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Liliom

 
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Liliom

  • Director: Fritz Lang
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Fantasy
  • Movie Type: Heavenly Comedy, Heaven-Can-Wait Fantasies
  • Themes: Crime Gone Awry, Fathers and Daughters, Redemption
  • Main Cast: Madeleine Ozeray, Charles Boyer, Pierre Alcover, Roland Toutain
  • Release Year: 1934
  • Country: FR
  • Run Time: 85 minutes

Plot

Liliom, Ferenc Molnar's bittersweet fantasy play, was first filmed in Hollywood in 1930, with Charles Farrell as ne'er-do-well carnival barker Liliom and Rose Hobart as his long-suffering wife Julie. While that version is not available for public viewing, the 1935 French-language version directed by Fritz Lang and starring Charles Boyer is currently being offered by several home-video warehouses--albeit in an undubbed, unsubtitled print. Boyer plays Liliom, who runs the carousel at a Budapest amusement park. He impulsively quits his job when he falls in love with mill-worker Julie (Madeleine Ozeray). A terrible husband and provider, Liliom panics when he discovers he's about to become a father. He enters into a get-rich-quick robbery scheme with his unsavory pal Alfred (Alcover), but the plan goes awry. Rather than allow himself to be arrested, Liliom kills himself, whereupon his soul is transported via an art-deco express train to the waiting room of Heaven. A celestial judge determines that Liliom will not get his wings until he returns to earth to do one good deed. Liliom materializes before his now-teenaged daughter, and tries to give her a star that he's stolen from heaven; when she panics, he impulsively slaps her. Considering himself a failure, Liliom wearily heads for Purgatory, but a coda shows that his visit has done a world of good for both his widow and his daughter. Liliom was later musicalized by Rodgers & Hammerstein as Carousel. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

On his way to Hollywood after fleeing the rise of the Nazis, legendary expressionist filmmaker and cynic Fritz Lang dallied in 1933 Paris long enough to make Liliom, the third adaptation of the popular play by Ferenc Molnar that eventually became the Rodgers & Hammerstein musical Carousel. Shooting this bizarre Hungarian fantasy as if it were a prequel to M, Lang one-upped the early-talkie Hollywood version by Frank Borzage (1930), and, presumably, a 1919 version left unfinished by another soon-to-be émigré, Michael Curtiz. The tale itself hasn't aged superbly: a womanizing carnival barker (Charles Boyer, before he emigrated) loses his job, shacks up with a starry-eyed maiden (Madeleine Ozeray), and loafs and slaps her around, eventually joining in on a botched robbery to net some cash after he learns his girlfriend is pregnant. After committing suicide, Liliom pleads his thin case before a heavenly court, but is sentenced to purgatory regardless. After 16 years, he's allowed to redeem himself by doing a single good deed on Earth -- but after becoming frustrated trying to convince his teenage daughter that her absentee father was a louse, he ends up belting her, too. Only after both his daughter and his aging girlfriend persist in professing unconditional love for Liliom does he find peace in the next world. Cheesily tragic and full of the effervescent otherworldliness so typical of French films of the early '30s (as in Vigo, Clair, Buñuel, Cocteau, and Renoir), Liliom has the dusty charm of a cluttered granny attic, and Boyer is aggressively engaging. But it's difficult to get around the fact that the film comes across today as something of an apologia for spousal abuse, to the extent that spiritual/moral redemption can be had if the victims refuse to emotionally prosecute. Given the long legacy of Molnar's play in 20th-century culture (it was first performed in 1909, and Carousel saw a major revival in the 1990s, culminating with Time labeling it the "Best Musical of the Century"), it's an impossible movie to dismiss, although the PC-minded will try. ~ Michael Atkinson, All Movie Guide

Cast

  • Madeleine Ozeray - Julie
  • Charles Boyer - Liliom
  • Pierre Alcover - Alfred
  • Roland Toutain - Sailor
Robert Arnoux - Strong Arm; Alexandre Rignault - Hollinger; Raoul Marco - Detective; Antonin Artaud - Knife Grinder; Odette Florelle - Mme. Muskat; Mila Parély; Viviane Romance; Rose Valetti; Maximilienne

Credit

René Renoux - Art Director, Paul Colin - Art Director, Fritz Lang - Director, Franz Waxman - Composer (Music Score), Jean Lenoir - Composer (Music Score), Rudolph Maté - Cinematographer, Louis Nee - Cinematographer, Erich Pommer - Producer, Fritz Lang - Screenwriter, Robert Liebmann - Screenwriter, Bernard Zimmer - Screenwriter, Ferenc Molnar - Play Author, Ferenc Molnar - Short Story Author

Similar Movies

Almost an Angel; Cabin in the Sky; The Devil and Max Devlin; Heaven Can Wait; Here Comes Mr. Jordan; Unlikely Angel
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Liliom (1921). Ferenc Molnar's play, with fantastic overtones, which told of the star‐crossed romance of a carnival barker and a serving girl, was first produced in America by the Theatre Guild at the Garrick Theatre in 1921 and ran for three hundred performances. Joseph Schildkraut and Eva Le Gallienne were the principals. It has been revived on several occasions and was the source of the 1945 musical Carousel.

