So begins Blonde Venus, a movie that provokes laughter and awe.
Immediately, all is not well. The man, Ned Faraday (Herbert Marshall), is a research scientist whose studies with chemicals have given him a life-threatening case of Scriptborne Illness of Convenience. He needs an experimental treatment to live. The treatment costs a lot of money. Wife Helen is played by Marlene Dietrich, but you knew that. Helen wants to help her husband, and the only way she can do so is―just go along here―to return to the stage. She auditions at a not entirely un-sleazy nightclub and joins their stage show. But this is a reluctant return to the spotlight, purely for her husband's sake, right?
Ha-ha, so very wrong. Any conception of Helen as a shrinking violet who only wants to bake bread and polish silverware dies when she takes off the gorilla mask in the much-discussed "Hot Voodoo" number and surveys the room. You can tell, this is the kind of thing she lives for. And she's drawn the attention of a shady and two-fisted millionaire played by Cary Grant, attention that she returns. Hubby will not be pleased.
The conceit that director Josef von Sternberg is making some kind of moralizing cautionary tale or socially conscious problem picture lasts about as long as the idea of Helen as Suzy Homemaker. Blonde Venus is camp and absurd. When Helen becomes a fugitive, fleeing both the law and her husband, her "Wanted" poster shows her wearing the ridiculous yellow Afro wig from "Hot Voodoo." A life of poverty, homelessness, and single motherhood only makes her more glamorous. Late in the film she gives away the only money she has and is next scene in a white tux, wowing 'em in Paris.
But because it's not entirely serious, that doesn't make it meaningless. It's thrilling to watch Helen rely on her wits. Her wits and a series of black women, whom she forms bonds of mutual trust with, and whom she'd probably never meet had she stayed in her respectable life.
It's a life she does return to, eventually. The ending seems deliberately ambiguous, though. Have she and her husband rediscovered, through it all, their love for each other? Or is this a classic case of staying together for the kid?
One thing is sure. It's the close of a powerful experience.
2 comments:
Ah, Marlene was always such a treat to watch but this is one we never did see. Your review makes trying to find a copy very tempting indeed. Added to the fact she was such a commanding presence what made her even more fun to see was that she'd almost always having a singing role too. 'Destry Rides Again' where she sings 'See What the Boys in the Back Room Will Have' is very memorable. One of our favourites that she starred in along with Charles Laughton was 'Witness For the Prosecution' - a great story too. Maybe you've seen it.
Since you covered this one so well I'll just leave it with both our compliments for your fascinating insights into the deceptively complex character she plays.
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On another subject entirely, but one talked about earlier, you might enjoy reading this article from Quillette Jer found this evening - a book review about the harms of the social justice movement.
I'll just take this opportunity, then, to recommend it once more. There's really a lot going on in it, but it's not hard to follow. She had a definite star quality. Like, there's a reason they were so eager to cast her back then, and it's not because a statuesque blonde with a distinct German accent could really disappear into a role.
I have seen Witness for the Prosecution, although so much time has passed that I really should see it again. I remember her, Charles Laughton, and ultimately Tyrone Power being quite good. Destry Rides Again I haven't seen. I understand the Madeline Kahn character from Blazing Saddles is a parody/homage. Curious.
I've seen a few excerpts from that book. It's a complex matter. The way I see it the grouping and ideological self-segregation caused by social media, combined with this year's physical separation, have had a dehumanizing effect. Pursuing social justice divorced from kindness and mercy is futile.
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