Charles
Laughton, Gertrude Lawrence, Elsa Lanchester, Edward Chapman, John
Bryning , Walter Hudd
Lightning steadfastly refused to strike
twice for the director/actor team of Alexander Korda and Charles
Laughton. Though the pair had scored an international success with
the 1933 quasi-biopic The Private Life of Henry VIII, they couldn't
make the magic happen again with 1936's Rembrandt. Laughton's performance
is solid throughout, and Korda's recreation of Rembrandt's Holland
is meticulous, but the film suffers from a lack of overall dramatic
tension. Except for his artistic achievements and the deaths of
his two wives, nothing really "happens" to Rembrandt--at
least nothing as colorful as the escapades of Henry VIII. The best
element of the film is the successful effort by cinematographer
Georges Perinal to recreate the famous "Rembrandt lighting"
effect in each scene. Laughton is given fine support by Elsa Lanchester
(his real-life wife), and by legendary stage star Gertrude Lawrence
in a rare film role.
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