The
film stars Paul Newman and Julie Andrews. Briefly, Newman is Michael Armstrong,
a world-famous scientist and Andrews is his fiancée and assistant, Sarah
Sherman. They’re attending an international congress of physics in Copenhagen.
Sarah discovers that Michael is defecting to East Germany and follows her heart
and him.
Occasionally,
I confuse this film with Newman’s other movie set in Scandinavia, The Prize (1963), based on Irving
Wallace’s novel. (Wallace’s literary autopsy of writing this novel, over a
period of sixteen years, makes fascinating reading: The Writing of One Novel.)
From
the critics’ viewpoint, Torn Curtain
wasn’t great Hitchcock; yet, at the box office, it did well. It was filmed at
the height of the first Cold War (as opposed to the new one that seems to be just
blossoming…)
The
movie was broken into three acts; classic film narration. The first act was from
the viewpoint of Sarah. The second act was Michael’s POV. And the third act covered
both their viewpoints, as appropriate.
Switching
the POV works here. We’re involved in Sarah’s puzzlement and heartache as
Michael defects.
All
of the trademark Hitchcock elements are present. Mystery and puzzlement
revolving round the protagonist, Michael. Is Newman playing against the usual
heroic type, actually being a traitor to his character’s country? Suspense
mounts as revelations explain Michael’s purpose – combined with the oppressive
regime of East Germany that meant that paranoia was a normal way of life at the
time. We see Sarah and Michael arguing, but are not privy to their words – a
standard technique Hitchcock employed in his films. The ‘ticking clock’ is used
in the form of an underground group’s escape route being compromised. Seemingly
irrelevant characters at the outset prove to be crucial at the denouement. The
Hitchcock McGuffin is a formula that Michael needs to obtain…
There’s
a prologue and epilogue – both have Sarah and Michael under a blanket – which
neatly bookends the story. The fact that the pair were not married caused
concern on moral grounds in certain religious and secular quarters. How times
have changed…
The
fight with and murder of an East German agent is a deliberately prolonged
scene. Hitchcock intended making it grim and difficult, eschewing the usual spy
characters who kill so easily, unlike in real life. To make such an observation,
Hitchcock might not have seen From Russia
With Love (1963); there’s nothing easy about the death of Red Grant on the
Orient Express. The realism makes for uncomfortable viewing, certainly.
The
studio insisted on using the stars Newman and Andrews. Julie Andrews was only
available for the film for a few months, so the pace of the filming was rushed –
moreso when Hitchcock decided that the original screenplay (by novelist Brian
Moore) needed beefing up and hired Keith Waterhouse and Willis Hall to inject
more life into it (both uncredited).
Overall, the pace is slow in sections, but there are plenty of occasions where the suspense is cranked up by Hitchcock. And the supporting actors perform brilliantly. Worth viewing.
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