Guy Van Stratten (Robert Arden) is a petty crook
who is smuggling cigarettes in Milan. We first see him and his girlfriend Mily at
night on the docks, on the run from cops, when they almost literally stumble
across a dying man named Bracco, who was stabbed by a one-legged man. Bracco
whispers the name "Sophie" and implies that if they can get to rich industrialist
Gregory Arkadin and mention that name along with Bracco's name, they might make
some money from Arkadin—we assume by blackmail. But when Van
Stratten finally gets to Arkadin (Orson Welles, at right), by cozying up to his pampered
daughter Raina, things take a different turn: Arkadin tells Van Stratten that his
earliest memory is of standing on a street corner in Zurich in the winter of
1927 with 200,000 Swiss francs and no memory of his life before. So Arakdin
hires Van Stratten to dig up whatever he can about his life before 1927.
Traipsing across Europe, Van Stratten runs into a number of interesting
characters who knew Arkadin and remember that he made his money running a white
slavery ring, but soon most of these folks wind up dead and Van Stratten
realizes that he might be next.
This infamous Orson Welles film has been released in a
variety of cuts over the years, and because Welles had no hand in the final cut
of any version, none of the films has been accepted as standard. The recent
Criterion set has three versions of the film; the one I'm reviewing was
released by Warner Bros. as CONFIDENTIAL REPORT. It is the most maligned of the
three, largely because it simplifies the arcane narrative structure a bit, but
having also watched the "Comprehensive" version put together by Welles scholars
based on his notes, I think the Warners cut is actually better. No matter how
many ways one puts the various pieces and parts together, the story is the same
and there are some ambiguities present, and in my summary, I smoothed over some
jagged edges. But despite reports that the movie is a mess, it's actually
fairly easy to follow; what's not easy is understanding character
motivations; everyone remains something of a cipher—Arkadin of course, but no
character is really fleshed out, and Van Stratten remains about as cloaked in
mystery as Arkadin, to the point where I think a movie about him might be
almost as interesting as one about Arkadin.
Welles, spinning another CITIZEN KANE-type biopic about a
mysterious but larger-than-life figure, has a good time hamming it up as
Arkadin, wearing an eccentric beard and an obviously theatrical wig. The person
with the most screen time is Robert Arden as Van Stratten. Critics tend to find
his performance lacking, but I liked him a lot. Arden makes the character a
little bit likable and a little bit despicable, and no smarter or dumber than
he needs to be. Given that the screenplay gives him little help, he works
wonders with his face and his often strained tone of voice. (Speaking of voice,
the fact that probably 75% of the dialogue is post-dubbed—even though most of
the actors are English speakers—is a burden to the viewer, especially since
sometimes the dubbing is worse than that found in Japanese monster movies. I
think it's worth trying to get past that distraction.) Patricia Medina as Mily
and Paola Mori as Raina are both fairly weak as the potential femme fatales—and
Medina's post-dubbing is particularly poor. A handful of character actors
deliver strong support, including Akim Tamiroff, Peter van Eyck, Suzanne Flon
(in a small role as a baroness, though she should have played Mily) and Katina
Paxinou as the mysterious Sophie. Best of all is Michael Redgrave as a junk
dealer (pictured at left, to the right of Robert Arden); he's about as close as the movie comes to any comic relief and though
his character is not important, he's slyly riveting in his few minutes on
screen.
As in any Welles movie, it’s worth seeing for its visual
style alone. Cockeyed camera angles and close-ups abound, along with a strong
film-noir use of light and shadow in many scenes. There are several bravura
sequences beginning, well, at the beginning with the dock scene, followed by a
grand and expensive-looking masked ball, and an almost nausea-inducing scene
between Arkadin and Mily on his boat. Both versions of the film that I watched
feel unfinished and a little raw in spots, but I think it's well worth making
time to see a version of this. [DVD]
1 comment:
I've seen this film, or at least I've seen one of the many versions of it. It was bewildering but fascinating and as you say it's visually striking. I really should give it another go. I have no idea which version it was that I saw - it was an early Region 4 DVD release.
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