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Saturday, Nov 25, 2017
8 PM
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BAMPFA
SUBJECTS
The Tarnished Angels
35mm Print
Rock Hudson, Robert Stack, Dorothy Malone, Jack Carson,
Also screens Wednesday, November 15, in the series In Focus: Filmmakers on the Language of Cinema.
Featuring the same principals as Douglas Sirk’s celebrated Written on the Wind, and adapted by the same writer (from William Faulkner's novel Pylon), The Tarnished Angels plays out many of the earlier movie’s themes—obsession, jealousy, self-destruction, defeat—but in a different key. Hysterical Technicolor affluence is replaced here by marginal Depression-era Americana, shot by Irving Glassberg in lush, melancholy black-and-white. Rock Hudson gives one of his best performances as a New Orleans newspaperman who develops an unprofessional fascination with carnival flier Robert Stack and his wife Dorothy Malone, a blonde in a pure white dress who’s made a profession of falling. Hudson’s passivity is an effective counterpoint to Stack’s characteristic desperation; although Hudson calls Malone a creature from another planet, the shadows under her eyes mark her as all too human. The Tarnished Angels is best experienced on the big screen, where the sweep of CinemaScope gives visceral impact to the film’s fatalistic circularity, the camera repeating the fliers’ compulsive loop around the pylons.
FILM DETAILS
Screenwriter
- George Zuckerman
Based On
the novel Pylon by William Faulker
Cinematographer
- Irving Glassberg
Print Info
- B&W
- 'Scope 35mm
- 91 mins
Source
- Universal Pictures
CINEFILES
CineFiles is an online database of BAMPFA's extensive collection of documentation covering world cinema, past and present.
View The Tarnished Angels documents
F is for Faulkner : The tarnished angels (program note), Harvard Film Archive, 2004
Douglas Sirk, conversations avec un témoin du siècle: le cinéaste y parle du nazism, de Brecht-- (article), Libération, Edouard Waintrop, 1997
Revivals in focus (review), Village Voice, Tom Allen, 1988
Flying (review), Village Voice, J. Hoberman, 1988
Sirk masterworks (review), Soho Weekly News, Fred Camper, 1976
Douglas Sirk (program note), National Film Theatre (London, England), Jon Halliday, 1972
La ronde de l'aube (article), Casterman (Firm), Jean Wagner, 1971
Tarnished angels, The (review), Monthly Film Bulletin, 1958
The tarnished angels (review), Variety, William Whitney, 1957
Patterns of power and potency, repression and violence: an introduction to the study of Douglas Sirk's films of the 1950s (article), Velvet Light Trap, Michael Stern
Displaying 10 of 13 publicly available documents.