When Marlene Dietrich
Strutted Her Stuff And Made All The Drag Queens Weep- Joseph Von Sternberg’s
Blonde Venus” (1932)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Will Bradley
Blonde Venus, starring Marlene
Dietrich, Herbert Marshall, Cary Grant (yes that Cary Grant), directed by Joseph
Von Sternberg, pre-Code 1932
It is amazing how you
get assignments for films sometimes from the site manager Greg Green who is the
guy who gives them out these days. Everybody knows, or if not then get it here
now, that Phil Larkin and I had been, have been if anybody wants to take up the
challenge, in a long term continuing battle royal over who is the “real” James
Bond (our respective choices Sean Connery and Pierce Brosnan) which has spilled
over into other reviews and brought in a couple of other reviewers. A reviewer
like Seth Garth who apparently really does believe that our dispute is a
tempest in a teapot. Of course, Seth, an old-timer like Phil probably thinks
Agatha Christie is the cat’s meow and as well from reading some of his latest
reviews he seems to be in a time machine set exclusively around the mid-1960s
what with him going on and on about the summer of love, acid rock and the like
subjects which got the previous site manager Allan Jackson the boot-and rightly
so. I won’t even mention Bart Webber’s remarks since he hasn’t written a worthy
review since he found out Humphrey Bogart died.
Here is the weird part
though since the time of my last Bond film review I have not been assigned any
film reviews although I have had plenty of other assignments. Some of them like
covering a Klimt exhibit at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston with Mark Rothko
thrown and on the political front the brewing controversies around the rise of
the Alt-Right which has become increasingly public around the country in the
aftermath of the Charlottesville events where they laid bare their fangs. (By the
way I was assigned that beat since the massive counter-demonstrations against
this movement have been spear-headed by young people and had argued to Greg
that giving the assignment to one of the old guard would bring in off-beat and
basically negative comparisons to their “glorious” 1960s. It didn’t hurt that I
mentioned that these elders would be clueless about the different way, mostly
via social media platforms, that the young organize today. Nobody needed to
hear about mimeograph machine leaflet production, pay phone telephone calls or
plastering the world with posters at midnight.)
The drought is over now
with this film review of one of Marlene Dietrich’s early Hollywood films
directed by master director and one- time husband Joseph Von Sternberg Blonde Venus (blonde by virtue of a wig
in this case). It was no accident that I received this assignment since in 2017
I was down in Washington on another assignment and decided to peek into the
National Portrait Gallery to see what was new something I try to do when down in
the “swamp” (the only term from Trump-land which resonates with me). While
there I noticed that there was an exhibition featuring Marlene Dietrich and did
a short report in this space on her career and her effect on the acting
profession centered on her provocative bisexual use of men’s clothing in many
of her films (including here) so that she was something of a forerunner and
icon for sexual liberation. Moreover Marlene had a certain style Allan Jackson (that
former site manager) old me that his growing up friend Timmy Riley, now
professionally a “drag queen” under the name Miss Judy Garland out in San
Francisco where he runs a famous “drag queen” nightclub told him was a close
runner up to Ms. Garland among that entertainment set.
This film gives an early
view of that patterned Dietrich style from the men’ clothing while preforming
to that look of utter distain and boredom which she gave off. The “hook” as Sam
Lowell who is a pretty cool guy even if kind of ancient and knows a lot about
these early films from a lifetime of reviewing likes to tell everybody they
should be looking for in a film to hang their hat on is that Marlene after
marriage and a child, a young boy, finds out that her scientist husband, Ned,
played by wooden stick Herbert Marshall in something of a mismatch, has
developed some rare and deadly radiation problem which requires a trip to
Europe and a lot of dough to help cure. Marlene to the rescue via her “talent”
as a singer and entertainer. (She can
act but the singing bit is hard on the nerves according to an associate who
knows a thing or two about music and declared her off-pitch in English and not
quite so bad in French.)
Well not exactly Marlene
to the rescue but Nick, Nick Townsend, the fixer man and a guy smitten by
Marlene for some reason, played by a very young Cary Grant so this is no slough
movie. While Ned is away getting his cure, which unknown to him Nick paid for
after services rendered Marlene and Nick are seen cavorting. Except Ned comes
back unknown to them and demands the custody of their son. Marlene flees and
through a series of further down the social scale maneuvers is the subject of
an all- points bulletin initiated by Ned. She finally gives up the kid, her
Johnny and she takes a few steps further down the social ladder. As she hits
bottom she decides to spring back and restart her career in Europe. That is
where forlorn Nick is trying to forget her until he runs into her at a concert
and they start up again. No good though since she still pines for her Johnny
boy. Eventually she will get him, and Ned, back to the chagrin of Nick. Along
the way we get that bunch of songs that are hard on the nerves but which also
makes me wonder why those drag queens love to imitate her.
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