The Way of Lost Souls (1929) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
5 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
Pola and Synchronized Sound
c21jackg29 January 2003
Pola's film she made in the UK after leaving Hollywood. The print that exists now has French Titles (the French Title of the movie is Notre Dernier Tango (Our Last Tango) which makes absolutely no sense what so ever - neither does the American Title The Woman He Scorned. The English title is the only one that even partially applies to this movie.

Regardless of title problems it is a beautiful film with a rather decent synchronized sound effects track and even a small section where you hear Pola humming a song. The cinematography is very good on this picture and the film composition as a whole is very good. Even if you don't read French, you should still be able to understand this movie. Hopefully someone will release it with restored english intertitles.
9 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Czinner--An Unsung Poet of the Cinema!
JohnHowardReid24 March 2008
Back in the days when I was a college student, Dr Paul Czinner was universally regarded as a no-talent opportunist who blandly filmed stage productions of ballet and opera which were then marketed at roadshow prices. True, Czinner's 1936 "As You Like It" was available, but it was thought to be somewhat dull.

It seems we were wrong. Dead wrong! Paul Czinner was a poet—a major poet of the cinema with a passion for creating a romantic drama with an overwhelmingly compelling atmosphere, using hauntingly scenic location imagery and super-charged studio effects.

Czinner has also taken advantage of the sound track to augment the highly engrossing appeal of his beautiful visuals. Music and songs are creatively employed. Although there is no spoken dialogue, it is not missed. Indeed speech could well have become an unwelcome intrusion. Even sub-titles are pointedly kept to a minimum. In fact, the film editing is a model of artistry and skill.

The camera focuses often on the fascinating Miss Negri, who proves more than equal to the task of making her sordid character highly sympathetic. Ward and Rehmann lend excellent support.

A film to be savored again and again!
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
A very poetic movie!
mtarek28 October 2003
I was very impressed with the photography and the poetic nature of the film. Pola's performance was great a tour de force. The scenes in the dance hall were so incredibly realistic you felt like you were there. The soundtrack was very good. A real gem of a movie.
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Excellent, mesmerizing Pola
overseer-315 February 2004
I am quickly becoming a fan of Pola Negri after seeing four of her films. "The Way Of Lost Souls" (1929) was the 2nd silent film of Pola's I saw, after the compelling and funny "A Woman Of The World (1925). I do think the other title "The Woman He Scorned" is actually a better title for this film, because the lighthouse guard who marries Pola truly scorns and pities her in the beginning, but marries her anyway, because he promises God to save the "unfortunate" if he is saved in a shipwreck. How kind of him.

I saw the DVD version put out by Grapevine before they went out of business. This DVD version has replaced English subtitles, but the beginning credits are in French. The music soundtrack, with Pola singing at one point, seemed out of sync many times and the sound of the projector kept interfering with the music, but otherwise the two main musical themes in the soundtrack were quite haunting and appropriate.

Pola just keeps you engrossed in this film with her fascinating performance. She definitely had a screen presence that few other actresses had; here she just draws you in to her world, and you are completely mesmerized. She plays a fallen woman trying to go straight, but she has the misfortune of falling for the too puritan lighthouse guard, played convincingly by German actor Hans Rehmann, and he eventually ends up - figuratively - stabbing her in the back. Moral for women: never fall in love with somebody who prides himself on being loftier than you and other people around him.

This film was beautifully photographed. I loved the moment when Pola stares in the mirror and tries to improve her looks by cleaning her face and playing around with a pretty scarf, until she finally likes what she sees in the reflection. All women can relate to that moment. And the moment when she wakes up after her marriage night and touches her husband's pillow tenderly, indicating subtly what transpired the night before. Today a romance movie isn't considered complete unless they show couples writhing around, chewing on each others' faces. Completely disgusting and immoral. The old films were wonderful; they left it all to your imagination, with little tender moments like that pillow scene.

I enjoyed the film and give it a 9 out of 10.
8 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Pola Negri Shines
drednm28 November 2006
Interesting late silent film from Pola Negri filmed in UK and released in US as THE WOMAN HE SCORNED.....

Negri plays a prostitute in a cheap saloon in a coastal village.... A lighthouse keeper (Hans Rehmann) wanders in for a drink and is spotted as an easy mark by Negri and her pimp (Warwick Ward). But after a fight and drawn knives the lighthouse man walks off, leaving Negri on the bar-room floor. The pimp is dragged away.... She races after the hero and begs him to take her away.....

He leaves her in the village but a fast-rising storm swamps his boat as he returns to the lighthouse and as he is drowning promises that if he lives he'll protect the weak..... After their marriage, Negri must learn the most rudimentary household chores but eventually the two find peace with one another.

But the pimp returns and seeks shelter in their house. Negri hides him but he is seen leaving the cottage and the police descend.

The big finale is at the lighthouse. The pimp follows her as she runs to the husband to tell him what's happened and beg forgiveness. But as she's leaving the pimp jumps out and demands money. She tells him to take her boat and is handing him cash when the husband catches them.

There is an exciting battle on the edge of a cliff but the husband has time to turn to her and call her a whore and to be gone. The police arrive and they and the hero chase the pimp while Negri jumps in her boat and heads to open sea.

Very odd film, roughly shot and edited, and it contains synchronized sound effects (music, gulls, wind) and one section where Negri hums while ironing. But the opening in the saloon is exceptionally realistic and Negri, though never a favorite of mine, is very very good. She's tough as nails in the opening sequence, funny while attempting to cook breakfast, and touching when she removes the harsh makeup and dons a new scarf, and realizes that she is young and pretty and happy....

Certainly worth a look.....
5 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed