THE SALVATION HUNTERS
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
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