Welcome to the Silver Screen Modiste

"Just us, the cameras, and those lovely people out there in the dark!"

Norma Desmond



Modiste: maker of, or dealer in women's fashionable clothes. Modiste was also one of the names given to the early 1920s Hollywood costume designers.




Sunday, February 26, 2012

OSCAR MOST GLAMOROUS GOWN AWARD

The 2012 Academy Awards Red Carpet did not disappoint. There were numerous fabulous gowns to see and admire. Among the many, I have selected the white sequin gown worn by Milla Jovovich and designed by Elle Saab as the Most Glamorous. This was a perfect gown for the occasion , with beautiful swirls of sequins and bias patterns on a one-shoulder, long-trained gown. Its one-shoulder was padded and Mila left no doubt of her glamorous intentions by wearing bright red lipstick. Va-va-voom they used to say.



My runner-up as the Most Glamorous Gown goes to the amazing gold-embroidered black strapless gown worn by Jessica Chastain - designed by Sarah Burton for Alexander McQueen. The gown was a cross between old Hollywood glamour and Renaissance handwork. It looked like a museum piece but was cut to perfection for the modern lithe figure.




There were two other creations that I can not leave unmentioned. I'll call them Most Glamorous  Honorable Mentions. The first is the gorgeous midnight-blue one-shoulder sequined gown worn by Rose Byrne and designed by Vivienne Westwood. It was backless and Rose looked absolutely stunning wearing it. Bravo.




And Gwyneth Paltrow looked like a siren in a white column gown with matching cape by Tom Ford. This was a fantastic ensemble and it was  high time that a star came wearing a wrap on a cold evening. Bravo for Tom Ford for designing this outfit - Adrian would have approved.




The 84th Academy Awards was a wonderful show, with great visual appeal from its Art-Deco set designs reflecting the influence of The Artist, the Best Picture winner that itself was influenced by old Hollywood movies and theaters. And of course The Artist won for Best Costume Design by Mark Bridges as predicted by The Silver Screen Modiste. This was Mark Bridges' first Academy Award, and he also won this year's BAFTA costume design award. As fabulous as the costumes were in The Artist, there was tough competition from the other nominees. The Costume Designers Guild gave its Excellence in Period Film award to W.E. and Arianne Phillips.




Actors Jean Dujardin and Berenice Bejo in The Artist.




The 1920s jazz age styles of The Artist have already started fashion trends - using fringe, low-waisted dresses with deco sequins and bead work designs. This is Mark Bridges first Oscar win. He is pictured below at the opening of the Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising 20th Annual Art of Motion Picture Costume Design Exhibit open now through April 28 at FIDM in Los Angeles.


Matt Sayles AP




Congratulations to all the contenders and winners, for all the criticisms heard, it was a good year for movies. And stay tuned for the next post of the Silver Screen Modiste, where I'll be showing some of the silver screen's real fabulous flappers.



Monday, February 20, 2012

OSCAR IS COMING

As we all know, the 84th annual Academy Awards show is coming up next Sunday,February 26, televised starting at 4:00pm PST. The Silver Screen Modiste will be selecting the Most Glamorous Gown Award, as it has done the past two years, along with a runner-up. The Most Galmorous Gown was given last year to Anne Hathaway's red Valentino gown. Mr. Valentino Garavani had designed the gown in his trademark Valentino red color before his retirement. His attendance with Anne Hathaway on the red carpet offered a great moment in history. In case this wasn't clear before, the symbiosis between the leading fashion designers and Hollywood stars is cast in stone. The Silver Screen Modiste chose another stunning red gown for runner-up, worn by Jennifer Lawrence. It was a very simple and ultra sleek number designed by Francisco Costa for Calvin Klein.


Anne Hathaway in the red Valentino, 2011



Jennifer Lawrence in the red Calvin Klein


The Golden Globe Awards offered a great preview to how exciting and glamorous the Oscar gowns of 2012 will be. Selecting the Most Glamorous and runner up awards will be a challenge. Stay tuned.


The Modiste will also be analyzing the Best Costume Design Oscar. Although I predict The Artist and Mark Bridges will win, it is a very competitive field. The period films such as the Oscar nominated Jane Eyre and Anonymous are the usual favorites, although the costumes for W.E. designed by Ariane Phillips were perticularly outstanding (see my post The Oscar Costume Design Contenders here).


Enjoy the show and we'll see you next week.


Sunday, February 12, 2012

A NOIR VALENTINE


In the dual portraits of film noir couples, the tension is not just sexual but existential. Fate was in command, and the film titles said it all: Detour; Kiss of Death; Cornered; Criss-Cross; D.O.A; Fallen Angel: Out of the Past; Possessed. In film noir, the games were played for keeps. These photos of film noir lovers convey that brooding quality, that moment of tenderness or passion, that brief moment before fate comes calling. Valentine can come in other colors than red - it even comes in black. (This post was revived and revised from last year's Silver Screen Modiste entry to the Film Noir blogathon).



Gene Tierney and Cornel Wilde in "Leave Her to Heaven" a film noir in vivid Technicolor

Film noir twisted the normal expectations of movie plots. A happy ending was not in the cards, and everyone had an angle. The couples danced around each other's schemes, or lost themselves to an obsession with the other.







Burt Lancaster in his first film, "The Killers" with Ava Gardner, 1946. The film made stars of them both.
                                                

The foundation of the film noir point of view was forged by the Great Depression, and tempered by the horrors of World War II. Women had learned to be independent and tough. They had learned to keep their families together by going to work, and during the war they had to make it on their own. Men had lived their lives  in the Depression knowing that they could lose their jobs, and often did, and at any random moment in the war a bullet or missile could snuff them out. Free choice had lost to cruel fate - such is the world view that pervades film noir, a reflection of a darker realism shaken loose by the war.



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Susan Hayward and Bill Williams in "Deadline at Dawn," 1946.


Whereas cars and trains used to represent escape and freedom, in film noir they became metaphors for confined spaces and one-way tracks to destiny. As the character Barton Keyes (Edward G. Robinson) says to Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray) in Double Indemnity, "They're stuck with each other and they've got to ride all the way to the end of the line."

  

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Veronica Lake and Alan Ladd in "The Blue Dahlia," 1946.



The black and white film and still photography, perfected in the 1930s, was ideal for film noir atmospherics. Orson Welles' Citizen Kane with its deep focus and claustrophic shots gave film noir inspiration. Deep shadows and strong contrasts of light and dark became a signature film noir technique. These settings were perfectly represented by light streaming through venetian blinds, the patterns of prison bars and staircases, and criss-crossed railroad tracks. The settings were mostly urban nightscapes. During and after WWII, soldiers, marines, and sailors from all over the country passed through big cities like New York and Los Angeles. After the war ended, tens of thousands returned and were cast adrift there, looking for an illusive normalcy.




Ann Blyth and Burt Lancaster in "Brute Force," 1947


Noir films often start at the end, their story played out in flashbacks. There is no mistake that destiny rules over the protagonists. The only question is, what road will get them there. And whatever the road, they're always looking back nervously in the rear-view mirror. In Out of the Past, even returning to normal life in a small town provides no escape from the clutches of his big city past for Robert Mitchum. And a similar fate traps Burt Lancaster in its spider-web in The Killers.

 
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Jane Greer and Robert Mitchum in "Out of the Past," 1947


For film noir couples, an intensity radiates from their portraits. Whatever force consumes them burns like white heat. Though their past chases them and their destiny beckons, they live in the moment. They lose themselves in the other.


