Paramount
Pictures, 110m 17s
The film noir genre is a grim category in
terms of its outlook on human existence, and director Billy Wilder's SUNSET BOULEVARD is one of the more
depressing instances of an already dark tradition. Even if one is fortunate
enough to carve out a career in Hollywood, what happens after one's starpower
inevitably fades? SUNSET BOULEVARD
offers no parachute after the ripcord is pulled, and it is a long way down.
Like
Wilder's DOUBLE INDEMNITY (1944),
two people who need each other are brought together in SUNSET BOULEVARD, but what seems expedient for both proves mutually
disastrous. Wilder began DOUBLE
INDEMNITY with narration from a dying man; SUNSET BOULEVARD's narrator Joe Gillis (William Holden) already is dead as the story opens! Most
of the remaining narrative plays out in flashback form, with the dead man
Gillis as humble narrator. An ex-journalist and former resident of Dayton,
Ohio, Gillis is trying to make it as a screenwriter in Hollywood. His financial
position is such that his car has been targeted by fiercely determined
repossession agents. Gillis reaches out in desperation to colleagues within the
film industry for assistance, to no avail.
The dead pool |
Gillis
is resigned to a humiliating return to his home state, but the mysterious noir force of fate intervenes. Gillis
suddenly finds himself at the dilapidated Desmond estate, where Norma Desmond
(Gloria Swanson) reclusively resides. She was the goddess of silent films,
thoroughly forgotten today. Her surroundings are in shambles, her swimming pool
is dry. The only fan mail she receives is composed by her stone-faced
manservant Max Von Mayerling (Erich von Stroheim), who does his damnedest to
keep his employer feeling relevant. Desmond is in love with the idea of fans
still in love with her. Based on the trustworthiness for which Sagittarians are
noted, she offers Gillis a hopeless writing project, and he sees an opportunity
to make ends meet. Desmond soon gets other ideas about the relationship that
somehow come as a surprise to Gillis, who ultimately prostitutes himself in a
sleazy attempt to advance his status in Hollywood.
"I am big. It's the pictures that got small." |
Desmond
cannot face the simple fact that Hollywood has moved on without its premier
female star of the silent era. The castaway nonetheless maintains a pathetic
pomposity, despite the 20-year lapse since her last feature role. She surrounds
herself with images of her former celebrity, and screens her own silent films
at home on a regular basis. Her touring car is monogrammed. The way she orders
Max around is deplorable, especially in light of the long-term history between
them. She is the most insufferable combination imaginable of bitchy and needy,
a has-been with suicidal tendencies. Her only friends are bridge-playing
"waxworks" left over from the silent era, tellingly portrayed by
Buster Keaton, Anna Q. Nilsson, and H.B. Warner. Current studio personnel who
remember the fossil Desmond are old-timers. The only division of Paramount to
take serious note of today's Desmond is Paramount News, whose agents descend
upon the Desmond residence after she becomes a news story in about the worst imaginable
way.
Without
a doubt, Desmond is a contributory factor in the downfall of Gillis, but she is
something other than a traditional film
noir femme fatale. Though arrogant and painfully out-of-touch with reality,
she begins to earn our sympathy when she plans a New Year's Eve party for two.
When she expresses her genuine affection for an indifferent Gillis at poolside,
the sequence is shot to make Gillis the heel. It is especially heartbreaking to
witness Desmond’s delusional return to the Paramount lot, where Cecil B.
DeMille (playing himself) views her visit as an uncomfortable distraction from
his work on SAMSON AND DELILAH
(1949) on Stage 18. In a particularly insulting moment on the set, Desmond is
bothered by a boom mic, one of the primary instruments of her career's
destruction. Betty Schaefer (Nancy Olson) is more than just the youthful antithesis
of the aging Desmond; Schaefer represents the ambitious new generation of
Hollywood hopefuls who will replace the names of the past. Anyone who has held
a long-term job can identify with the displaced relic Desmond. We would like to
think we are indispensible in the workplace, yet in truth any of us can be
replaced. That reality is disconcerting, but unavoidable. Every individual has
a shelf life.
