13 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
An Ace Pushkin adaptation!, 21 June 2004
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Author:
silverwhistle (docm@silverwhistle.free-online.co.uk) from Glasgow, Scotland
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
*Possible semi-spoilers, but as the story has been around for over 150
years, these may not surprise many...* 1806 Sankt-Peterburg: Herman
Suvorin (Anton Walbrook) approaches middle-age as a bitterly
disappointed man. Outranked by young bucks in more fashionable
regiments men from aristocratic families who can afford to waste
money on gambling, drinking and wenching he envies the meritocratic
rise of Napoleon. When he learns that old Countess Ranevskaya (Edith
Evans) the grandmother of one of the officers he envies allegedly
sold her soul to the Devil in exchange for learning an infallible way
of winning at Faro, he sees a chance of advancement. But how can he, a
mere Captain of Engineers, and a commoner, get access to the old lady's
household to learn her secret? The Countess has a pretty, downtrodden
young companion Lizaveta (Yvonne Mitchell) sure to be easily beguiled
by his attentions...
However, Andrei (Ronald Howard), an aristocratic officer and friend of
the Countess's grandson, begins to see through Herman's schemes. Can
Liza be saved from seduction? And can Herman himself escape the curse
of the cards? 'The Queen of Spades' is a magnificent black-and-white
chiller from the golden age of British film. Made on a post-war
shoestring budget, it nevertheless conjures powerfully the atmosphere
of early 19C Peterburg: the gaming houses, the palaces and street-life.
Indeed, it brings out the story's powerful prefigurings of Gogol' and
Dostoevskii, and its ambiguities. Are there really supernatural forces
at work, or is it all in the anti-hero's obsessed mind? - Either
interpretation is possible.
Anton Walbrook is brilliant as Herman, although it takes a little while
to get used to seeing him without his moustache, which would not have
been appropriate to this period setting! While he excelled at playing
wise, noble heroes for the Archers (Peter in '49th Parallel', Theo von
Kretschmar-Schuldorff in 'The Life & Death of Colonel Blimp', and -
most magnificently - Boris Lermontov in 'The Red Shoes'), for Thorold
Dickinson both in 'Gaslight' and 'The Queen of Spades' he provided fine
studies in scheming ambition, subtle menace and deception. Herman is in
some respects a natural successor to his earlier performance (as Adolf
Wohlbrück) as another tragic, tormented gambler - Balduin in 'Der
Student von Prag' (1935). Herman's bitterness and frustration, his
duplicities, his rising hysteria, and the pathos of his final scene are
rendered with the conviction and skill which make him one of *the*
all-time great film stars (sadly under-appreciated nowadays, while many
less gifted actors have cult followings). However reprehensible
Herman's behaviour, it is impossible not to feel some pity for him as
his military bearing crumples, and the devastation of his breakdown is
conveyed in his eyes.
Yvonne Mitchell is poignant as Lizaveta, and Ronald Howard displays
some of his father Leslie's sensitive charm as Andrei. Edith Evans, as
the Countess, acquits herself well playing a woman some decades her
senior: spoilt, vain (still dressing in the high wigs and panniers of
thirty years before), bullying - and beneath the show, pathetic and
terrified.
As a Pushkin adaptation, I would rate this film as highly as Martha
Fiennes' 'Onegin'. As a subtle thriller, it shows what can be done on a
low budget with imagination, intelligence and a quality cast. It's a
lesson in fine craftsmanship - as small (in budget and length) and
intricately fashioned as a Fabergé ornament.
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