Director's Spotlight
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Director's Spotlight: United States
A Deep Dive into the 1916 Vision of Cortland Van Deusen
Analyzing The Man Behind the Curtain (1916) requires a deep dive into the unique directorial voice that Cortland Van Deusen brought to the screen. By challenging the status quo of 1916 cinema, it continues to spark endless debates among critics and cinephiles alike.
In The Man Behind the Curtain, Cortland Van Deusen pushes the boundaries of conventional narrative. The film's unique approach to its subject matter has sparked endless debates and interpretations among cinephiles and critics alike.
| Cinematography | High-Contrast |
| Soundtrack | Experimental |
| Editing | Elliptical |
| Art Direction | Expressionist |
Visualizing the convergence of Cortland Van Deusen's style and the core cult narrative.
Fate has not stopped being cruel to Edna Hall after orphaning her. She walks innocently into more tragedy when, thrown upon her own resources, she applies for employment at the Stanhope home. Little did she dream that her letter from Mrs. Stanhope would bring her across the threshold to find that lady stretched out dead, stabbed, and robbed of a precious pearl ring. In his house, where she knows no one, further terror is hers when from behind a curtain stretches a sinister hand that drops a dagger. Edna is paralyzed at the sudden appearance of a man from behind the curtain. This man is kind but cynical. He declares it looks bad for Edna, all this, but he believes in her innocence. But, ah, can she prove it? He sagely doubts it. She had better fly while she is yet undiscovered. This poor Edna does, leaving behind certain clues. Driven by the appearance of guilt, Edna goes far away and is finally happy as a governess for another family. One day one of her little charges plays truant and drifts in the path of racing motorboats in a skiff, from which position the child is rescued by Harry Leland. Harry, although a young man of wealth, becomes enamored of the pretty governess and marries her. At the end of their true-love honeymoon he takes her to his home. With amazement she recognizes this as the house of the murder. With a shock she learns that Harry is Mrs. Stanhope's son by her first husband, with terror she realizes that she is recognized by Perkins, the butler. Now begins a campaign of torture of the unhappy bride by Perkins. It culminates in the accidental discovery of his demands upon Edna for money, whereupon he exposes her to Harry as the woman who was in the house the day of Mrs. Stanhope's murder. Mr. Stanhope, just back from Europe, also recognizes Edna as the woman who passed hurriedly out of the house on that date as he entered it. The broken-hearted young man, in loyalty to his mother's memory, is forced to turn his back upon her until she can prove her innocence. Edna is now practically an outcast. She is spurred by hope, however, when she chances to see Mr. Gardner, the mysterious man who bade her flee from the house. Adopting the disguise of a street boy, Edna discovers much about him, and soon has him attentive to her under her proper guise. She bears his odious attentions while biding her time. In the meantime, Harry, still fast in love with her, sends a detective to find her and bring her back. This detective discovers her just as she has received the stolen ring of Mrs. Stanhope as a gift from Mr. Gardner. This detective she is at once able to put on the trail of Mr. Gardner. He is captured after he has lured the blackmailing Perkins into a burglary of his own house and killed him. Needless to say that Harry rejoices enthusiastically at the vindication of Edna.
Decades after its release, The Man Behind the Curtain remains a vital piece of the cinematic puzzle. Its influence can be seen in countless modern works, solidifying Cortland Van Deusen's status as a master of the craft in United States and beyond.