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"Give My Love to the Sunrise" The Lady from Shanghai With Wong Kar Wai's remake of The Lady from Shanghai (1948) set for release in 2008, it is a fitting time to re-evaluate Orson Welles' original. An adaptation of Sherwood King's novel If I Die Before I Wake, Welles' fourth feature was dismissed as a B-movie technically true, as Columbia relegated it to second billing on its belated release and it lost the studio money.1 However, filmed only five years after the canonical byword that is Citizen Kane (1941), The Lady from Shanghai provides rich rewards for those who approach it without preconceived notions about Welles and his consensual triumphs and failures. Featuring Welles himself and his estranged wife Rita Hayworth in the leads, the film succeeds both as a poignant postscript to their marriage they would be divorced by the time the film was released and as a reflection of his dilemma working within the Hollywood studio system. It even portends his approaching, self-imposed exile therefrom. Above all, though, the film represents perhaps Welles' most formally masterful exploration of the cinematic medium. As Simon Callow observes in his magisterial biography of Welles, "it was as if Welles' cinematic imagination, shackled on The Stranger and unused during his long fallow period of political commentary, had run riot."2
If Elsa could double for Hayworth, then Michael too, seems to offer up a mirror to his creator. Welles was indebted to Cohn and Columbia, just as Michael is compelled to work for Bannister and Grisby. Michael the free spirit "I've always found it very sanitary to be broke" reflects Welles the Hollywood nonconformist; and just as Michael is forced to lower himself in order to be able to afford Elsa, so was Welles increasingly forced to compromise in order to make films. Welles has Bannister chide the complacent Michael: Bannister: So, money doesn't interest you. Are you independently wealthy? The compulsion to make money in order to survive is shared by everyone in the film. Michael fakes Grisby's death for five thousand dollars with which to support Elsa. Grisby requires his partner's insurance payoff in order to decamp to paradise. Bessie, the Bannisters' maid, relies on her meagre wage to support her family at the most basic level. Bannister depends on his millions to come between him and a county hospital ward. And Elsa, like all femme fatales, requires money as reparation for her past experience of the world: "Everything's bad, Michael, everything. You can't escape it or fight it. You've got to get along with it. Deal with it, make terms." Welles' dismay at the material dependence of dream and dignity alike, the constant demand to compromise the self and its values, punctuates the narrative with a staccato insistence. And he so often bathes the characters' desperate intrigues in the harsh, unforgiving glare of the sun that their evasions and manipulations are nakedly apparent. As Michael laments while gazing on Acapulco moments after a passing gigolo has told his consort, "Darling, of course you pay me!" "it's a bright, guilty world."
The film's credits open over a seascape. As the first scene then plunges the audience into New York's Central Park, the opening shot may seem incongruous, but it introduces perhaps the predominant theme of the movie: the false promise of escape. The sea summons reveries of the "far places" that Michael will later idealise as the source of escape from mendacity, interference, and confusion and that Elsa already knows break any such promise they seem to offer. In fact, Bannister too knows the folly of seeking deliverance through flight: as he warns Michael, "You've been travelling around the world too much to find out anything about it." Only Grisby shares Michael's fantasy of the far places, intending to escape the nuclear annihilation he predicts by vanishing to "the smallest island in the South Seas." The absurdity of this idea would have been especially obvious to contemporary audiences, as the United Sates began a series of nuclear tests at Bikini Atoll in the South Seas in 1946, earlier in the very year the picture was filmed. Thus, the opening shot of a beckoning sea is surprisingly in harmony with the opening scene of a mugging in Central Park, that urban space so redolent of balmy picnics the lunch hour escape by day, so symbolic of human horrors by night. The casual viewer could be forgiven for failing to recognize these associations, because the opening scene features one of the most dynamic sequences of cinematography ever conceived. The crane shot that portrays Michael