Wikipedia: Liliom
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Liliom is a 1909 play by Ferenc Molnár. It was very famous in its own right during the early to mid-twentieth century, but is best known today as the basis for the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical Carousel.

Contents

Plot

The play takes place partly in Budapest, Hungary, and partly in Heaven. The story concerns Liliom, a tough, cocky carousel barker who falls in love with Julie, a young woman who works as a maid. When both lose their jobs and Julie discovers that she is pregnant, Liliom, unbeknownst to Julie, agrees to participate with his friend Ficsúr, a criminal, in a holdup to obtain money to provide for the child. The holdup is a disaster, but Ficsúr escapes, and Liliom kills himself to avoid capture. He is sent to a fiery place, presumably Purgatory. Sixteen years later, he is allowed to return to earth for one day to do a good deed for his now teenage daughter, whom he has never met. If he succeeds, he will be allowed to enter Heaven. He fails in the attempt, and is presumably sent to Hell. The ending, though, focuses on Julie, who obviously remembers Liliom fondly.

A contrasting subplot involves Julie's best friend, Marie, and Wolf Beifeld, a rather pompous hotel porter who marries Marie and eventually becomes the wealthy owner of the hotel at which he once worked. The two eventually have seven children, but the children never appear onstage in Molnár's play, although they are a very unpleasant bunch in Carousel, in which the number of children is increased to nine rather than seven. There is also a Carpenter in Liliom who is in unrequited love with Julie, and who, in contrast to Liliom, has a stable job.

Reception, stage and radio adaptations

Liliom was a failure in Hungary when it was staged there in 1909, but not when it was staged on Broadway in an English translation by Benjamin Glazer in 1921. The production starred Joseph Schildkraut and Eva Le Gallienne, with supporting roles played by such actors as Dudley Digges and Helen Westley. [1]Ivor Novello starred as Liliom in 1926 in London, with Charles Laughton, in one of his first stage roles, as Ficsúr. Schildkraut and Ms. Le Gallienne also starred in the first American revival of the play, in 1932. [2]

In 1939, Orson Welles directed and played the title role in a one-hour radio adaptation for his CBS Campbell Playhouse program ; the production co-starred Helen Hayes as Julie and Agnes Moorehead as Mrs. Muskat, the carousel owner who is infatuated with Billy.[3] It was broadcast on October 10, 1939.

In 1940, a second American stage revival, starring Burgess Meredith and Ingrid Bergman, with Elia Kazan as Ficsúr and Joan Tetzel as Liliom and Julie's daughter Louise, played New York.

In 1945, at the suggestion of the Theatre Guild (which had produced the 1921 and 1932 productions of Liliom as well as the original Oklahoma!), Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II wrote Carousel, an American musical adaptation of the play. This was also produced by the Theatre Guild and became one of the great classics of musical theatre. Even though the musical adaptation took liberties with Molnár's play, changing the ending so that the ex-barker is successful in trying to help his daughter upon his return to Earth, Molnár applauded Carousel. The character of Liliom's daughter, Louise, is made more poignant in the musical, in which she is snobbishly taunted and rejected because her father was a thief. It is the Liliom character who finally gives her the confidence she needs to face life. In Carousel, the characters of Marie and Wolf Beifeld in Liliom become Carrie Pipperidge and Mr. Snow, and Snow, who becomes a fisherman in the musical, is made even more pompous than in the original play. Carrie and Mr. Snow's children are the ones who so viciously taunt Louise, although, in order to keep Carrie a sympathetic character, Hammerstein keeps her totally unaware of this; in contrast to Mr. Snow, she is even supportive of a potential budding romantic relationship between their eldest son and Louise. (The relationship is quickly cut short, however, when Snow's son insults Louise by stating outright that marrying her would be "beneath his station").

Carousel also Americanizes the story, setting it in Maine during the last part of the nineteenth century, and including a New England clambake as the setting for some of the more cheerful songs in the show. The names of most of the other characters were changed as well. Liliom became Billy Bigelow, the criminal Fiscúr became Jigger Craigin, and Mother Hollunder, the boarding house keeper, became Julie's cousin Nettie. There is no Carpenter in Carousel.

There is an added layer of social commentary in Liliom which is deliberately omitted from Carousel. The intended holdup victim in Molnar's play, a payroll clerk named Linzman, is Jewish, as is Wolf Beifeld. In Carousel, Linzman becomes Mr. Bascombe, the wealthy owner of the cotton mill at which Julie once worked.

In Liliom, Liliom encounters Linzman only once: during the robbery. In Carousel, Billy Bigelow has met Bascombe much earlier during the play. Bascombe finds him and Julie together and kindly offers not to fire Julie, who has stayed out past the mill workers' curfew, if she allows him (Bascombe) to take her back to the mill. She gently refuses.

