Der Teufel ist eine Frau (1935)

20K
Share
Copy the link

Der Teufel ist eine Frau: Directed by Josef von Sternberg. With Marlene Dietrich, Lionel Atwill, Edward Everett Horton, Alison Skipworth. A young man is warned by a captain about a temptress; nonetheless, he finds himself falling in love with her.

“u0026quot;The is a Womanu0026quot; is a wholly artificial film, dealing with wholly artificial people, amidst wholly artificial surroundings. Like u0026quot;The Scarlet Empressu0026quot; with imperial Russia before it, u0026quot;The is a Womanu0026quot; takes the simple idea of old Spain during carnival, and exaggerates it into a fantastic world choking itself with an impossible amount of streamers, confetti, and grotesquely costumed revelers. Essentially to Spanish to possibly be Spanish, the atmosphere created gives a richly textured visual feel. It becomes a costume as garish as those the Spanish people wear, disguising a series of complex and controversial themes, which could never be used as open plot devices. Director Josef von Sternberg is obviously aware of the conventions and restraints set up by Hollywood, twisting them to his own good. Using the illusion of a typical Hollywood story, he thinly but potently veils these visual costumes, which in themselves hide his rich themes, creating a film so layered its staggering!u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eAt the center of all this is a Dietrich so beautiful, it is not quite possible to believe she ever existed outside this fantastic world created for her. Impeccably lighted, and costumed in the most flamboyant trappings imaginable, she is a toyingly evil creature of film, more alive than ever. Is it any wonder her character ruins so many men, on film alone you could fall in love with her?!u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eu0026quot;The is a Womanu0026quot; is a completely visual film. Itu0026#39;s themes and ideas do not come from what you hear, but what you see. The plot, which seems to hide them, is really needed only that these themes and visuals may gradually reach you. I think, essentially, that story for Sternberg was like the cherry flavor in cough medicine, designed only to help you swallow the truly important stuff. Perhaps we may never reach the center of a film like u0026quot;The is a Woman.u0026quot; If we did would we find the key to everything, or merely emptiness?”

Comments

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *