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Well, as you can see by the time elapsed since the last post on Song O' My Heart, my intention of watching the Borzage talkies straight through got somewhat... waylaid. Fact is, two tries at watching Liliom had ended in finding something else that needed to be done that night. But I watched Man's Castle the other night, and that convinced me that it was time to finally get through the film it owes a great deal to, Liliom.
I've seen four versions of Liliom at one time or another, counting a road show of Gordon McRae in Carousel when I was about 10, and the only one that really makes psychological sense to me is Fritz Lang's, with Charles Boyer. Carousel works fairly well because it's obvious that carny Billy Bigelow is a stand-in for all the war dead who never saw their kids grow up, but it's still hard not to find Billy self-indulgent for getting himself into a situation where he can't help dying, and then singing about it. Only Boyer captures Brandoesque psychological depths and confusion that make Liliom comprehensible as a figure full of self-loathing and low esteem, who mistreats his girl to build himself up and then hates himself for it. Lang's version works as therapy that finally helps Liliom understand himself, so he, in turn, can finally be of use to his wife and daughter.
And then there's Charles Farrell, in a mustache that makes him look 14 and giving a performance that suggests Charley Chase trying to play Stanley Kowalski. Farrell's own callowness, used effectively elsewhere (eg The River), only exacerbates every way in which we find Liliom a lazy bum and slacker, while making him seem too juvenile for his swagger to seem at all magnetic, let alone suggestive of inner depths and torment as with Boyer.
And this being 1930, though the film is technically well-made (and the print is absolutely gorgeous), it is very much filmed theater, with characters appearing at doorways just when they're needed to deliver a line that underlines the preceding scene, and a general feeling of dead air despite the imaginativeness of the studio backdrops. Dead air extends to Rose Hobart's performance, which is heartfelt by her, but too monotonously downbeat to really earn our empathy. What makes it worth watching— and it is worth watching— is the visuals; though the middle set in a surprisingly modernist home is a bit drab, the first act set mostly in the carnival is vivid and picturesque, and the last act, set in the afterlife, makes little sense in this version but is certainly like nothing else you've seen, except maybe The 5000 Fingers of Dr. T.
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Well, we all know that Lang took another crack at Liliom just four years later; his version is much more poetic-realist than Borzage's Expressionist-tinged one, leading someone to observe, pretty accurately, that "Lang made the Borzage version of Liliom, and Borzage made the Lang version."
But as far as I'm concerned, Borzage too took another crack at it just three years after Liliom (1930)— or at least, he remade the earthbound parts of it that didn't work. Man's Castle has no supernatural elements in it, and the Liliom figure (Spencer Tracy) doesn't die, but otherwise the plot is virtually identical: a poor, lonely girl falls head over heels for a swaggering layabout type who seems, from the outside, to use and mistreat her. But her love sees past his cloddish behavior and fulfills her so completely that for her, the domestic life she makes with him is bliss. Then the day comes that a baby is on the way and the man gets mixed up with an untrustworthy friend in a robbery to provide money for wife and baby...
Casting makes all the difference and Spencer Tracy as the Liliom figure is convincing in ways Farrell could never be; you believe he could throw a punch that would knock somebody out, and you believe that there's tenderness under his brutishness, too. Loretta Young, likewise, glows with her secret love in a way that makes you see that it doesn't matter if he's worthy of her love or not; it's a thing unto itself. (She in particular gets a lot of help in the inner glow department from cinematographer Joseph August, of Portrait of Jennie fame.) The American depression setting (most of it takes place in a Hooverville) helps by making Tracy seem less of a bum; it's more understandable why he's not working a regular job, and he's not living off Young even if he's not exactly supporting her properly, either.
But the other big difference is that three years have passed and Borzage has regained the visual command that he had in silent days. Tracy and Young's squatter cottage is one of those Borzagean apartments like in Seventh Heaven or Little Man, What Now?, whose Expressionist misshapenness is relieved by a direct connection to the sublime, a little square of window looking straight up at the sky. And the film has an undercurrent of frank, healthy eroticism— rooted in the sexual hunger in Young's eyes— which is palpable in almost every scene. No dead air here; the entire movie seems to be curling up next to you under the covers, satisfied. Man's Castle is, perhaps, Borzage's first great talkie (that depends on the remaining titles in this set, I suppose), and the one that most successfully recalls his silent masterpieces in the context of a new, grittier talkie realism. But it's also a do-over of an early talkie that Borzage knew, by then, he hadn't gotten right the first time— and why. By the time this movie is heading to heaven on a train, Borzage knows that you don't need a fantastic plot to reach seventh heaven.
