Released at a time when American films were
making bold strides in the portrayal of race relations, The Angel Levine is odd insomuch as race relations
only appear to be an important
narrative element. Rather than being a probing study of the prejudices that
tinge an elderly Jewish tailor’s unlikely friendship with a younger black man, The Angel Levine is an examination of
religious faith. And yet it’s also about the dissipation of a marriage, about
mortality, about a fractious romance between a ne’er-do-well and his grounded
girlfriend, and about the line separating delusion from reality. The Angel Levine is concerned with all
of these things—and less. Presented in a peculiar fashion that’s alternately
cryptic, melodramatic, and pretentious, the film begins with a premise
requiring considerable suspension of disbelief, then undercuts the premise at
every turn, either by deviating into peripheral narrative concerns or by
wobbling tonally between satire and seriousness. In the end, The Angel Levine is a mess, but it’s
executed with such care and intelligence that one roots for the piece to come
together. Moreover, the experience of watching the movie is frequently
engaging, simply because the story involves so many provocative ideas.
Adapted
from a short story by Bernard Malamud, whose work provided the basis for the
fine drama The Fixer (1968) and the
romantic baseball yarn The Natural
(1984), The Angel Levine is set in a
Jewish tenement in modern-day New York. Chubby tailor Morris Mishkin (Zero
Mostel) can’t work because of health problems, and his wife, Fanny (Ida
Kaminska), is bedridden with illness that might be terminal. One night, Morris enters
his kitchen to discover a black man sitting there. The man introduces himself
as Alexander Levine (Harry Belafonte), then explains he’s an angel sent from
heaven to help Morris deal with his problems. An inordinate amount of time is
then spent on conversations in which Morris and Alexander debate the veracity
of Alexander’s divinity. Later, Alexander’s girlfriend, Sally (Gloria Foster),
enters the scene for more debates about Alexander’s virtues. Eventually, the
whole thing becomes a referendum on Morris’ and Alexander’s respective
identities, with the female companions of both men finding them wanting.
Downbeat from start to finish, The Angel
Levine was the first American movie directed by Hungarian filmmaker Ján
Kadár. Hampered by a claustrophobic script that feels more like a one-act play
than a proper movie, Kadár lets his leading actors slip into familiar rhythms—Mostel
alternates between annoying brashness and mawkish pathos while Belafonte
delivers most of his lines with all-purpose intensity. This has the effect of
rendering both main characters monotonous and unlikeable. Even more
problematically, the story’s quasi-supernatural element feels contrived and odd,
although it’s likely much was lost in translation from Malamud’s story.
Compounding all of these flaws, Zdenek Liska’s original score is more suitable
for a horror movie than for a human drama, since Linska employs eerie chants
and other disorienting noises. Yet unlike other very strange movies of the same
vintage, The Angel Levine never ventures
fully into the realm of the surreal; quite to the contrary, it feels like a
sober attempt at existential inquiry gone wrong.
The
Angel Levine: FUNKY
The film reunited Jan Kadar with Ida Kaiminska whom he directed in the Oscar winning The Shop on Main Street. ( I beleive she was nominated for an Oscar as well for that film.) The screenplay was co-authored by the highly regarded ( at the time) Ronald Ribman and the whole enterprise was very much a New York intellectual package. I remember admiring it more than liking it when it was first released, but I haven't seen it since. Strangely reading your critique of it makes me want to see it again.
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