The White Countess directed by James Ivory, 2005,
color, English, 2 hours, 15 minutes.
By Donald H. Harrison
SAN DIEGO, Calif.—The White Countess is an enjoyable film, set in 1930s
Shanghai, about a former privileged member of the Russian nobility (Natasha
Richardson) who lives in a squalid apartment above a Jewish tailor shop. The
countess, Sofia, goes to work for, and ultimately falls in love with, a former
American diplomat (Ralph Fiennes) in the years prior to Japan's occupation
of China.
The tailor, Samuel Feinstein (Alan Corduner), is an endearing if puzzling
character. He has such respect, love and compassion for the upstairs
tenants, despite the fact that they were part and parcel of a regime that
launched or tolerated numerous pogroms against the Jews. When
a Nazi type in Shanghai's international community slurs the Jews, Feinstein
pretends not to notice, later revealing that back in the old country, his
children had lost their mother and grandmother to the haters.. In
Shanghai, under the Chinese government, Jews were as protected as any other
foreigners. So after what his children had endured, Feinstein said,
"I don't hear it."
But he did hear and see enough of the two main characters that, during a
critical time in their lives, he was able to intervene to their benefit.
Throughout the movie, the Jew, the American, the White (Russian) Countess,
various Chinese functionaries, and a secretive Japanese diplomat all treat each
other with impeccable manners, never failing to call each other by their
surnames, and usually rising when addressed. This courtliness was in
marked contrast to the loss of life and destruction that would befall
Shanghai with the Japanese conquest.
In the case of the character Samuel, we wonder at his fascination with the faded
countess, who works as a hostess in a nightclub in order to support her
impoverished yet still royal family. Perhaps, he is attracted to her
nobility of spirit— her willingness to do what was needed to be done in order
to care for her daughter as well as a sister, aunt, and doddering parents.
Or perhaps, after being treated so badly as a Jew, he simply was delighted to be
on an equal, even superior footing, with the former nobility.
Whatever his motives, Samuel proved himself a true gentleman. He may be a
minor character, but he is one to be remembered by those who pay attention to
how Jews are portrayed in the movies.
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