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Gene Tierney and Richard Widmark in "Night and the City," 1950



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Coleen Gray and Victor Mature in "Kiss of Death," 1947



Film noir combined great acting talent with great stories and screenplays. Outstanding film directors were also responsible for the classics of film noir. It seemed that the European directors working in the U.S. appear to have best captured the film noir aesthetic. They seemed to have understood the malaise of the post-war years. And often as refugees, they had lived through its nightmares. They included Robert Siodmak, Jules Dassin, Jacques Tourneur, Fritz Lang, Billy Wilder, and Otto Preminger. But film noir lives on, not only in these classics, but in stylish hits such as Body Heat and L.A. Confidential. We could hope for some more - but bad endings are never popular. This much is certain - there was no bad ending for Film Noir itself - it lives on in its masterly films and its influence on film making through today.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

THE COSTUME DESIGN FOR VERTIGO




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“I don’t wear suits, and I don’t wear gray. Another thing, I don’t wear black pumps,” said Kim Novak to Edith Head, the costume designer for Vertigo.
“I don’t care what she wears as long as it’s a gray suit, Hitchcock retorted when Edith reported this conversation to him.
Thus began the creative tension over the costuming of Vertigo. But in a clash of opinion over the visual aspects of a Hitchcock film, Hitch always prevailed. Indeed, he already had the colors and the costume types selected before pre-production for Vertigo began. Kim Novak wore the gray suit with the black pumps - her iconic look in Vertigo. “I had never had a director who was particular about the costumes, the way they were designed, the specific colors,” said Novak about Hitchcock later. 
This blog post is a slightly revised version of my contribution to The Lady Eve's "A Month of Vertigo".


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The story theme within Vertigo is based on obsession, and the costume looks for the Madeleine/Judy character are a key symbol of that dysfunction. The “clash” that Kim Novak had with Hitch and Edith Head over her costumes was nothing new for an actress in Hollywood, but Alfred Hitchcock’s very specific clothing demands in type and color speaks volumes about Vertigo being for him a very personal film. The combination of the costumes and look of Kim’s Madeleine, the psychological tension caused by the character Scottie’s clash of opposite impulses towards Madeleine/Judy, and the ultimate futility of his possession of her, were all deeply embedded in Hitchcock’s psyche. As far as the costume choices being good fashion, it didn’t matter that Kim’s pumps were black. They would have looked better in gray or brown, or as she wanted, in tan to match her nude-toned hose. Wearing flesh-toned pumps was an old trick she’d learned from Marlene Dietrich, a device to make your legs look longer. The gray suit was in a neutral and sedate color. Hitch believed it revealed how the Madeleine character felt about herself. Edith Head also frequently designed gray suits for her film costumes, and wore them regularly herself, believing that it gave her a non-competitive look when working with the stars. But Marlene Dietrich had worn a gray suit for Hitch in Stage Fright, as had Doris Day in The Man Who Knew too Much, and as Tippi Hedren would wear in The Birds. So the gray suit touched something within Hitchcock, and along with the blonde hair of his leading actresses, denoted for Hitchcock the “woman of mystery,” the cool and subtle beauty with the blazing insides. And as for the black pumps, they can often be fetishistic objects, and Hitchcock's insistence on them here gives them that significance.






The colors of the costumes and the sets had a symbolic meaning for Hitchcock. Gray represented modesty when worn in a gray suit . Perhaps it's dove gray color denoted a uniform to Hitchcock, perhaps even linking it to the color of a nun's habit. And perhaps it was that modesty contradicted by the figure-hugging cut of the suit that added spice to the costume.  When Jimmy Stewart as Scottie first sees Kim Novak playing Madeleine, she wears a black gown but is covered in a green-trimmed opera coat at Ernie’s Restaurant. The wallpaper of the restaurant forms a red background that vibrates with the green in these color opposites. For some reason green represented death for Hitchcock, and Madeleine’s car is also green. It’s in the following scene where Scottie begins tailing Madeleine that she first wears the gray suit.  His fascination with her was peaked at Ernie's, but seeing her in the gray suit is when he becomes obsessed. As for Scottie’s former love interest Midge, played by Barbara Bel Geddes, she is dressed in warm colors and soft fabrics – symbols of her nurturing and loving proclivities towards Scottie.



