THE SALVATION HUNTERS

Josef von Sternberg

Scen., M., Sngf.: Josef von Sternberg. F.: Edward Gheller. Int.: George K. Arthur (il ragazzo), Georgia Hale (la ragazza), Bruce Guerin (il bambino), Otto Matiesen (l’uomo), Nelly Bly Baker (la donna), Olaf Hytten (il bruto), Stuart Holmes (il gentiluomo). Prod.: George K. Arthur e Josef von Sternberg per Academy Photoplays 35mm. L.: 1501 m. D.: 70’ a 22 f/s

info_outline
T. it.: Italian title. T. int.: International title. T. alt.: Alternative title. Sog.: Story. Scen.: Screenplay. F.: Cinematography. M.: Editing. Scgf.: Set Design. Mus.: Music. Int.: Cast. Prod.: Production Company. L.: Length. D.: Running Time. f/s: Frames per second. Bn.: Black e White. Col.: Color. Da: Print source

Film Notes

Josef von Sternberg created self-en­closed worlds with their own rules of artistic coherence and beauty. His first film, The Salvation Hunters, stands apart from the anti-realist virtuosi­ty that made him famous later, and not only for the films that transformed George Bancroft and then Marlene Di­etrich into stars. Its story is intertwined with documenting Los Angeles in 1924: the port in San Pedro, the Plaza down­town with jobless wanderers, the still uninhabited fields of the valley. Los An­geles is not named, only abstractions: the harbor, the city, the country.

Von Sternberg and British actor George K. Arthur banked their meager assets, primarily their skills and resource­fulness, to make a film that would get them work in Hollywood. Von Sternberg directed, edited, designed the sets and created visual poetry. Arthur, the male lead, won distribution from United Art­ists and rave reviews through his friend Charles Chaplin’s endorsement. Chaplin then cast Georgia Hale, Sternberg’s “sul­len beauty”, as his glowing leading lady in The Gold Rush.

The Salvation Hunters has been called the first avant-garde feature film because of its haunting beauty and opening titles announcing “a film about thought.” But von Sternberg wasn’t aim­ing for the art-film circuit. He wanted to mainstream his conception of cinema art in the Hollywood studios.

“I had in mind a visual poem,” he wrote in his autobiography, Fun in a Chinese Laundry (1965). “Instead of flat lighting, shadows. In the place of pasty masks, faces in relief, plastic and deep-eyed. Instead of scenery which meant nothing, an emotionalized back­ground that would transfer itself into my foreground. Instead of saccharine char­acters, sober figures moving in rhythm… And dominating all this was an impos­ing piece of machinery: the hero of the film was to be a dredge.”

The Salvation Hunters is the story of destitute, unrelated individuals – a boy, a girl, a child – living in the shadow of this machine’s huge claw swinging back and forth scooping mud from the chan­nel. They find enough hope to leave for the city, naïve to its dangers.

Janet Bergstrom

 

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