Pages

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Street Angel (1928) - Directed by Frank Borzage



A few weeks ago I went on a Frank Borzage binge, a deep dive into 7 films of his that I’ve never seen before. In fact, until that week, somehow I had managed to never see a Frank Borzage film…..ever. This was the list of films I watched: 7th Heaven, Street Angel, Lucky Star, Bad Girl, After Tomorrow, and The Shining Hour. Borzage represents a style of filmmaking that would seem to me to have almost been completely eliminated from our consciousness. Here we have a director who pulls together some fantastically staged visual themes of love and sexuality, complete with some wonderfully expressive use of atmosphere: streets, apartments, rooftops. Yet he throws in heavy doses of wild melodrama. Now melodrama, in the hands of Sirk, tends to be something that modern audiences have received well. There’s something about Sirk’s use of color and tone that adds a layer of subversion to his melodrama. But Borzage tells his stories with a straight face, in black and white. There’s really nothing inherently funny or campy per se lurking beneath the surface. Borzage’s version of melodrama is irony free, and I don’t think today’s viewers know what to do with that.




Although 7th Heaven gets most of the attention, and Lucky Star is a hidden gem, Street Angel is Borzage’s best film of the bunch that I’ve seen and is a romantic masterpiece, standing with the greatest love stories of all time. It is the story of a woman named Angela (Janet Gaynor), who in need of some money to purchase medicine for her mother, attempts to prostitute herself on the street, and winds up getting arrested for robbery and sentenced to a year in a work house. She runs off before being imprisoned, and escapes to find her mother dead at home. She avoids the cops and runs off to join the circus, where she meets a painter named Gino. They strike up an awkward friendship, but soon bond and fall in love. Their blossoming love, and impending marriage is threatened when the police find her again. She is taken to prison while Gino is unaware. He thinks she is lost forever, and things get really interesting when she is released a year later.




Janet Gaynor won the first Academy Award for Best Actress for her portrayals in three films: Sunrise (1927), 7th Heaven (1927), and Street Angel (1928). AMPAS first designed these awards to be based upon an actor’s body of work for that entire year. If you had to ask me, I think her performance in Street Angel is the best of the three. I don’t think Sunrise capitalizes on her sincere and varied emotional qualities as well as the Borzage films, and in fact Borzage makes far greater use of melodramatic elements than Murnau ever did. She has a girl next-door quality about her and also a burgeoning sexuality that was not an easy combination to pull off for other actresses in this era like Garbo, Brooks, or Gish (all of whom were either too beautiful or too saintly for those descriptors to match up). She has great chemistry with her leading man, Charles Ferrell, whom she appeared with in a total of 12 films together! His performance here is very solid, and much more understated than in 7th Heaven. Her character hovers in the realm of the Madonna/Whore complex, which is used here to illicit some specific choices that Ferrell’s character must make regarding his view of her. She is in fact, neither all good nor all bad, but in fact, a real woman whom he must decide if he can love her the way she is.




Borzage’s use of wildly ridiculous melodramatic elements is to my mind, highly entertaining and emotionally satisfying, and part of what Borzage is all about: the obstacles thrown in love’s way forces us to sacrifice, make tough choices, and is a true test of how devoted one really is to one's lover. Love is not proven true, until it perseveres beyond adversity, and this is most apparent in his silent films especially: 7th Heaven, Street Angel, and Lucky Star. His emphasis on depth of field, set design, and lighting were also great choices. Street Angel includes some fantastic tracking shots and pans, use of silhouette and shadow, and of particular note, the intense scene among the thick fog along the docks at the end of the film. This is a spectacular shot, filled with suspense and romantic desperation that then culminates in a perversely emotional climax that finishes in a church. It is one of the greatest romantic endings to any film I’ve seen and caps the film with a feverish pitch. I wish that audiences of today could appreciate this stuff more, but we’ve been so trained to snicker and doubt the sanity of films like this. Street Angel is too well made, and too spectacular to be left by the wayside though. It’s a masterpiece to my mind.

5 comments:

  1. This is a great film! I really like it! Great performances and the direction was very good! On of my favorites from the silent era.:)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hey John, great post. Glad you are diving into Borzage and getting something out. You are right when you talk about viewers today not knowing what to do in the face of this kind of extreme, direct emotional expression; in fact, just last night I attended a screening of Stahl's original Imitation of Life which was one of the oddest viewing experiences in my life due to the audience reactions. There were literally moments where half the audience was laughing uncomfortably and obnoxiously at the melodrama while the other half was being obviously moved by it and sniffling. (It's a very good movie btw, and very different from the Sirk; like Borzage, Stahl treats the melodrama with the highest degree of sincerity.)

    I probably prefer 7th Heaven the most from the Gaynor/Ferrell trilogy, but they're all excellent of course. I'd highly recommend trying to see his silent Lazybones at some point. It's pretty uncharacteristic in its subject matter and restraint, but it might be my favorite of all. And of course his late noir Moonrise is essential and another very different movie for him.

    ReplyDelete
  3. @ Cinemarion- Thanks for your vote of support! Glad to know you like it so much.

    @Drew- Hey thanks and I was convinced to start watching Borzage after your "year-end" post. You and I both agree on the tone being something that modern audiences have a hard time with. I have not seen that version of Imitation of Life but will need to soon for sure, as well as track down Lazybones. I trust your recommendations here and I know they'll be worth-it. I do like 7th Heaven quite a bit though and nearly wrote a piece on that one as well. Lucky Star was something as well and I wasn't expecting as much from it because I'd never heard of it before. Thanks for your thoughts Drew.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Jon, I am delighted to see you catch fire with Borzage over the past weeks, and certainly this particular film is one of his best - an expressionist work that remains one of it's era one distinguished accomplishments. You have boosted this work with impressive scholarly heft in every regard to be sure. Gaynor is magnificent for sure, though I might be able to go quite so far as to put her work here ahead of her performance in SUNRISE, but it's a fair enough position.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Thanks Sam. Yes I am aiming to track down more of Borzage. He seems to be my cup of tea. I like Gaynor alot and this is opening up my eyes to her like never before. She's great in any regard.

    ReplyDelete