and Elsa as he drives her in a horse-drawn carriage he sat atop, she sat inside beneath out of Central Park to her car, is as audacious as anything in Citizen Kane, and far more challenging and less prosaic than the much more famous opening shot of Touch of Evil (1958). Hagopian records that this "was the longest crane shot yet attempted in Hollywood; Welles' harried camerman was ordered to keep Welles/Michael and Rita/Elsa in focus for three-quarters of a mile."19 The genius of the shot is that it asserts the potential of film to surmount any practical obstacle. Elsa and Michael's flirtatious exchange is documented in exacting detail, the camera rising or falling as it literally follows the dialogue of each character, so that they are shown in relative isolation, as their verbal responses fail to reflect their emotional reactions: when Elsa says that "you need more than luck in Shanghai," only the audience can see the emotion on her face. Finally, the sequence establishes their paradoxical proximity by showing the two in the same frame, Michael pictured beyond Elsa through the hatchway above her head. It is at this moment as they are graphically brought together that Michael decides to climb below and drive the carriage from inside with Elsa. Technically, the shot is minutely planned and difficult to achieve, but its actual effect is one of genuine naturalism, as the audience is given a privileged seat from which to observe the characters in all their psychological minutiae, and where it is able to witness both their interpersonal and intrapersonal reactions. What might be a scene that draws attention to the director and cinematographer actually favours the actors' performances, providing a level of intimacy that an audience could not usually expect of such demanding camera coverage. It is certainly not what Pauline Kael accuses Welles of in Raising Kane: "technique 'for its own sake'."20 Nor does it suggest the "boredom, laziness or impatience in its maker" that Thomson finds in the film.21
The emphasis on the spatial relationship between characters is continued in the next scene, but this time it is no longer the camera but the actors' blocking that achieves the figural complexity of the mise-en-scene. Michael and Elsa exit the carriage and he walks her to a car park to collect her car. They talk about a famous lawyer, Arthur Bannister, notorious for brazenly defending murderers. As Elsa's car pulls up alongside them, Elsa tells the attendant to send the bill to her husband a brief reverse shot shows Michael's consternation that she is married. As Elsa asks Michael if he would like to work for her, she is facing the camera, framed over his shoulder. He then steps around and beyond Elsa to open the car door for her, turning to face the camera with a cold expression as Elsa turns to face him, Michael now framed over her shoulder. So the shot has been reversed within the same camera set-up by the movement of the actors. Thus their figural relationship reflects the shifting power dynamics at play between them as first Elsa assumes the dominant role by simultaneously informing Michael that she is married, asking him to work for her, and implying extra-financial recompense only for Michael to wrest it from her by affecting indifference and rebuffing her in the harshest terms. The blocking becomes even more elaborately choreographed as Elsa drives away. Michael begins to exit the garage, the camera tracking him from the left. As he does so, a previously unseen figure emerges from behind the pillar at which Michael and Elsa have had their exchange. This figure follows Michael and passes to his right, announcing "Some dame, ain't she?," to which a third figure the car park attendant who emerges to Michael's left answers "Yeah, and some car." The stranger crosses the shot from left to right, passing between Michael and the camera, which tracks with him ever so slightly to reveal a fourth figure, whom he identifies by saying "Good evening, Mister Grisby," in an insinuating tone the audience will soon learn that these two men are Broome and Grisby, associates of Elsa and her husband. Grisby looks discomforted by the mention of his name, and exits from right to left of frame, crossing in his turn between Michael and camera, leaving Michael alone with the attendant, who now identifies Elsa as the wife of Bannister, the infamous lawyer, as Michael stares ruminatively after her departing car. In this way, the mise-en-scene is expressive of Michael's position as the locus around which the other characters spin their machinations, himself always in possession of less information than they are.