House of horrors |
An
indictment of the sometimes unfair Hollywood system, SUNSET BOULEVARD is a film
noir that imports elements from the horror genre to meaningful effect. In
terms of setting, a mansion in ruins houses an organ that is given a voice by
the wind. Recreational areas have fallen into complete disrepair, surrounded by
out-of-control vegetation. After he is shown to the spare room above the
garage, where low camera positioning emphasizes his containment, Gillis
describes what he sees outside:
"...the
whole place seemed to have been stricken with a kind of creepy paralysis, out
of beat with the rest of the world, crumbling apart in slow motion."
The
same could be said about Desmond. As the sequence continues, animals are likened
to people. In an extremely unflattering implication, Gillis is linked to the
rats that infest Desmond's empty pool, where he ultimately finds the Hollywood
fame he had found so elusive. Soon after the rats are shown, the burial of
Desmond's monkey provides a disturbing metaphor for past and future husbands.
Gillis is associated mistakenly with the expired creature when he first meets
Desmond, but at this juncture effectively replaces
the creature to become Desmond's new pet.
Of course
every house of horrors requires a resident crazy, and Desmond doesn't
disappoint. With her large eyes wide open, head tilted back, and claw-like
hands, Desmond hardly could pass for anyone's definition of normal. The exaggerated
acting style of the silent cinema has taken over her mind and body, to the
point Desmond doesn't really exist anymore, other than as a mechanical walking-dead
figure who no longer functions in the outside world. The film's conclusion,
which emphasizes Desmond's connection with the audience, anticipates Norman
Bates (Anthony Perkins) speaking as his mother at the end of Alfred Hitchcock's
PSYCHO (1960). Both Wilder and
Hitchcock recognized something perversely binding about a theatrical audience's
shared connection with a disturbed protagonist. In both cases, the characters
register awareness of the audience eyes upon them, and seek some form of
acceptance from a world that has, foolishly it seems, relegated them to
isolated old houses other people only encounter by accident. We may not want
Desmond or Bates for a neighbor, but as viewers of SUNSET BOULEVARD and PSYCHO,
we are forced to confront the existence of such people, and perhaps even
empathize with them to some degree. The closing sequence of SUNSET BOULEVARD is even more
disheartening when one considers the public humiliation of Desmond, a once
beloved movie star now reduced to murderess, is what finally gives a teary-eyed
Max the opportunity to direct again.
The proper on-screen title |
The
horror tropes notwithstanding, SUNSET
BOULEVARD is a film noir through
and through, with perhaps the most sustained downbeat tone of any example of
the genre. The presentation of the film's on-screen title (SUNSET BLVD.) comes in the form of curb identification, one step
away from the gutter. Clearly what follows will not be a red carpet review of
Hollywood. Compared with classic film
noir blueprints like DOUBLE
INDEMNITY and OUT OF THE PAST
(1947), SUNSET BOULEVARD represents
an evolutionary step for the genre, especially in regard to cynicism. Now most
everyone puts his or her own interests ahead of someone else's, and not without
penalty—there is a persistent sense of self-loathing that informs the narration
by Gillis. He is the noir sap who
only too late becomes aware of how flat on his face he has fallen, and why. In
a morbid sense, everyone gets what he or she wanted in SUNSET BOULEVARD.
In his
oft-cited essay “Notes on Film Noir”
(Film Comment, Spring, 1972), Paul
Schrader observes, "There seems to be an almost Freudian attachment to
water. The empty noir streets are
almost always glistening with fresh evening rain (even in Los Angeles), and the
rainfall tends to increase in direct proportion to the drama." That last
idea certainly empowers the SUNSET
BOULEVARD narrative. It is invasive rainwater that forces Gillis from the
room above the garage to the "husbands" room within the gloomy mansion.
Rain again impacts the complicated romantic life of Gillis when Schaefer's
fiancé Artie Green (Jack Webb) must extend his stay in Arizona when rainfall
delays the production schedule of his current project. This circumstance allows
the professional relationship between Gillis and Schaefer to become personal.
In noir fashion, Gillis covertly
develops his relationship with Schaefer exclusively at night, the most common timeline for noir activity. Of course the recurring motif of water begins and
ends with death in the swimming pool.
