Oscar History
Film Bitch History
Welcome

The Film Experience™ was created by Nathaniel R. All material herein is written by our team. (This site is not for profit but for an expression of love for cinema & adjacent artforms.)

Follow TFE on Substackd

Powered by Squarespace
COMMENTS

 

Keep TFE Strong

We're looking for 500... no 390 SubscribersIf you read us daily, please be one.  

I ♥ The Film Experience

THANKS IN ADVANCE

What'cha Looking For?
Subscribe
« Beauty vs Beast: Cillian Time | Main | Review: The Nice Guys »
Monday
May232016

The Furniture: Black Narcissus's Maddening Matte Paintings

"The Furniture" is our weekly series on Production Design. Here's Daniel Walber...

In movies, if perhaps not in life, people can be driven mad by mountains. In films by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, they can be driven mad by paintings of mountains.

Black Narcissus is the story of a group of Anglican nuns who trek up to an abandoned cliffside palace in the Himalayas to establish a new convent. Deborah Kerr, cinema’s most consistent nun, is Sister Clodagh, the young mother superior. Her mission is doomed from the beginning, of course, though not necessarily because the locals reject their presence. Rather, it is the landscape that overwhelms their emotions and breaks their faith and their vows.

Powell and Pressburger did not shoot on location in India, however. The set was built at Pinewood Studios. [More...

The long establishing shots of the remote palace were done with a combination of models and matte paintings, a perfect example of that breathtaking falseness that we only rarely find in today’s world of digital effects. 

The sets fall under the purview of production designer Alfred Junge, who won an Oscar for the film. He had also worked with the Archers on The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp and would later work with Kerr on the utterly bizarre Edward, My Son. The mattes were by legendary British painter Walter Percy Day, another regular collaborator of Powell and Pressburger. Their work is both luxuriously detailed and extremely assertive.

The most memorable use of these paintings the famous shot of the drop down from convent’s bell, which hangs just next to the edge. But Day’s paintings are everywhere, constantly reminding us of the vast landscape that takes more than the breath away from these sisters. Sister Philippa, for example, is so entranced by the sky that she loses her ability to work her garden. Overcome with emotion, she replaces all of her vegetables with flowers.

The building itself is no escape, either. Surrounded on three sides by nothing but the fresh air of the mountains, Day’s paintings find their way into nearly every shot. They peer into the yard, through the small windows of the chapel, and draw our eye even from Kerr’s quaint monastic sleeping cap in this shot of her cell.

As Sister Ruth goes mad, the mountains underline her distress from beyond the enormous windows of the school room. The scene is gripped by a malevolent dusk, perhaps the best example of the way cinematographer Jack Cardiff’s lighting aligns with Day’s images.

Even in the few rooms where the sky cannot interfere, nature often holds sway. Though the building is full of wall paintings of scantily clad women, a holdover from its harem days, the abstract walls of the central chamber are even more entrancing. Its lush blue frescoes take the power of the Himalayan exterior and morph it into a floral delirium.

For Sister Clodagh, this constant stimulation results in flashbacks to her life before the veil. The blue of the sky takes her back to the blue of an English lake, where she once fished with her sweetheart. While she may not actually go mad, her monastic resolve is certainly weakened by the landscape’s constant suggestion of beauty and desire.

For context, their original Calcutta convent is devoid of such distractions. There are no paintings, either inside or outside. The walls are bare and white. Instead there are electric ceiling fans, among the film’s few garish reminders of the 20th century. The blunt corners of their cross-shaped dining table are far cry from the flowing lines of the Himalayan landscape to follow.

And so it is perhaps obvious from the beginning that these nuns are out of their depth. But the film does not show all of its cards so early, instead using the beauty of the matte paintings and the sets to gradually increase the tension. It is not until that terrifying dusk finale that the entire world seems gripped by panic and dread. The mountains and the sky redden accordingly.

Finally, as Sister Clodagh and Sister Ruth struggle beneath the bell, clouds descend. All is cold and gray. The matte paintings have done their job, slowly creeping up on the nuns until the resulting psychotic break drives away their hue. There is nothing left but to give up and go home, return to the colorless houses of the established order and relearn the quiet peace of unchallenged faith.


