Much truncated on the first release, and financially ruining its producers, this is a superb film, inspiring Kubrick among others.
Lola Montes (1955)
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Reviews Counted:23
Fresh:20
Rotten:3
Average Rating:7.7/10
Theatrical Release:Oct 10, 2008 Limited
Synopsis: LOLA MONTES, the last film by Max Ophüls, is one of the most celebrated examples of both wide screen CinemaScope and lush Technicolor in film history. Added to this is Ophüls' usual use of sweeping... LOLA MONTES, the last film by Max Ophüls, is one of the most celebrated examples of both wide screen CinemaScope and lush Technicolor in film history. Added to this is Ophüls' usual use of sweeping crane shots and angled tracking shots, making this a beautiful, creative film. It is the story of Lola Montes (Martine Carol), the 19th Century dancer who was famous for her scandalous affairs with everyone from Franz List (Will Quadflieg) to Ludwig, the King of Bavaria (Anton Walbrook). At the end of her career she was the main attraction at a circus in the United States which featured a lavish tableaux of scenes from her life. The ringmaster, played by Peter Ustinov, leads the circus audience through her life, and also cues the cinematic flashbacks. Ophüls had used a similar structure in his adaptation of Arthur Schnitzler's play REIGEN in his film LA RONDE. Here, although not in chronological order, the flashbacks span Lola's life, covering everything from her early unhappy marriage to a drunken military officer, who she leaves to embark on a career as a dancer, to a very short affair with a German student played by a young Oskar Werner. Ophüls, with his always-moving camera, gives the story a wonderful sense of historical drama. [More]
Starring: Martine Carol, Peter Ustinov, Anton Walbrook, Oskar Werner
Starring: Martine Carol, Peter Ustinov, Anton Walbrook, Oskar Werner, Will Quadflieg, Paulette Dubost
Director: Max Ophuls
Director: Max Ophuls
Screenwriter: Annette Wademant, Max Ophuls
Producer: Ralph Baum
Composer: Georges Auric
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Reviews for Lola Montes
Ophüls conjures that space into life -- indeed, makes it the very subject of his film -- by means of the most sumptuous stylistic effects imaginable.
Andrew Sarris in 1963 dubbed this film the greatest ever made, and although he's noted for his quirky opinions, he's no fool.
I recommend Lola Montès wholeheartedly both for its sensuous delights and its ever exquisite artistry.
A baroque masterpiece by Max Ophuls, his last film (1955) and his only work in color and wide-screen.
Ophüls' style co-stars, paralleling and reinforcing stage artificiality with tracking and crane and pan shots, fluidly tilting to emphasize romance as opposed to "reality."
A bodice-ripper invested with the profundity of a Stendhal novel, Lola Montes is also, even more than La Ronde, Ophüls's definite commentary on movie-watching.
Watch Lola Montes and you may never watch a movie the same way again.
Lola Montès could never be confused for realism in any format: home video, theater or iPod. But its effectiveness as a tragedy relies on Ophüls setting out a luxurious spread for his hapless heroine.
With all due respect to film critic Andrew Sarris, Max Ophüls' legendary Lola Montès is not 'the greatest film ever made.'
Lola Montes is mainly a triumph of vibrancy and metaphor. Nonetheless it's quite an experience.
It is all of a piece from beginning to end: The mood, the music, the remarkably fluid camera movement, the sets, the costumes.
Ophüls makes the story of Lola Montes (Martine Carol), the successful nineteenth-century courtesan (if only so-so Spanish fandango dancer), into a visually dazzling, ironic commentary on celebrity.
Latest News for Lola Montes
October 09, 2008:
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