Another
familiar noir motif is the use of
mirrors. The mirrors of SUNSET BOULEVARD
reflect the truth that Desmond would prefer to suppress. This point is
illustrated when Max notes a flaw in Desmond's appearance via her car's
rear-view mirror. The mirror motif recurs throughout the film, interwoven with
another noir staple: idealized images of the past. A vast
collection of framed pictures mark Desmond's days as a popular silent film
actress and stand in direct contrast to the current image of Desmond that
various mirrors reflect. And in the tradition of the expository camera
placement established in DOUBLE
INDEMNITY, the same dynamics inform SUNSET
BOULEVARD, with Desmond framed in her home to suggest control over men,
particularly in relation to the mansion's elaborate staircase, another common noir motif that so often leads to
danger.
The woman dominates the man in this composition |
As was
the case with DOUBLE INDEMNITY, SUNSET BOULEVARD experienced some
alterations after audience testing. At a test screening in Evanston, Illinois,
the original opening sequence set in a morgue of conversing corpses elicited
raucous audience laughter of the unintended kind. But apart from the original
morgue concept that was replaced with the now iconic opening pool sequence,
Wilder never deviated from the finished screenplay according to Nancy Olson. Swanson
recalls a 12-week, chronological shooting schedule, during which
cinematographer John F. Seitz established the Hollywood setting with location
footage from Alto-Nido Apartments, Schwab's Pharmacy, the Getty Mansion, as
well as Stage 18, the Dreier Building, and the very recognizable Bronson Gate
at Paramount Pictures.
Though
he definitely paid his dues, Billy Wilder was a success at the time of filming SUNSET BOULEVARD, so it is somewhat
ironic he would provide such a scathing review of his industry. The director
collaborated on the screenwriting of 13 films with Charles Brackett between
1936 until 1950. SUNSET BOULEVARD
would be the final project they would work on together. THE LOST WEEKEND (1945) may be the writing team's most celebrated
production, the winner of Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Actor in a
Leading Role, Best Director and Best Writing, Screenplay. SUNSET BOULEVARD racked up 11 Academy Award nominations, but won
just three, including Best Writing, Story and Screenplay (Brackett, Wilder and
D.M. Marshman Jr.), Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black-and-White (Hans
Dreier, John Meehan, Sam Comer, Ray Moyer) and Best Music, Scoring of a
Dramatic or Comedy Picture (Franz Waxman).
Interestingly,
Swanson was not the first choice to portray Desmond. Mae West and Mary Pickford
were approached, among others. George Cukor advised Wilder to pursue Swanson, a
star of the silent era who had not appeared in a film for almost a decade. In
probably the most striking case of intertextuality on display in SUNSET BOULEVARD, the silent film
Desmond presents to a bored-looking Gillis is QUEEN KELLY (1929), a silent film directed by von Stroheim, with
Swanson in the title role! After he was fired from the production, von
Stroheim's career as a director never would recover. He essentially plays
himself in SUNSET BOULEVARD, and
even laments his unrealized promise as one of Hollywood's most talented
filmmakers; he even mentions his real-life contemporaries D.W. Griffith and
Cecil B. DeMille. DeMille actually directed some of the most notable silent
films that featured Swanson, such as DON'T
CHANGE YOUR HUSBAND (1919), MALE AND
FEMALE (1919) and WHY CHANGE YOUR
WIFE? (1920). She received a nomination for the very first Academy Award in
the Best Actress category for her title role in SADIE THOMPSON (1928). William Holden claimed the role of Gillis
after Montgomery Clift bowed out only weeks before filming was to commence.
Wilder and Holden would re-team for STALAG
17 (1953), SABRINA (1954) and FEDORA (1978). Nancy Olson would be
paired with Holden three more times: the
fine film noir UNION STATION (1950), and the war dramas FORCE OF ARMS (1951) and SUBMARINE
COMMAND (1951).
