On the roof of the world
Dec. 31st, 2008 06:34 amI've been watching two film fictions set in the Himalayas. Frank Capra's Lost Horizon (1937) was the most expensive film of its day, and popularised the idea of Shangri-La, a sheltered valley established centuries ago by (Christian) monks from Belgium, and entirely cut off from both the storms raging around it and the rest of the world (which, in 1937, had storms of its own to contend with).

Shangri-La is a utopian community ruled by the Golden Mean (moderation in all things, including moderation), in which people live vastly expanded lifespans. The architecture has a League of Nations feel to it, a series of conference centres balanced amongst vineyards and stepped orchards. Shangri-La is like Summerisle without the human sacrifice. Sections of the film have gone missing, and have been replaced with slide sequences which add to the strangeness, giving the film levels of ostranenie normally found only in art video.

My other Himalayan excursion was filmed just ten years later, in colour. Powell and Pressburger's Black Narcissus (1947) is a much richer world, visually. Again we're in a Christian environment, this time a nunnery perched high in the mountains. Black Narcissus is one of the most beautiful films ever made, with its rich early colour photography. It concerns human sensuality tugging at the respectable habits of life in a religious retreat, and sublimation being defeated by the arrival of spring, the incursions of various impudently sexy outsiders, and the gorgeous Himalayan scenery itself.

Shangri-La is a utopian community ruled by the Golden Mean (moderation in all things, including moderation), in which people live vastly expanded lifespans. The architecture has a League of Nations feel to it, a series of conference centres balanced amongst vineyards and stepped orchards. Shangri-La is like Summerisle without the human sacrifice. Sections of the film have gone missing, and have been replaced with slide sequences which add to the strangeness, giving the film levels of ostranenie normally found only in art video.

My other Himalayan excursion was filmed just ten years later, in colour. Powell and Pressburger's Black Narcissus (1947) is a much richer world, visually. Again we're in a Christian environment, this time a nunnery perched high in the mountains. Black Narcissus is one of the most beautiful films ever made, with its rich early colour photography. It concerns human sensuality tugging at the respectable habits of life in a religious retreat, and sublimation being defeated by the arrival of spring, the incursions of various impudently sexy outsiders, and the gorgeous Himalayan scenery itself.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 07:40 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 08:05 am (UTC)PS - You'd better have a good reason for posting such a short entry... even your 'oh I really should be writing my novel' entries were longer. Hope you're okay!
(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 12:51 pm (UTC)I enjoyed the lack of cynicism. The spiritual authorities in Shangri-La turned out to have been telling the truth about the incredible longevity of the place. It would have been easy to make them into evil kidnappers. Instead, Conway performs amazing feats trying to relocate Shangri-La, and the message is that believing in something gives us enormous power. It's an anti-nihilism message. The suggestion is that Conway finds Shangri-La again, but that isn't necessary; all he needs is to believe in it, and he will be a stronger man.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 01:23 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 06:00 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 07:11 pm (UTC)happy new year to you and your nearest and dearest..I always enjoy reading your insightful comments on Click Opera.
maf
(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 09:52 pm (UTC)2, that the Belgian monk is not motivated by a love of humanity, but by a dislike of it. He lamented man's "vulgar passions" and started Shangri-la to preserve Europe's treasure and culture against the doom that was rushing in towards it. A quote from him:
"Look at the world today! Is there anything more pitiful? What madness there is, what blindness, what unintelligent leadership! A scurrying mass of bewildered humanity crashing headlong against each other, propelled by an orgy of greed and brutality."
Don't you find that the least bit infantile? I'm not saying anti-nihilism is infantile, but this is not that. It's a self-righteous youth marking his territory with dislike of people masked as belief in them.
3, what I meant in bringing up the Dostoevsky quote what not a cynical 'damn him for trying!' It's the point that people aren't meant for a Shangri-la, and unerring kindness toward one another, and that you can't damn them all for having yin along with yang.
4, the whole subplot of George and the Russian woman is very poorly put together--he's just in hysterics throughout the whole movie, an explanation for his dislike of Shangri-la is never given, and he melodramatically throws himself over a cliff at the end with little real cause. Maybe you and Nick like that harsh, Old Testament-esque moral stance, but I don't!
The screenplay is here if you want it: http://www.imsdb.com/scripts/Lost-Horizon.html
Spitting on
Date: 2009-01-01 02:42 am (UTC)Is there room for order and faith?
(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 12:34 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 12:54 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 01:34 pm (UTC)I've commented here before on how I am hugely fond of certain Powell and Pressburger, even their more propagandist war films have a particular humanist slant; like many films of the time, they do however tend to reinforce the class system and glorify the officer-class.
Black Narcissus does indeed look wonderful, hard to believe that gorgeous Himalayan scenery was created entirely in Pinewood Studios and in a Sussex garden.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 01:50 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 01:56 pm (UTC)For some reason my Neo-Pagan friends like to imagine that the human sacrifice in The Wicker Man is something we're supposed to sympathize with. I don't understand; they're sacrificing people. Why is this?
(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 03:52 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 04:00 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 04:51 pm (UTC)On another subject, I 've just started reading Luke Haines book 'Bad Vibes'. So far, it's very enjoyable and yes you do get a mention as a great Scottish songwriter.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 04:55 pm (UTC)A creepy bit (could be a misreading, born of watching the two films together, but anyway...) was when they cited Dean and the ascetic guy as examples of the two ways to survive the place (ignore it or give yourself up to it), but didn't say which was which. Shivers!
(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 05:04 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 06:49 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 05:19 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 05:37 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 06:02 pm (UTC)We are preternaturally quiet people.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 07:11 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-31 05:27 pm (UTC)Interesting to read thomascott's comment. Powell's original idea for 'The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp' was for the film to *unequivocally* debunk and denounce the old military elite and their ways - his plan was to have Laurence Olivier as Clive Candy, who would have been portrayed much less sympathetically. But when the Fleet Air Arm refused to release Olivier, the role went to Roger Livesey who portrayed him as a much more likeable old buffer, which indeed led left-wing critics at the time to denounce the film for being too sympathetic to Blimpishness (while right-wingers criticised it for its positive portrayal of a German character). Personally, I like its ambiguity.
A personal favourite reading of 'Black Narcissus', which was released in the year of Indian independence, is as a farewell to the Empire and an admission that it was time for Britain to let go, something the British found even harder to grasp over the following decade than they found the idea of pure cinema.
lost horizon spoilers
Date: 2009-01-04 08:41 pm (UTC)I was also surprised when it seemed to be more about eternal life as the greatest accomplishment of Shangri-La rather than the peaceful lifestyle or untied non-capitalistic economy. I thought that was Shangri-La's greatest flaw, made it into a sort of search for the Sorcerer's stone (eternal life and gold both).
Anyway, thanks for putting me onto this film, I thought it was definitely worth watching. I friended you by the way. I've watched your blog under a few different names, and now I have a new one so I'm watching it under this way as well. Cheers.
-Stephen
Re: lost horizon spoilers
Date: 2009-01-04 09:04 pm (UTC)Re: lost horizon spoilers
Date: 2009-01-05 02:56 am (UTC)Last Spring
Date: 2009-01-05 08:57 am (UTC)