For Whom the Bell Tolls, 1943
Director: Sam Wood
Writers: Dudley Nichols, from the novel by Ernest Hemingway
Cinematographer: Ray Rennahan
Produced by: Buddy G. DeSylva and Sam Wood for Paramount Pictures
Starring: Gary Cooper, Ingrid Bergman, Akim Tamiroff, Katina Paxinou, Joseph Calleia, Arturo de Cordova, Vladimir Sokoloff
Why I chose it
Having recently viewed Ken Burns' documentary about Ernest Hemingway, I put this film on my short list when it was also included on Filmsite.org's list of best 1943 films. It won my Twitter poll by just a few votes.
'No-spoiler' plot overview
American expatriate Robert Jordan (Gary Cooper) is fighting on the side of the Republicans during the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s. His commanding general assigns him to a dangerous mission to blow up a bridge strategic to the Fascists. To do this, he joins up with a group of guerilla fighters led by the squabbling couple Pilar (Katina Paxinou) and Pablo (Akim Tamiroff). Among them is a young woman Maria (Ingrid Bergman) recently rescued from being a political captive. Through a series of alliances, betrayals, and re-negotiations, the plan to demolish the bridge inches forward. In the meantime, Robert and Maria fall in love and pledge to join their souls for eternity.
Production Background
Production began soon after the book had become a sensation, and Hemingway, who earned $150,000 for the film rights, was actively involved in the planning process. He counted Gary Cooper among his friends, and modeled the character of Robert Gordon on the actor. It was easy then to cast Cooper in the film. Paramount struggled casting the two primary leading female roles, but eventually settled on Hemingway's pick Ingrid Bergman, who had coveted the role of Maria, and Greek stage actress Katina Paxinou as Pilar.
There were some tricky issues for the Production Code Administration censors. First, on the political side, Paramount was nervous to be too explicit in naming the 'Fascists' as the enemy here, especially since they were the victors in Spain, and kept the two sides' identities a bit fuzzy. (The film was ultimately banned in Spain and only released there after Franco's death). The other big issues were the "sex" scene between Robert and Maria and the revelation that Maria had been gang-raped by her captors. In the film, it wasn't clear to what extent the physical relationship between the lovers progressed, although they did show the two in a partial shot with a sleeping bag, and it also included a bit of dialog about the rape.
The film garnered several Oscar nods for its actors, including Cooper and Bergman, but only Paxinou won as Best Supporting Actress in her first and only nomination.
Some other notable film-related events in 1943 (from Filmsite.org):
- 20th Century Fox began distributing three million pinups of leggy actress Betty Grable, in her famed white swimsuit photo (with her hands on her hips and an over-the-shoulder smile), mostly to GIs serving in armed forces overseas. She was declared their favorite pinup.
- 50 year-old British actor Leslie Howard, famous for his role as Ashley Wilkes in Gone With the Wind (1939), was killed when onboard a DC-3 plane that was shot down by German Luftwaffe fighters over the Bay of Biscay near Lisbon, Portugal (considered a war zone).
- The precursor of Italian neo-realism was Luchino Visconti's gritty Ossessione (1943, It.), the Italian director's first film. Loosely adapted from James M. Cain's pulp novel The Postman Always Rings Twice, it enraged fascist censors and inspired the term neo-realism. The movement would really take hold from the mid-40s to the mid-50s, with its main exponents being Visconti, Roberto Rossellini and Vittorio De Sica.
- Supported by the Screen Actor's Guild (SAG), Olivia de Havilland filed a far-reaching lawsuit against her studio, Warner Bros, eventually winning in a 1945 ruling called the DeHavilland Law. It declared that a studio could not indefinitely extend a performer's contract. It imposed a 7 year limit on contracts for service unless the employee agreed to an extension beyond that term. The decision ultimately limited the oppressive contract-power of studios over their performers.
- Controversy was engendered when 54-year-old Charlie Chaplin wed 17-year-old Oona O'Neill, the daughter of playwright Eugene O'Neill (who cut ties with her and disowned her following the marriage).
My Random Observations
- This is the first film in my 50 Years of Film in 50 Weeks series that I actively disliked. It plodded along for its nearly three hours running time; various European actors with different accents were made up with brownface to look gypsy or Spanish (all except Ingrid Bergman that is); and the romance was telegraphed and overwraught from the moment Bergman showed up on screen. I was desperate for the bridge to blow up already and end everyone's misery.
- The rugged mountain scenery (filmed in California) was quite impressive at times -- which stands to reason as the great William Cameron Menzies was the production designer.
- When Ingrid Bergman cried out "Roberto!", I couldn't help but think about her marriage to Roberto Rossellini, then still a few years in the future.
Ingrid Bergman and Gary Cooper in For Whom the Bell Tolls - Katina Paxinou was really my favorite actor in the film; she seemed to own the camera and her fellow actors. However, Paxinou's features and dark hair reminded me of Margaret Hamilton as the Wicked Witch of the West (all she needed was green face makeup and pointed hat).
- It's time I revisit the novel, which, as opposed to the film, is a true classic.
Critic and writer James Agee's review here offers some of the reasons why I didn't like the film, but also praises some performances.
I like to see Joseph Calleia in Technicolor, but that's about it for me and For Whom the Bell Tolls.
ReplyDeleteGood point! I always smile when I see Calleia on screen - he really was a terrific character actor and he did the best he could in this one.
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