Previously on The Furniture:
Deadpool (2016), That Hamilton Woman (1941)  The Lady in the Van (2015), Joy (2015), The Exorcist (1973)

 

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (14)

Ther firts image looked like Gandalf in Lord of The Rings!

Amazing analyses

May 23, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterPet

love this movie so much and you did it proud. especially love the idea of the madness draining the mountains of color (and thus beauty, too)

May 23, 2016 | Registered CommenterNATHANIEL R

I adore this film and the matte paintings are very vital to the experience. Even home viewing doesn't diminish their impact.

May 23, 2016 | Registered CommenterChris Feil

God I love this movie. I cannot think of one shot in this movie that is not stunning. The matte paintings are so in keeping with the reality/unreality of the scenes. What strikes me is that the lighting enhances every picture, making the mountains whisper shadows and light.
Daniel, truly love these posts of yours…Keep it up

May 23, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterLeslie19

This is one of the movies I remember seeing and thinking Movies are definitely an art...

May 23, 2016 | Unregistered Commenterrick

I fucking love this film. I recently re-watched it last month and man, it is still a gorgeous film and also quite erotic. I still get goosebumps over that eerie stare of Sister Ruth and the scene where she puts on lipstick.

May 23, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterSteven

A true work of cinema art- one of the most beautiful movies ever made.

May 23, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterJaragon

These shots are amazing. I've wanted to see BLACK NARCISSUS for years, so I'm grateful your write-up didn't spoil it but only made me want to see it more.

May 23, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterSteve G

I love matte paintings so much and the artform was never better than in Black Narcissus.

Did anybody see STEP UP 4? I think it was subtitled MIAMI HEAT or whatever nonsense in various parts of the world. It opens with a scene in which the flash dancers do a routine in the middle of the street while a graffiti artists works on a matte painting in the middle of the street. It's very bizarre, but very cool.

May 24, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterGlenn Dunks

Hands down, THE Best Movie of 1947!! Not only for its breathtaking cinematography and gorgeous sets, but also for its classic story of Man (in this case, Nuns) vs Nature, & Faith vs Lust/Desire, and the psychological effects of the mountains and men (particularly, John Farrer) on the nuns

I am alws in dilemma on who to award the best actress of 1947 to...Kerr & Byron are such contrasting characters and both are so good at their characterization.

Byron had the showier part of the amorous nun gone mad & she gave it her all, playing it w a feverish relish & literally plunging all the way down to her horrific end.

Kerr had the more (barely) controlled role, which relied more on subtle changes of her expression and shifting of her mood. She was like a volcano buried deep under the snow, trying hard to control her emotions, but the cracks are showing....

Both are equally outstanding but they are no match to the temptation of the exotic Mountain/Culture. There is such a strong erotic undertone that even viewed more than half a century later, it still feels kinda gorgeously decadent...

May 24, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterClaran

of all the places they could've put that bell...

May 24, 2016 | Unregistered Commenterpar

Thanks, everyone!

Claran, comparing the performances really is nearly impossible. This time through I also found myself really struck by how much Flora Robson does with just a few scenes, there's a totally different sort of emotional exhaustion on her face.

Glenn, I haven't seen Step Up 4 but that sounds crazy. The production designer, Carlos Menéndez, also worked on Larry Crowne and Miami Vice, apparently. Florida!

May 24, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterDaniel Walber

Thanks, a great review of a great film by Powell & Pressburger and The Archers

A few points though. Clodagh was fishing in an Irish lake (a lough), not an English one
And (in the comment from Claran, it was David Farrar, not John Farrar

May 26, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterSteve Crook

While watching this film, it is almost impossible to believe it was done in a British studio thousands of miles from the Himalayas. The matte paintings are utterly realistic and stylishly beautiful at the same time, and the constant sound of the wind serves to highlight the experience. But does it capture the true essence of that part of the world? Since I have been there several times, the answer to that question is a resounding yes.

February 11, 2018 | Unregistered Commenterphilip b
Member Account Required
You must have a member account to comment. It's free so register here.. IF YOU ARE ALREADY REGISTERED, JUST LOGIN.