Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 April 2024
Summary
“No man is a genius unless he can deliver honest entertainment.”
‒ Ernst Lubitsch.1968 was an important year for the cinema of Ernst Lubitsch. In February, Cahiers du Cinema published a special issue on Lubitsch, which included French translations of existing essays and a filmography, as well as new essays by Francois Truffaut and Jean Domarchi. Later that year saw the publication of Herman G. Weinberg's The Lubitsch Touch: A Critical Study, the earliest book-length work on Lubitsch in English. Then, late in 1968, the Museum of Modern Art in New York held what was at that time a complete retrospective of the director's films. In a review of this retrospective Kirk Bond wrote:
At last we have had a chance to see what Lubitsch really did as an artist, and we are now able to understand that he was an artist in the highest sense, that he was probably the equal of Murnau and Lang, but that this is all for quite different reasons than we have ever known.
But the expected wave of scholarship on Lubitsch failed to arrive, and, in any event, the critical response to Lubitsch was far from equal to that generated by the films of F. W. Murnau and Fritz Lang. Of course, Lubitsch's success and fame are undeniable, even recognized: Lubitsch was commended by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for his outstanding contributions to the art of the motion picture. Yet the scholarly investment in his work remained relatively meager. The director whose films exerted an influence on film pioneers such as Buster Keaton and Sergei Eisenstein and was admired by Charlie Chaplin, Alfred Hitchcock, Orson Welles, John Ford, Billy Wilder, Jean Renoir, and Truffaut, has received less critical attention than the masters of cinema who acknowledged his work's importance. Lubitsch's American films (1922–1948) remain an under-populated terrain; scholarly engagement with his German work in film (1913–1923) is sparse, his works understudied. The director's place in the history of the Hollywood musical and the romantic comedy also requires elaboration. This holds true as well for the history of early German cinema, where popular cinema has received short shrift.
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- New Approaches to Ernst LubitschA Light Touch, pp. 13 - 30Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2024