The figural density of mise-en-scene continues throughout the film, as multiple figures or faces occupy the same shot in back/mid/foreground to form a kind of decoupage that allows Welles to repeatedly emphasize the theme of humans compulsively preying on one another financially, psychically, sexually like the sharks in the tale Michael tells to the Bannisters: A few of us had lines out for a bit of idle fishin'. It was me had the first strike. A shark it was, and then there was another, and another shark again, till all about the sea was made of sharks, and more sharks still, and the water tall. My shark had torn himself from the hook, and the scent, or maybe the stain it was, and him bleedin' his life away, drove the rest of 'em mad. Then the beasts took to eatin' each other; in their frenzy, they ate at themselves. If the visual design of the film is indicative of its thematic concerns, then the use of sound is equally expressive. Thomson erroneously identifies the sound design as a weakness, arguing that in Welles' scenes with Hayworth in particular, "there is no contact or intimacy. . Welles' talk sounds postsynchronized, and we feel he is miles and months away, in a dubbing studio."22 This assertion is surprising as it ignores Thomson's own veneration of Welles as a radio artist, as a master manipulator of sound. The sound is postsynchronized, and there is indeed an absence of "contact or intimacy" between all the principal characters. However, this aural disassociation ingeniously underlines their essential loneliness and alienation from one another. Often, the dialogue itself has the character of rhetoric, the words spoken seeming to require no response from friend or foe alike. This is nowhere better illustrated than in the scene where Bannister lectures Michael on the harsh necessity of money by summoning his maid, Bessie, as an example: Bannister: Take Bessie here. She used to work for Bacharach I pay her more. Don't I, Bessie? There is no emotional connection between Bannister and Bessie; she serves rather as a mannequin with which to model his preconceived world view: that of primacy through capital. Financial relationships nullify the need for emotional contact. It is a view shared by all the main characters, with the exception of Michael, and so when they speak to one another, to Michael, or he to them, the sound design almost literally echoes their isolation. It is as if their words are spoken into a void, reaching no one, so that even in their rare moments of longing when they really do try to connect with one another Bannister with his wife, or she with Michael the attempted intimacy dissolves in the barren sonic distances that separate them.
Michael: You said the world's bad; we can't run away from the badness. And you're right there. But you said we can't fight it. We must deal with the badness, make terms. And then the badness'll deal with you, and make its own terms, in the end, surely. The final shot, with appropriately uplifting, ascending crane shot, shows Welles emerge from the den of duplicity, free of Bannister/Cohn and Elsa/Hayworth, to stride purposely into the future (though he does indulge himself with a fond adieu to Hayworth: "Maybe I'll live so long that I'll forget her. Maybe I'll die trying"). The film marked the end of Welles' Hollywood career; he chose to go off to the "far places" to continue making films. He returned only once to the studio system, eleven years later, to make Touch of Evil, which would suffer the same fate as The Lady from Shanghai, being heavily recut against his wishes and consigned to a wholly inappropriate second billing. Notes1. Sherwood King, If I Die Before I Wake (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1938). 2. Simon Callow, Orson Welles Hello Americans (London: Jonathan Cape, 2006), 357. 3. David Thomson, Rosebud, the Story of Orson Welles (London: Abacus, 2005), 280. 4. Bosley Crowther, The New York Times, June 10, 1948. 5. Ibid. 6. Thomson, 277. 7. Ibid., 274. 8. Ibid. 9. Ibid., 275. 10. Ibid., 50. 11. Ibid. 12. Ibid. 13. Ibid. 14. Ibid., 279. 15. Kevin Jack Hagopian, "The Lady from Shanghai," Images Journal, Issue 2, 1996. 16. Thomson, 277. 17. Callow, 356. 18. Ibid. 19. Hagopian.
21. Thomson, 277. 22. Ibid. 23. Callow, 365. 24. Chris Justice, "The Lady from Shanghai," Senses of Cinema, Issue 36, 2005. 25. Thomson, 276. 26. Justice. November 2007 | Issue 58 Jason Mark Scott is a book seller and cinephile from the UK, with a particular interest in the 1960s New Wave cinema of France, Italy, and England. ALSO: More film reviews |
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on Orson Welles