Cult Cinema: The Red Tent (1969) - Reviewed

Courtesy of Mosfilm and Paramount Pictures
After Mikhail Kalatozov’s 1964 experimental propogandist arthouse epic I Am Cuba failed to connect with its intended Cuban/Soviet Union demographic amid accusations of ‘formalism’ and general indifference to the picture altogether, the Palme d’Or winning Russian master filmmaker’s most ambitious effort turned out to be a near career ender.  Despite the hard but memorable creative fall with critics and audiences, Kalatozov got back on his feet in 1969 with the equally ambitious and daunting survival epic The Red Tent which turned out to be the director’s most successful film since The Cranes Are Flying. 
 
Based on the true story of the ill-fated Italian airship Italia commandeered by Umberto Nobile (one of the ship’s only survivors) which crash landed in the arctic region in 1928 followed by an extensive and hazardous rescue mission that claimed as many lives as it tried saving, the film is a mammoth joint Italian-Soviet coproduction prominently featuring English speaking actors Peter Finch and Sean Connery in the leading roles amid a bilingual cast of Italian-Russian speaking actors.  Loosely adapted by novelist Yuri Nagibin co-authored by Kalatozov with uncredited rewrites from Lawrence of Arabia and Doctor Zhivago screenwriter Robert Bolt, this disaster-survival epic proved to be the director’s final film as he passed away two years later.  And what a film it is!

 
Adopting a fictitious, surrealist angle with Nobile imagining his apartment as a courtroom with Rashomon-like testimonies from the living and dead such as Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen (Sean Connery) who died searching for survivors, the film cuts back and forth freely between the past and present with the ghosts of those who died by Nobile’s side as well as those died trying to save him holding him on trial.  A psychological drama of endurance echoing Kalatozov’s own wartime drama The Cranes Are Flying as well as a raw and nail-biting visceral survival thriller sure to make the likes of Clouzot blush, The Red Tent is debatably the director’s most harrowing picture with many scenes of survivors on icebergs surrounded by nothing but water.
 
Aided by stunning location photography by Anna Karenina as well as uncredited Stalker cinematographer Leonid Kalashnikov who makes grand use of wide-angled lenses and released in two separate versions with the Russian cut featuring a score by Aleksandr Zatsepin running 158 minutes while the Italian-English versions clocked in at about 121 minutes with an Ennio Morricone score and some additional shots not used in the Russian version, The Red Tent tries to completely put you in General Umberto Nobile (Peter Finch) shoes.  


Following him living in Rome years after the deadly expedition that claimed the lives of many as well as tarnished the reputations of its key survivors with much of what’s seen onscreen lived in his mad, guilt-ridden head, The Red Tent is at once an action-adventure oriented historical drama as well as somber paean to the lives lost in what proved to be a suicidal rescue mission.  Almost as many people if not more died simply trying to retrieve survivors, all of it weighing heavily on Nobile’s mind.
 
Curiously Sean Connery’s role as Amundsen, while good, took billing over Peter Finch’s role who is ostensibly the film’s main character and tragic figure.  Moreover, Connery was only on the shoot for a few weeks while Finch endured the cold Spitzbergen Archipelago, the Baltic Sea and later studio work between Moscow and Rome for about nine months altogether.  There’s a romantic subplot worked into the proceedings by one of the film’s producers prominently featuring his wife (at the time) Claudia Cardinale and Barry Lyndon actor Hardy Kruger that works against the otherwise immersive totality of the movie but when the film spends its time with the survivors in the freezing cold, it chills to the bone literally and figuratively.

 
One of the very first co-productions between Russia and a western country as well as the last film of arguably Russia’s greatest film director, the story of The Red Tent and its bold and ultimately doomed rescue mission is as terrifying as it is somber.  A cold weather survival drama gargantuan in size and scope with much of the director’s extraordinary filmmaking magic tricks on full display including but not limited to wild handheld camerawork and crane shots that seem to float in the air, the film is also for its day a solid entry in the then-heating up disaster film subgenre.  For Connery the film is something of a vacation for the actor but Peter Finch takes the film on from top to bottom giving it his all and making the troubled Nobile into a somewhat sympathetic figure unfortunately also responsible for the deaths of many.
 
In Kalatazov’s oeuvre, The Red Tent is a sobering farewell which shows the director going back to making a wintery action-drama ala Letter Never Sent with just enough of his wild, frenetic yet precisely controlled camerawork to remind you of I Am Cuba.  Admittedly, as was the case with the Italian and English language versions, hearing Connery and Finch dubbed over in Russian is somewhat unusual though as with all three release versions the dialogue is somewhat secondary to the recurring vistas of tiny humans clinging together for life in the middle of an endless white snowy terrain.  

 
Over the course of the movie, you find yourself sharing in the communal experience of what it must’ve been like to be trapped in the middle of the arctic with a faint glimmer of hope for survival.  The setup of much of the self-imposed “trial” is indeed a strange approach to this subject but at the end of the day, The Red Tent is a solid closing chapter to the great director’s checkered if not largely overlooked career and just a great historical drama-thriller in general with keen attention to detail and a refreshing approach to the disaster film.

--Andrew Kotwicki