Thursday, March 21, 2013

The Most Desperate Creature on Earth: SHADOW OF THE VAMPIRE (2000)



Standing beside the camera in a white lab coat and goggles, director F. W. Murnau (John Malkovich) has a plan.  Denied the rights to Bram Stoker’s Dracula by his widow, Murnau has gone ahead with the film under changed character names and a new title: Nosferatu.  As he finishes his last studio scene, he screams to the heavens, “Thank God, an end to this artifice!”  He is about to embark upon a bold experiment in on-location filmmaking in Czechoslovakia, most boldly in employing a mysterious character actor named Max Schreck to play Count Orlok. 

According to Murnau’s limited information, Schreck will only appear to the cast and crew in character, in full makeup, and at night, and he went to Czechoslovakia weeks prior.  None of the crew, including producer Albin Grau (Udo Kier), the writer, or the lead actors (Eddie Izzard and Catherine McCormack) have heard of him, some hearing he’s a follower of Stanislawski’s school and comes from the Reinhart company.  However, none of these things are true.  Only Murnau knows who Schreck really is, and this secret, revealed early in the film, is what drives the story of this utterly fascinating speculative fictionalization of the making of one of the greatest horror films of all time.

What Murnau knows, and tries desperately to hide, is that Schreck (Willem Dafoe) is actually a vampire.  Murnau found him in Czechoslovakia, and roped him into playing Orlok on the condition that he doesn’t harm the cast and crew, and that, once filming is completed, he will have the neck of the lead actress, Greta Schröder (Catherine McCormack).  Keeping the vampire in check, and convincing his people that he actually is a character actor, is a constant battle of wills, one that the filmmakers take surprisingly seriously.

The idea that Schreck was a real vampire has its roots in real-life rumor, which spread upon the film’s release due to Schreck’s barely known personal information and incredibly chilling performance.  A combination of frightening talent, striking make-up, Murnau’s deft atmospheric touch, and the dream-like, evocative quality of silent filmmaking itself, the character of Count Orlok is one of the most memorable and haunting presences of horror cinema.  Orlok is also unique among Draculas in his demeanor.  In most Western vampire literature, the vampire is an ex-human, maintaining an outer image of life while desperately sating its animalistic hunger for human blood.  If the line between human and animal is straddled, most Western vampires are on the human end, such as most depictions of Dracula.  However, Orlok is clearly on the animal end of the spectrum, though hardly a living one.  Through incredible make-up and costume work, Orlok could be described as an enormous rat, bound upright in a black straightjacket, painfully attempting to pass as human.  His rodent-like teeth, extremely long fingernails, alarming gaze and stiff movement make him a far cry from your average Bela Lugosi.

Part of the genius of Shadow of the Vampire is the unbelievable performance by Willem Dafoe, who here shows himself as one of our greatest living character actors.  Dafoe understands the animalistic and desperate tendencies of the character and turns Schreck into a shifty, embittered, pathetic and deeply frightening figure.  His speech is slow and tortured, each word resonating a bottomless hunger for sustenance and escape.  He peers around each room, regarding the cast and crew with a predatorial gaze and a certain amount of confusion at his acting task.  His movement is stiff and awkward, each gesture dramatic and separated by pregnant pauses.  And he is no actor.  Each filming session with Orlok is an unusual ordeal, where the cast and crew are mystified by Schreck’s apparent lack of acting talent and Murnau’s uncanny habit of looking the other way, even when Schreck attacks the cinematographer on set during a brief power outage.  These scenes result in a good deal of unexpected humor (much of it drawn from Schreck’s inability to act), such as when Schreck-as-Orlok looks at the pendant of Greta Schröder worn by the Hutter character (Eddie Izzard) and loudly exclaims, “She has a beautiful bosom!”  He has little respect for his side of the bargain, and eventually members of the crew start vanishing in the night, eventually working his way towards the film’s climax.

