Week 3/2025

In The Edge of the World, Michael Powell’s first major film, a remote Scottish island becomes the setting for a tale about the disrupting effect of modernity on local communities. When socio-economic changes make their usual way of life practically impossible, the islanders are torn between leaving their homes in search of a better future on the mainland and staying on their beloved island despite the grim prospects. While the film’s black-and-white documentary style is at odds with the thrilling technicolor aesthetic of Powell’s later films, it also contains a hint of surrealism that foreshadows the imaginative and fantastical approach he would soon develop through his famous collaborations with Emeric Pressburger.

Alfred Hitchcock, a close friend and major influence on Powell, had an ambiguous relationship with Hollywood. Although he worked within the commercial studio system for much of his career, his distinctive style makes him undeniably an auteur. Rope is perhaps the film in which his stubborn side is most apparent. With this huis clos about two friends hosting a dinner party after having committed what they consider the “perfect murder”, the filmmaker breaks the rules of continuity editing by making the story unfold in real time through a series of extremely long takes that are seamlessly edited together. With camera movement as the most important formal device, Rope relies entirely on the narrative power of mise-en-scène, making it one of Hitchcock’s – and by extension Hollywood’s – most experimental films.

Many of Johan van der Keuken’s films have political overtones, but few are as politically committed as Vietnam Opera and De Palestijnen, in which he explicitly takes a stand on two concrete political issues: the Vietnam War and the Palestinian question. Although less self-reflexive than his other films, these visual explorations of international politics are nonetheless shaped by van der Keuken’s characteristic perceptive style.

The Edge of the World

A way of life is dying on a remote Scottish island, but some of the inhabitants resist evacuating to the mainland.

EN

“The story hinges conventionally on a romantic couple who are separated by tragedy and circumstance, then reunited after the birth of their illegitimate baby, yet the film refuses to conclude with this couple — refuses to use them as a summing-up of what the picture is really about, as almost any American movie would. Eerily, these characters are dwarfed first and last by their awesome physical surroundings, and by the nurturing community they come from, which looms second largest in Powell’s sense of a natural order.”

Jonathan Rosenbaum1

 

“I don’t want to make a documentary. Documentaries are for disappointed feature film-makers or out-of-work poets.”

Michael Powell2

  • 1Jonathan Rosenbaum, “The Communal Balancing Act,” Chicago Reader, 9 June 2000.
  • 2Michael Powell, A Life in Movies: An Autobiography (New York: Knopf, 1987), 241.
screening
KASKcinema, Ghent
Rope

Two men attempt to prove they committed the perfect crime by hosting a dinner party after strangling their former classmate to death.

EN

“Shooting Rope was a little like unpuzzling a Rube Goldberg drawing.  A long time ago I said that I would like to film in two hours a fictional story that actually happens in two hours. I wanted to do a picture with no time lapses — a picture in which the camera never stops. In Rope I got my wish. It was a picture unlike any other I've ever directed. True, I had experimented with a roving camera in isolated sequences in such films as Spellbound, Notorious, and The Paradine Case. But until Rope came along, I had been unable to give full rein to my notion that a camera could photograph one complete reel at a time, gobbling up 11 pages of dialogue on each shot, devouring action like a giant steam shovel. As I see it, there's nothing like continuous action to sustain the mood of actors, particularly in a suspense story. In Rope the entire action takes place between the setting of the sun and the hour of darkness. There are a murder, a party, mounting tension, detailed psychological characterizations, the gradual discovery of the crime and the solution. Yet all this consumes less than two hours of real life as well as "reel" life. (Actually, it took us 35 days to wrap up the picture.) The sight of a "take" under these conditions is something new under the Hollywood sun. It's like being backstage at one of those madhouses that comedian Joe Cook used to devise when he was explaining why he couldn't imitate the four Hawaiians.”

Alfred Hitchcock1

screening
CINEMATEK, Brussels
This Week
-