In 1934, Leslie Howard made a classic movie called “The Scarlet
Pimpernel”. It was the tale of a British
aristocrat who used his quick wits and disguises to rescue Frenchmen during the
Reign of Terror of the French Revolution.
Seven years later, he revisited the premise and applied it to the
situation in Europe right before the outbreak of WWII. Howard was inspired by the story of the
rescue of an anti-Nazi Hungarian leader.
He worked on the project for three years and ended up producing and
directing. The film was a big hit in
Great Britain. It was released in
America as “Mister V” (I have no idea why they renamed it). Churchill chose to show it to the officers of
the HMS Prince of Wales on his way to meeting FDR for the conference that
resulted in the Atlantic Charter. When
Raoul Wallenberg saw it in Sweden, it inspired him to rescue numerous Jews from
the Holocaust. The movie has some major
street cred. The movie claims to be a
fantasy based on real people and events, but you should view it as
preposterously entertaining propaganda.
Howard plays Horatio Smith. Smith is a professor of antiquities at
Cambridge University. He is
absent-minded and anti-female. No one
would guess he is the daring “shadow” who has been sneaking Nazi targets out of
Germany. The mission portrayed in the
movie is to rescue a German pianist who is anti-Nazi. He plans to do this via a Nazi approved
archeological dig that he tells them will prove the German civilization has
Aryan beginnings. So, if you’re
wondering how a British professor has the opportunity to be rescuing right
under Nazi noses, there you have it.
Don’t overthink. The professor
takes six of his students with him, including a brash American (I know that is
redundant) named David (Hugh McDermott).
They will piece things together
(the clue comes from a wound Smith gets while masquerading as a scarecrow!) and
end up teaming up with their prof.
Smith’s nemesis is a Goering-like Gestapo chief named von Graum (Francis
Sullivan). He is pompous, but not
buffoonish. However, he does not get
snark well. He suspects Smith and their
interplay is the highlight of the movie.
The movie has a running joke about von Graum’s claim that Shakespeare
was German. At the end of one of their
exchanges, Smith says “Parting is such sweet sorrow.” When Von Graum asks “what is that?”, Smith
responds with “One of the most famous lines in German literature”. To show the level of intelligence of the
script, Smith refers to the theory that the Earl of Oxford wrote Shakespeare’s
plays. Von Graum sics Ludmilla (Mary Morris) to flirt the truth out
of the Professor and provide us with romance.
“Pimpernel Smith” is an entertaining propaganda piece
from WWII Britain. It is a showcase for
the wonderful Leslie Howard. He made it
because he felt he needed to weigh in on the Nazi threat and show Brits what
they were fighting for. It was one of
the first movies to reference the concentration camps, although the scene in
one of them is ludicrous and far from showing the horrors of the
Holocaust. The movie’s theme is more of
a fist in the face of the Nazis. The
movie closes with the obligatory speech by Smith which concludes with him
promising Von Graum: “I shall be
back. We should all be back.” That is a bit trite, but most of the dialogue
is crisp and there are some humorous lines.
Smith describing a skeleton uncovered at their dig: “Buried with all his weapons, you see, presumably, in the
belief that there might be a rearmament program in the hereafter, eh, Mr.
Spencer? An ancient Teuton.” Howard
dominates the movie. He has a bravura
scene where he goes to Gestapo headquarters in disguise and snarks the hell out
of them. (The scene reminds of “To Be or
Not to Be”.) The rest of the cast is
average, except Sullivan who makes Von Graum a worthy adversary. He is atypical for a comedy Nazi. Otherwise the movie is predictable, but you
expect that.
“Pimpernel
Smith” is available on You Tube and is well worth a watch. Although not particularly well known, it is a
classic and it stands the test of time well because the dialogue is
intelligent. The words balance the
silliness and Howard moves it to a B.
GRADE = B
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