Lola Montès
Fri 19 April 2013 - 20:00
SPHINX cinema

Introduced by Marcel Ophuls

Resistance. If there is a single word that characterizes the work of Marcel Ophuls, this is it: resistance to every form of injustice and banalisation, resistance to the prevailing dogmas of documentary cinema. It is an attitude that is marked both by a whole-hearted abhorrence (for indifference) and by passionate love (for narrative film).

Lola Montès
Max Ophuls, 1955, DE, FR, 35mm, 110'

Max Ophuls' final film (and his only movie in color) is a cinematic tour-de-force masquerading as a biography, in this case a dazzling fictionalized life of the notorious 19th century dancer, actress, and courtesan. “Did his father's reputation as a filmmaker help or hinder Marcel? "It helped me to get work. More than anything, it helped me to be modest about my achievements. I was born under the shadow of a genius, and that spared me from being vain. I don't have an inferiority complex - I am inferior." Ophuls worked with his father only once, as third assistant director on Lola Montès. "That means I was the coffee carrier." It was his father's last film, one the critics hailed for its ingenuity. In one shot, Lola arrives in a circus ring to re-enact scenes from her life while standing on a turntable that revolves in one direction, while the camera tracks round her in the opposite direction. "He was a genius, but that film killed him. I carried the coffee and saw him withering." It was then Max had his first heart attack; two years later he died. "People say he was a romantic who dealt with private things like love and I was political," says Ophuls. "That's bullshit. I never make a distinction between private life and politics - that's a petit bourgeois thing. How can you make a stand against Nazi Germany, or in Rwanda, when you live life by making that distinction? What I am saying has to do with citizenship." (from an interview with Stuart Jeffries, 2004)