GME PRESENTS DOUGLAS SIRK'S THE TARNISHED ANGELS ON BLU-RAY
/As part of GME’s ongoing distribution collaboration with Kino Lorber, we are pleased to announce our release of Douglas Sirk’s THE TARNISHED ANGELS (1957), now available exclusively for acquisition by our North American university clientele.
This complements GME’s distribution of other key genre films, directed by such filmmakers as Ida Lupino, Richard Fleischer, and Curtis Harrington. Sirk was one of the major directors of melodrama during the 1950s, including MAGNIFICENT OBSESSION, ALL THAT HEAVEN ALLOWS, WRITTEN ON THE WIND, IMITATION OF LIFE. Based on a novel by William Faulkner (Pylon), THE TARNISHED ANGELS evokes depression-era New Orleans, enhanced by glorious black-and-white CinemaScope photography, Sirk's riveting chronicle of personal obsession, romantic longing and irreconcilable desires is one of the most noteworthy films to emerge from 1950s Hollywood.
Set in the 1930s Depression era during Mardi Gras in New Orleans, THE TARNISHED ANGELS covers three days in the lives of a trio of flying-circus performers, headlined by former WWI fighter-pilot hero Roger Shumann (Robert Stack) and his beautiful blonde wife, LaVerne (Dorothy Malone). Romantic complications arise when newspaper reporter Burke Devlin (Rock Hudson) falls in love with LaVerne while covering their daredevil aerial show.
“The director has to control everything. The movement of the camera is important because this is his style. Otherwise he just becomes a director of the people. With film, a director should be in on everything. Never give up and don’t let them tell you they are the specialist. You don’t want any special kind of work, you want your kind of work. You see, a film is a visual thing. It’s not being told by words alone. Words are important, but almost to a minor degree. It’s the lighting, the angling, and it’s the cutting, too. I’ve always been from the first to the last minute, in the cutting room telling the cutter I want it this way and that way, because once in a while you take a whole sequence out of here and put it there and that makes a lot of difference. Believe me, maybe it will make the film.”
– Douglas Sirk
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Warren Sonbert’s NOBLESSE OBLIGE (1981) pays direct homage to Douglas Sirk’s film, in both its narrative structure and visual iconography. Sonbert’s film also contains themes and images of flying and falling, of masked parades, and of the manner in which media reportage shapes public perceptions of personalities and events. In order to directly underscore his esteem for Sirk and his movies, Sonbert also includes in his own film shots of THE TARNISHED ANGELS on video monitors and of Sirk himself conversing with filmmakers Nathaniel Dorsky and Jerome Hiler while attending a tribute at the San Francisco Film Festival.