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In one of the many extras in Criterions sumptuous DVD presentation of Carol Reeds The Third Man, Peter Bogdanovich calls the film "the greatest non-auteur film ever made." The idea that Reed was not an auteur, merely a gifted technician, is difficult to credit in light of the directors career and particularly The Third Man. True, the contributions of others shine here Graham Greenes impeccable script; Vincent Kordas superb art direction; a fabulously polished studio look (some of it was shot at Shepperton Studios, some on location in Vienna); even the haunting zither score by Anton Karas. But the films beauty and power clearly come from the same directorial sensibility behind Odd Man Out, The Fallen Idol, and Outcast of the Islands. Reeds personality pervades the visuals endless tilted angles, forced perspectives, chiaroscuro lighting and the films melancholy themes of moral tests and the failure of human beings to meet them, and the difficulty if not impossibility of human relations in an unpredictable world.
The story is a familiar one for fans of Graham Greene and Reed. The scene is postwar Vienna, a city under the schizoid control of four powers in uneasy alliance: Britain, France, Russia, and Austria. As in all such contested realms, morality is lax, and illegal trafficking of all kinds pervades the city, from smuggled shoes and tires to watered-down penicillin that kills or mentally maims its victims. Holly Martins (Joseph Cotton), a somewhat naïve writer of pulp westerns, arrives in Vienna expecting to meet his old friend Harry Lime (Orson Welles). But Lime has apparently been accidentally killed by a car driven by his own chauffeur, and their "meeting" is at the funeral. But Martins, too curious for his own good, hears contradictory stories about the circumstances of Limes death. Witnesses disappear or are murdered. Martins himself is chased by unknown assailants through the glamorously dark streets of Vienna. Complicating matters are the sardonic Major Calloway (Trevor Howard), head of the British forces, and Limes mistress, Anna (Alida Valli), who ironically is a stage actress in comedies that are the antithesis of her misery over the death of her lover. The film methodically constructs a curious picture of the missing Lime through the comments of those who knew him. Martins remembers him as a charismatic friend. Annas unquestioning adoration paints a picture of Lime as a romantic. Major Calloway offers a startlingly different picture of this elusive man as a morally rotten racketeer; he shows a suddenly sobered Martins the effects of Limes work in a hospital filled with children dying from the watered-down vaccines that were part of the dead mans "business enterprises."
Lime chillingly embodies the chaos of a postwar world with his fascination with survival and triumph at the expense of any moral values. Reed captures this world with a camera thats often grotesquely skewed, images of a Vienna seen almost exclusively at night, and supremely, the haunting presence of Lime as a literal shadow looming large over the pathetic daily lives of the ordinary people who are his victims. The informative production history on the DVD tell us that Welles was in a sense as "missing" as his character at certain pivotal points in the film. When he arrived in Vienna, he apparently disliked the sewer system and demanded a studio version be built in England. When Welles fled, the ingenious Reed improvised, casting assistant director Guy Hamilton as Harry Lime in shadow, having him dress in a black coat and hat and run across an arc light to project that large ominous shadow.
The DVD includes the restoration of Reeds original, more cynical opening speech (David Selznick replaced it with a tamer version by Joseph Cotton, also available here). There are also a couple of radio drama versions, a solid stills gallery to go with the production history, a quickie restoration demonstration, concert footage of composer Anton Karas playing his famous zither ("Hell have you in a dither with his zither!"), two different trailers, and subtitles for the hearing impaired. All considered, a masterful use of the DVD medium in the service of a fine film. January 2000 | Issue 27 ACCESS: The Third Man is readily available at finer DVD joints everywhere. For more info, check out Criterions web site. MORE WELLES: F for Fake and Citizen Kane ALSO: More film reviews |
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Douglas Sirk
Robert Wise
Mania Akbari
Lars von Trier
Michael Haneke
Allie Light
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The Brothers Quay
Barbara Kopple
Federico Fellini
Abbas Kiarostami
François Truffaut
Caveh Zahedi
Peter Bogdanovich and
Joseph McBride
on Orson Welles