Change Your Image
zzeresque-139-289256
Reviews
Moonfleet (1955)
Fritz Lang's masterpiece?
Moonfleet is not a minor Fritz Lang. Without doubt, it is one of the most extraordinary films ever done. This is not to exaggerate, not a bit. Even if Lang was not pleased with the result (the studio interfered in the final cut), the truth is that the spelling experience achieved in Destiny (Der Müde Tod, 1921), for example, knows its peak with this adventure story lived and seen by the young John Mohune. One of those films only a good cinema theater is an appropriate place to watch. In cinemascope and glorious, dreamlike color. Attention: if you want to see Moonfleet on DVD, search for an edition that respects its original colors. It would be a crime to see this film in one of those very shiny restorations.
Vale Abraão (1993)
A story of rebellion and frustration.
Oliveira asked Agustina Bessa-Luís to write him an adaptation of Flaubert's Madame Bovary for contemporary Portugal. The result was Abraham's Valley, the romance that served as the basis of Oliveira's script. The book and the film are very different. Comparing them is not a fruitful exercise. Fortunately, Oliveira had no reverence for Agustina's fabulous writing and used her text with total freedom.
Agustina placed the story in Douro, a most romantic and sensual Douro, "a land predestined to suffering" incomparably filmed by Oliveira. Abraham's Valley is a story of rebellion and frustration that flows through the spaces of that region: houses, palaces, gardens, vineyards and the river, to which Ema (Leonor Silveira) offers herself in the end: "You are beautiful, said the princess, but you didn't arrive in time to this place." Abraham's Valley is maybe Oliveira's most loved film. I won't dare to say it is his best. But between Vermeer's hypnotic aura and Agustina's and Oliveira's cruelty, it is certainly one of the most beautiful and provoking films ever made.