After Scottie saves Madeleine from drowning and takes her to his apartment, she is dressed, albeit in his robe, in a vibrant red. Here the color evokes life and full-bloodedness. And indeed, a prior scene of intimacy is implied. Then in a later scene when Scottie and Madeleine drive to the shore, she is dressed in black and white – a black dress with black gloves and a white coat. The black and white in this costume denotes not the unambiguous nature of her character, but rather the duality of her persona. As an added fillip, her black chiffon scarf blows freely with the ocean wind, perhaps a symbol of mystery, or one of doom.


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As the character Judy, Kim Novak is costumed by Edith Head to appear dowdy. She wears the "deathly" green color – in a green sweater made bulky by being worn over a blouse. The blouse is green with white polka-dots and with a peter-pan collar turned over the sweater. The whole is accentuated by an unflattering hair style. The total look is purposefully unappealing. This look has several purposes: to define the character of Judy in contrast to Madeleine’s; to appear that she is “hiding” her identity; and to provide a stark difference with Madeleine in order to dramatize her coming make-over.

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When they go on a date and later go shopping for her clothes, she is dressed better but still very simply. She wears lavender, a  color of mystery and transition. But Scottie will not be satisfied until he makes her over in the very image and dress of Madeleine. The make-over itself is a key dramatic moment in the film - Judy’s reluctance, Scottie’s obsession in turning her visually into Madeleine, complete with gray suit and blonde hair.


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The nature of the costumes, and the make-over, reverberated not only with the character’s roles, but with the actor’s and the director’s deep psychology. Hitchcock exercised his darker side in molding an actress into his own obsession, while directing Jimmy Stewart to do the same. Kim Novak as Judy wondered why Scottie couldn’t love her as she was, just as Kim Novak really felt about Hollywood in general. The entire film reverberates not just from vertigo but due to mirroring techniques and doubling of the images of the main characters. We are challenged to keep our footing while viewing this Hitchcock masterwork. But the gray suit worn with the black pumps served their purpose, and they allowed Kim Novak to not only be in character, but by taking her out of her comfort zone in dress, enabled her to more effectively be an actress that plays a part of a character that is pretending to be someone else. The simplicity and neutrality of the gray suit belies the fact that when Kim Novak wears it as Judy she is a woman pretending to be another woman who was herself a fiction. This may create a blurred vision, But Scottie knows he has been tricked.



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Hitchcock must have recognized his own dilemma in creating Vertigo. At the climactic end, Scottie demonstrated his tragic disappointment with Judy, “He made you over just like I made you over,” he says accusingly to Judy. Only he (Elster) had made her over first, and thus Scottie had been pursuing the hollow goal of recreating another man’s fantasy. And perhaps worse, he accused her of being “an apt pupil, for Elster, which he repeats twice - something she hadn’t been for him. That demonstrated to Scottie, and served asthe film’s underlying theme, that the pursuit of an empty ideal is futile. For Hitchcock, it was a deeply ingrained motif, one that would keep repeating itself as he tried to mold one Hitchcock blonde after another into his fantasy, only to have her leave him for one reason or another. With the character Scottie, this creation and possession fantasy was played out not as a means of domination, but rather one where we could believe that once his fantasy woman was created, he could surrender and succumb to her. She could have been his Madeleine/Midge.  But alas we know that that too would have been another fantasy - another beguiling but untrustworthy image reflected in a mirror, or another swirling and spiraling movement creating a feeling of vertigo.

Vertigo received several Oscar nominations, including Best Art Direction. Edith Head was not nominated for Best Costume Design, which was won by Cecil Beaton’s florid Gigi. And she had also just been snubbed for her outstanding costumes for Grace Kelly in Hitchcock’s To Catch a Thief. It seems that a fabulous gray suit as character-delineating costume was just too subtle to pick up awards. No matter, she had already won five of her ultimate eight Oscar wins by then. Worse, Hitchcock wasn’t nominated either for this iconic classic.