This isn’t to say, of course, that the other performances aren’t also gold.  The film relies on its performers in order to stay afloat, and John Malkovich as the obsessed and megalomaniacal Murnau couldn’t be better.  Malkovich has always possessed a talent for making seemingly innocuous phrases seem electrifying and hilarious simply through his arch delivery, and this is perfectly suited to Murnau (e.g., when he screams “Albin, a Native has wandered into my frame!”).  He cares little for the safety of his people, except for the purpose of finishing his picture, mixes contempt with morbid fascination in dealing with Schreck.  The screenwriter, Steven Katz, exploits the director-actor relationship to real satirical depth; even though Schreck isn’t human, he still has self-absorbed quarrels with the director, such as refusing to ride the sail ship to Heligoland, forcing Murnau to build a full-sized replica at Schreck’s castle.

As for the supporting cast, we are given a dynamic grab-bag.  Udo Kier as the producer is delightfully Kier-esque, employing little facial movement but using his voice and weirdly compelling gaze to hypnotic effect. (If Dr. Mabuse is ever reincarnated, I know just the man for the job.)  Eddie Izzard as Gustav von Wangenhein, the actor playing Hutter, is inspired by prima donnas before him and creates a preening, spoiled hack-job, and in a DVD extra admits he was inspired by the real-life Gustav’s mediocre talent.  Catherine McCormack is devilish and rightly hateful as Greta, a narcissistic theater debutante whose first question upon reaching the German village of Wismar is where she can find a cabaret.  About halfway into the film a quirky and robustly uncouth Cary Elwes replaces the cinematographer, swooping in on a bi-plane with his face covered in soot.  When referred to as Dr. Fritz Wagner, he replies, “Well, I’m not a doctor, but I have dabbled in pharmaceuticals.”  His first action as photographer is to fire a gun to startle the extras.

What makes this film work so well is how it takes its subject matter very seriously.  In his review of the film, Roger Ebert remarked that what makes Nosferatu such a compelling film is that the filmmakers seem to really believe in vampires; this effect is literally reproduced here, with Murnau both repulsed by, and fascinated with, his vampire.  And, in the tradition of Dracula, the film paints the vampire as a deeply pathetic, tortured creature, unable to die a natural death and forced to contend an endless time with his fading memories.  (At one point Murnau approaches him as he recites Tennyson’s “Tithonus”, a poem about a mythical being who is immortal but continues to age.)  One of the most heartbreaking scenes of the film is when Schreck joins Albin and the writer in some late-night drinking and reveals his feelings on Dracula.  The book made him sad, because it depicted a man who had forgotten how to be human but was forced to pretend, and simple human tasks such as preparing meals had to be painfully relearned.  There is nothing glamorous or attractive in being a vampire, only desperation and regret.  (This scene also includes the funniest moment in the film, in which Schreck grabs a bat out of the sky and ravenously devours it.)

Working from Katz’s inspired screenplay, this film is E. Elias Merighe’s first foray into mainstream filmmaking.  Merighe is a daring and intriguing filmmaker, whose first feature, Begotten (1991), was an uncompromising, experimental plunge into a unique world of myth and horror.  Lacking dialogue, character definitions, straightforward plot, and music, each scene was photographed and then re-photographed to create a striking and surreal effect, sometimes making it difficult to make out what is happening.  The film moves as if submersed in a peat bog (and looks just as much), depicting a psychological tale of death and rebirth more like a vivid nightmare than a fashioned story.  Void of normal entertainment value, the film is instead fascinating in a more haunting and cerebral fashion, and will remain a staple of experimental filmmaking for a long time to come.

Although this film is far more mainstream than Begotten, Merighe isn’t devoid of inspiration in its execution.  The events of the film are often set up by title-cards, throwing the film into silent-film territory with great ease.  Before the crew departs for Czechoslovakia Murnau visits a kinky sex-club in Berlin, and this brief glimpse into surreal Weimar decadence is capped by a shot from above seemingly looking through frosted glass.  This is actually just a deliberately artificial frame, giving the action a deeply strange touch of old-world atmosphere (this is accompanied by distant and distorted sound).  I can’t tell you of the effect that he uses in the film’s climactic scene on Heligoland, but I can tell you of the opening credits.  The camera moves through an imagined castle, or rather what appears to be a screen painted to depict rooms.  These images are very flat, almost like blueprints, and the images are clashes of medieval architecture and frightening, symbolic faces, battle scenes, and Escher-like deconstructions of beings.  The camera pans very slowly, allowing the viewer to really soak in the haunting beauty and eerie power of these images.

