essential ingredients of the Hitchcock suspense thriller, along with a
wry dark humour and perverse love of the macabre, which can also be
glimpsed in this film.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Alfred Hitchcock film:
Downhill (1927)
Film Synopsis
Patsy Brand, a chorus girl at the Pleasure Garden Theatre in London,
helps another girl, Jill Cheyne, to get a part in the theatre's next
revue. Jill's fiancé Hugh leaves for the colonies to work
on a plantation for two years, confident that Jill will remain faithful
to him. Hugh's friend Levett takes a liking to Patsy and within a
short time the two are married. After honeymooning at Lake Como,
Levett heads off to the colonies whilst Patsy resumes her career at the
Pleasure Garden. On her return, Patsy is appalled to discover
that that Jill, now a star, is affianced to a prince and has forgotten
about Hugh. Little does Patsy know that she too is the victim of
marital infidelity...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.