However, many elements of Liliom are retained faithfully in Carousel, an unusual step in the 1940s for a musical play based on such a serious drama. Molnár's basic plotline for Liliom and Julie is largely adhered to, as is much of his dialogue (although Hammerstein makes it more colloquial and gives it a New England flavor). Billy Bigelow is a womanizer and an abusive husband, as is Liliom in the non-musical play, but the Rodgers and Hammerstein musicalization is careful to stress that he has hit Julie only once, and that other characters erroneously believe that he is a habitual wife-beater. Carousel also retains the attempted robbery scene and Liliom/Billy Bigelow's suicide early in the second act.

Film adaptations

Liliom has been filmed several times, beginning in the silent era:

  • The second, a somewhat disguised and heavily altered version reset in Coney Island, was made in 1921 and was titled A Trip to Paradise. It starred Bert Lytell.
  • In 1930 came the first talkie version, a mostly faithful adaptation made in English by Fox Film, although Ficsúr (played by Lee Tracy) was called "The Buzzard" in this version. The character Hollinger, who is alluded to in the stage version but never actually appears, was one of the supporting characters in this film, and Mother Hollunder, the boarding house keeper, was re-christened Aunt Hulda. Directed by Frank Borzage, the film starred Charles Farrell and Rose Hobart, and was not a success. It is rarely shown today, but has recently been issued on DVD in an enormous multi-disc set entitled Murnau, Borzage, and Fox. The package contains many of the best known silent and early talkie films that F.W. Murnau and Frank Borzage made for Fox Film. The 1930 Liliom is, as yet, not available as a single disc.
Liliom

DVD cover of Liliom (1934)
Directed by Fritz Lang
Written by Ferenc Molnár
Robert Liebmann
Bernard Zimmer (dialogue)
Starring Charles Boyer and Madeleine Ozeray
Studio Fox Europa
Distributed by Fox Film Corporation (USA)
Release date(s) 1934
Running time 118 min
Country France
Language French
  • In 1934 came what is considered to be the most notable film version of Molnar's original play - the French film version directed by Fritz Lang, starring Charles Boyer and Madeleine Ozeray. This version, released by Fox Europa, was also extremely rarely seen, until it was made available on DVD in 2004. On the whole, it was a very faithful adaptation. Lang, however, omitted the characters of Wolf Beifeld and the Carpenter. Mother Hollunder was renamed Mrs. Menoux. In Lang's version, Hollinger again appears onscreen. He serves as a substitute for the Carpenter, and is changed by Lang into a rather twerpy young man foolishly infatuated with Julie. The criminal Ficsúr, who leads Liliom into committing a holdup, was renamed Alfred.

These first two talking film versions of Molnar's original play also alter the ending to make it more hopeful, though not as drastically as Carousel does. (A Trip to Paradise also featured a happy ending.) In the 1934 French film, Liliom finally does gain entry into Heaven, not because he has successfully done something good for his daughter, but because of Julie's forgiveness and love for him. Likewise, in the 1930 American film version, Liliom feels that he has failed, but the Heavenly Magistrate (H.B. Warner) reassures him that he has not, because Julie clearly still loves him. But it is never revealed in this version whether or not Liliom actually enters Heaven.
By contrast, in the original stage play, Liliom is ominously and sternly led offstage after he fails in his heavenly mission and is never seen or heard from again, although Julie still remembers him fondly.

  • The play has also been adapted for both Austrian and German television, respectively.
  • Rodgers and Hammerstein's musical adaptation, Carousel, was made into a Cinemascope 55 color film by 20th-Century Fox in 1956, starring Gordon MacRae and Shirley Jones. The movie version of the hit musical failed to attract wide public attention at the time, although its soundtrack album was a best-seller and remains so to this day, but the motion picture has since taken its place as one of the Rodgers and Hammerstein film classics. (See the article on the film, Carousel.)
  • A television adaptation of Carousel, starring Robert Goulet and an unknown singer-actress named Mary Grover, aired in 1967 on the ABC network.

Major Characters in 'Liliom'

  • Liliom, a carousel barker
  • Julie, a housemaid who falls in love with Liliom
  • Mrs. Muskat, owner of the carousel at which Liliom works; she is infatuated with Liliom
  • Ficsúr, a criminal, and friend of Liliom
  • Mother Hollunder, owner of the boarding house at which Liliom and Julie are staying
  • Young Hollunder, her son
  • Marie, Julie's best friend
  • Wolf Beifeld, a hotel porter and Marie's fiancée
  • A Carpenter, in unrequited love with Julie
  • Louise, Liliom and Julie's daughter
  • Linzman, a payroll clerk
  • The Heavenly Magistrate
  • Two Policemen from the Beyond

References

  1. ^ http://www.ibdb.com/production.php?id=9062
  2. ^ http://www.ibdb.com/production.php?id=11658
  3. ^ http://www.mercurytheatre.info/

External links


 
 
Learn More
Molnár, Ferenc (Hungarian writer)
Liliom (1930 Fantasy Film)
Rudolph Schildkraut (Austrian actor)

Playwright who wrote liliom? Read answer...

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Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
American Theater Guide. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre. Copyright © 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Liliom" Read more

 

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