Charade (SE)/A,B
Criterion/1963/114/WS 1.85

     One of the terrifically fresh films of the sixties, Charade has style from it's very beginning. Turning a suspense film into a romantic comedy is no small feat. Maintaining the integrity of both genres is even tougher. This is a beautiful deck of cards inspired in every suit. Stanley Donen, a director of elegance and taste, shuffles the elements of Charade with panache. It's a fine script, to be sure, but look at the cast that Donen attracted. It's possible that Cary Grant is the only actor capable of bringing off the role of Peter Joshua and Audrey Hepburn is at the peak of her charming screen attraction playing Reggie.

Dyle in for trouble ŠUniversal

    Perched atop a luxurious resort balcony overlooking the frosty Swiss ski slopes, man about town Peter Joshua bumps into charming gamin Regina Lampert. From such innocent, light comedy origins, Charade twists and turns the conventions to it's own needs. In Paris, Joshua finds Regina and changes, chameleon like, from one identity to another.  Regina has returned home to find her Paris apartment stripped and her husband fallen dead from a moving train. Through the City of Lights, Regina is pursued by an assortment of murderers and fortune hunters, with Peter Joshua at her side. There are breaks for romantic interlude, sophisticated banter, and there's always Paris.
     Pairing Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn is pure casting inspiration. The assorted bad guys give delicious performances starting with Walter Matthau's bland bureaucrat Bartholomew to George Kennedy's fierce Scobie or James Coburn's slick Tex and Ned Glass as the accountant like Gideon.
     Donen's direction is equally adept at delivering the clever dialogue of romantic comedy or some good old fashioned action. The rooftop scene when Grant struggles with Kennedy is almost reminiscent of North by Northwest, especially when Grant hangs off the edge. It's a fine set piece though, well choreographed and filmed with grace and style.
      Transferred from elements in very good condition, Charade looks quite lovely. Aside from several scenes early on when there appear to be some MPEG compression artifacts, ie. emphasized grain in bring solid surfaces and some strange edge movement, the transfer is mostly sharp and the color depth is outstanding. Upscaled to fill a 1.85 screen by my Faroudja 3000 processor, Charade looks almost as detailed as an anamorphic transfer, though slightly sharper of course. There is excessive grain in the opening and closing scenes, but other than that, film grain is usually reasonably controlled and relegated to the background. Fleshtones vary nicely and contrast is good. Shadow detail follows the cinematographer's dictates. 
     On the audio commentary for this special edition, Stanley Donen and Peter Stone have a fine time recounting the making of Charade. Sometimes it seems strange as Stone talks of Donen in the third person, though they are watching the film together. Stone and Donen are rather funny together. Stone wants to reveal all sorts of plot points and Donen is reluctant, not wanting to spoil the experience. Stone exclaims that everyone is already familiar with the film. There are lots of stories about the birth of the film, how Grant and Hepburn came to star, the importance of authentic French onion soup.The commentary is indexed to scenes and it makes it much easier to integrate the feature with the images.

 

 

 

 

 


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