Each aspect of the film’s production is gorgeous and compelling.  Of particular note is the genius make-up design by Ann Buchanan and Pauline Fowler; when we see the vampire, we don’t think about make-up – all we see is a vampire, miraculously captured on film.  Caroline de Vivaise’s costumes are brooding and ominous, edging towards cloaks and long coats and steeped in rich darkness.  (Schreck’s outfit actually restricted Dafoe’s movement greatly, adding to the stiff and pained effect of his acting.)  Lou Bogue’s cinematography and Assheton Gorton’s production design brilliantly capture the crudely organic landscape of Schreck’s realm, finding looming shadows in ruins and making sure any civilization present removed from the modernity of Murnau’s production, dirty and left to nature’s devices.  A large wooden cross seen in a Czech village seems to have erupted out of the ground centuries earlier, so darkly woody it appears burned.  And composer Dan Jones has opted towards an elegiac post-romantic language, and with that mindset created one of the most haunting film scores of the 2000’s.  His main motive is an icy fiddle tune, both folk-like and removed from folk tradition, that is so distant it seems to be coming from across a mountain valley.

Another compelling aspect of the film is the role of Nicolas Cage as producer.  Shadow of the Vampire was the first production of Cage’s Saturn Films, which he founded in order to explore new avenues of acting.  He was the one who originally paired Malkovich and Dafoe, who come from two very different theatrical aesthetics and, when combined, made a richly engrossing film experience.  Unfortunately, Cage hasn’t maintained his vision for the company, and has been using it primarily to fund his starring roles.  It would be nice to see him return to form and find another project as fruitful as this one.

Shadow of the Vampire was released by Universal Pictures and Lion’s Gate Pictures to a small audience and a warm critical reception.  Though it was never intended to be as widely seen as their flagship titles, I’m not sure that it will be remembered as time passes.  One reason is the inherently small target audience, as the film will most likely appeal to fans of Nosferatu and those interested in film art.  And I’m not sure the film is flawless, either.  The Wismar sequence pulls the pacing to a crawl, and the presence of drugs and Weimar culture in Nosferatu’s production and the character’s lives is an undeveloped detail that irritates me more and more each time I watch the film.  But despite these minor errors, the film is still an engrossing, perceptive, and haunting experience.  I don’t think it really counts as a horror film, but it is certainly one of the best vampire films ever made, and one of the best films about filmmaking I’ve seen.

The most compelling feat it accomplishes is the way in which it examines the same themes as Dracula with almost as much depth as the original, even though they are separated by more than 100 years.  The greatness of Dracula’s narrative came not only from its examination of the vampire, but also from its depiction of a society where an exciting and fast-approaching future is clashing with a mysterious and superstitious past.  The Victorian era looking upon ancient Transylvanian myth is a clash of progress and tradition, enlightened sensibilities and rural fears.  When Murnau was making Nosferatu, Dracula wasn’t more than 30 years old; when he went to the Bohemian countryside to film, people still lived in a timeless village existence, and for many vampires were as real then as they were a generation prior.  Murnau was working from a fascination with the supernatural past as personal to him as it was to Stoker.  It is enthralling to see Merighe and Katz work from that same fascination, and it is even more enthralling to witness the vampire taken up in those same feelings.  Some of the best moments in the film are rooted in Schreck’s first encounters with modern film technology, as well as the aforementioned scene where he discusses Dracula. 

What may be the most revealing and beautiful moment in the film is when Schreck is left alone on the set and comes across a projector loaded with Murnau’s nature photography.  As he hand-cranks the camera, the flickering image of a cloudy sky appears on the wall opposite him.  He sticks his hand into the frame, in awe of his shadow interrupting the scene.  Eventually, he ducks down to face the camera dead-on, and as he cranks the sky is projected directly onto his face, and a sight that he has been denied for hundreds of years is now intoxicating him, letting him drift into abandon.

~PNK

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