I was at last night’s
screening of Blimp at Film Forum wiht Martin Scorcese introducing, and I got
there early to get a good seat. It’s a small cinema and I knew there’d be a
line. I asked the few peiple who were standing nearby if they’d come to see
Blimp, and all of them knew nothing about the film. They’d come because Marty
was introducing it and wanted to see him! But at least they got to see the film
as a bonus!
Before Marty there was a
short film presentation on the restoration given by a woman whose name I
forget. They showed several before and after clips and went into quite some
detail discussing the state the print was found in and the amount of work
required to restore. They showed before and after clips of the German beer hall
scene and the difference was truly striking. I want to go back and look at my
DVD, because even there it such a visually arresting scene, but the estoration
was magnificent. The bright blue coats of new guests walking in, the brilliant
red of the skirt of the woman pouring the beers.
I forget some of what
Marty said. I kept taking mental notes, but when the film started, I was lost
and forgot most of it. This is the first time I’ve ever seen him, so if I’m
repeating what he's said a dozen times, apologies. He told a story about how he
and Robert DeNiro were
talking about ways to tradically transform his physical form for Raging Bull,
where he gains large amounts of weight, and so naturally Blimp came up in the
discussions. DeNiro said he’d like to talk to Michael Powell about what Roger
Livesey went through, and so Marty asked MP to dinner one night, telling him he
wanted to introduce him to DeNiro. About halfway through the dinner, MP, who
was sitting next to Marty, leaned over and whispered, “I thought you said
DeNiro was gioing to be here?” Of course, he was, he was sitting on the other
side of MP, but was so self-effacing in public he virtually disappeared. DeNiro
did get to ask MP about the Livesey’s transformation, but all Marty claims MP
said was, “It’s called acting.”
(Isn’t Gielguld or someone also supposed to have said that to DeNiro about
Raging Bull?)
Marty also talked about
his own first experiences watching Blimp, the buthchered 90-minute version in
black and white on TV in the 50s. He said he saw this again, in color, in the
late 70s, and talked about the reconstitution of the film back to its original
163-minute form for the 1983 version. It was these negatives, if I remember
rightly, that were used as the basis of the restoration.
Well, the restoration! I
always thought the DVD looked really fine, with sharp, bright colors and
excellent sound, and wondered if a restoration was even needed, but this new
version is something else. Some of the moments
were a pure revelation. For example, when Clive walks into the convent at Bonne
Amie (sp?) the quality of light when he first sees the rows of nurses is
astonishing. There are some close-ups of Deborah Kerr’s face when she becomes
luminous, and the play of emotion is tangible. There was moment after moment
which came alive in a new way, and that’s hard to do for a movie that is,
well, so alive in the first place. Also, the sound restoration was beautiful. I
was there with a friend who had never seen
it before, and was awestruck at the end. The man sitting beside me let out a
loud “Wow” when the end credits began rolling, and there were similar
exclamations from other audience members, and the credits were met by a round
of applause. So I think Marty drawing in the unknowing New York crowds did a
great service by introducing this movie to many who would never have seen it
otherwise.
-Ranbir