SHIP OF FOOLS
This 1965 film couldn't be made now. Imagine asking an American audience to sit through 150 minutes of assorted characters on an ocean voyage doing nothing much, other than performing some sort of allegory as to the nature of human existence, where the two biggest roles go to an Austrian actor and a French actress! Even in the 1960s it can't have seemed a very commercial proposition, except that it is an adaptation of a 1962 bestseller. Given that it takes place in 1934 on a German passenger ship going from Mexico to Germany, via Spain, I was expecting Nazism to crop up, and indeed it does. There is a German salesman, Lowenthal, who is Jewish, so naturally he is excluded from sitting at the captain's table at mealtimes. Prominent among the German passengers who do enjoy the honour of sitting there is a businessman, Rieber, played by José Ferrer, who dominates the conversation, loudly extolling the virtues of nationalism and eugenics. The c...