In The Time
Of The Soviet-Franco Friendship Association-With Greta Garbo’s Ninotchka In
Mind
DVD Review
By Sam Lowell
Ninotchka,
starring Greta Garbo, Melvyn Douglas, Ina Claire, 1939
Rick (played
by Humphrey Bogart) of Rick’s American Café in the movie Casablanca famously said to Ilsa (played by Ingrid Bergman) that
they “would always have Paris,” meaning the Paris of their whirlwind romance.
Well apparently the city of lights can play the backdrop for more than one film,
and more than one kind of film in the case of the film under review the 1939
classic romantic comedy Ninotchka. While
Russian head Red, General Secretary Joseph Stalin would certainly not have
liked this film (if I recall it was banned for many years in the Soviet Union
and its environs) as a parody of the shortcomings of his regime as a period piece
it retains its interest. Hell, if I had been adhering to the party line, the
Communist International line of the time, I might not have liked it, not liked
it publicly although there are several sly political jabs I could have laughed at
privately, very privately like in an acoustically sealed room with all doors locked.
Here’s why Uncle
Joe was in a snit. And remember this is only a romantic comedy. It was all
about the jewels, right? The jewels confiscated by the Soviet authorities in the
aftermath of the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 when the nobility and their hangers-on
either fought with the Whites and perished or more sensibly went into exile in places like Paris. By 1939 thought
conditions in the Soviet Union warranted the necessity of selling jewels and other
valuables on the world market to bring in ready cash for food. (Yes, Uncle Joe would
not have liked that at all). So the Russian Board of Trade sent three goofs
(what else could they be called with their Marx Brothers-type antics and I don’t
mean Karl antics) to sell off Duchess Swana’s jewels to a wary jeweler in Paris.
It just so happened that among the Russian ex-patriates in Paris was that self-same
Swana (played by the catty Ina Claire) who was holding court in exile waiting on
the Soviet experiment to burn itself out and for the old order to return. While
she was waiting though she would be more than happy to repossess her “stolen”
goods. That is where her consort of sorts the Count d ’Algout (played by Melvyn
Douglas) devised a plant to get them back-bring a ton of litigation to hold up
the sale until the French courts can determine the legal owners. So the Count
gets in touch with the three Russian goofs and lays it on the line to them. But
they are only low-level functionaries, at best.
That is
where the heart of the story begins-the rags to riches romance part. The Russians
send a special envoy, a woman, a hard Bolshevik to take charge of the case,
Ninotchka (played by the alluring Greta Garbo). Although the Count and Ninotchka
meet by chance on the street the up close and personal duel between the hard
red and the cosmopolitan bourgeois is on. Naturally the delights of Paris grab
Ninotchka as they do almost anybody and in a series of cat and mouse scenes she
and the Count fall in love. Even if it was only to be just a whirlwind affair since
she had to go back to Moscow when the litigation was over. Moreover Swana, who
despite her blasé demeanor wanted the Count to herself, by devious means got
personal possession of the jewels and forced Ninotchka on her terms back on the
plane to Moscow and without her Count.
Of course
here is where film conventions for romantic comedies or any romance film come
into play. The Count once he finds out his beloved is gone devised some schemes
involving the three goofs in order to get Ninotchka back to Paris and life happily
ever after. Naturally they work. And get the goofs to Paris too. Along the way there
are plenty of allusions to the real situation in late 1930s Russia (the Moscow trials)
and the social and economic hardships that probably had Uncle Joe throwing vodka
bottles around on drunken nights in the Kremlin after he watched his screening
of the film. But now as the dust has long settled as a period piece it is a good
showing of the talents of both Garbo and Douglas. That makes the film worth
seeing these days when you don’t have to worry about the party line.
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