Other
films critical of Hollywood that soon followed in SUNSET BOULEVARD's wake included director Vincente Minnelli's THE BAD AND THE BEAUTIFUL (1952) and SINGIN' IN THE RAIN (1952), directed by
Stanley Donen and Gene Kelly. The following decade, director Robert Aldrich's WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? (1962)
features an even more exaggeratedly horrific washed-up star than SUNSET BOULEVARD's Desmond, but the
ancestry of Jane Hudson (Bette Davis) is obvious. The early 70s brought the
darkly comic SUNSET BOULEVARD remake
HEAT (1972) directed by Paul
Morrissey, and produced by Andy Warhol. In the early 90s, SUNSET BOULEVARD opened as an Andrew Lloyd Webber musical, perhaps
the ultimate tribute.
The
finest home video presentation of SUNSET
BOULEVARD to date is the dual-layered Blu-ray released in late 2012 by
Paramount. The disc contains a1080P transfer, digitally restored frame-by-frame,
presented in the original theatrical aspect ratio of 1.37:1. The feature film
is unlikely to look significantly better in the near future, so this Blu-ray is
well worth the upgrade for owners of the prior DVDs. The main audio track is
English Mono Dolby TrueHD.
The
Blu-ray's packaging promises "Over 2 1/2 Hours of Special Features,"
but the supplemental material is frustratingly redundant and mostly culled from
past DVD editions, released in 2002 and 2008 respectively. The deleted musical
number, "The Paramount Don't Want Me Blues" (2012, 1m 26s) is a new
addition for the Blu-ray, everything else has been ported. The audio commentary
track (2002) from Ed Sikov, author of ON SUNSET
BOULEVARD: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF BILLY WILDER (1998), is one of the most
informative of the supplements, even if he starts to run out of things to say
during the film's third act. "The Noir
Side of SUNSET BOULEVARD"
(2008, 14m 19s) features Joseph Wambaugh, a former LAPD detective and author of
THE ONION FIELD (1973), THE BLACK MARBLE (1978) and THE BLUE KNIGHT (1972), the
latter was adapted as a made-for-TV movie that starred Holden. The other
supplements:
•"SUNSET BOULEVARD: The Beginning" (2008, 22m 47s).
•"SUNSET BOULEVARD: A Look Back" (2002, 25m 52s).
•"SUNSET BOULEVARD Becomes a
Classic" (2008, 14m 29s).
•"Two
Sides of Ms. Swanson" (2008, 10m 37s).
•"Stories
of SUNSET BLVD." (2008, 11m
22s).
•"Mad
About the Boy: A Portrait of William
Holden" (2008, 11m 13s).
•"Recording
SUNSET BLVD." (2008, 5m 51s).
•"The
City of SUNSET BOULEVARD"
(2008, 5m 36s).
•"Franz
Waxman and the Music of SUNSET BOULEVARD"
(2002, 14m 27s).
•"Morgue
Prologue Script Pages" (2002) accompany the opening footage (without
audio) that was scrapped.
•A
Hollywood location map (2002) with information on the Paramount Pictures lot,
the Gillis apartment building, Schwab's Pharmacy, the Getty Mansion, and
Desmond's customized Isotta Fraschini Tipo 8A luxury vehicle.
•"Behind
the Gates: The Lot" (2008, 5m 5s).
•"Edith
Head: The Paramount Years" (2002,
13m 43s).
•"Paramount
in the 50's" (2000, 9m 33s).
•Three
photo galleries (2002), and a theatrical trailer (2002, 3m 16s).
Hi, I just stumbled on your very nice movie site.
ReplyDeleteI started my Noir blog a few months ago and also wrote a review about Sunset Blvd., one of my all-time favorites.
I look forward to reading more of your reviews.
http://downthesemeanstreetsblog.blogspot.com
Margot
Thanks Margot, I will be sure to check out your blog. Love the name you came up with for it. Cannot wait to see SUNSET on the big screen next month, obviously!
DeleteHi again, I'll add your blog to my "like" list.
DeleteI did the same for yours. I plan to post a review tomorrow of Tomorrow Is Another Day (1951), after that will probably be the upcoming Criterion release of Moonrise (1948). On Dangerous Ground (1951) is long overdue. I post about a review a month. By the way if you add the "Follow" button to your blog I will act accordingly.
DeleteI usually post two reviews a month, wish I could do more. Some of the reviews I posted were my old reviews from the imdb boards, before they were taken down.
Delete