A Real “Killer” B Movie (one of 237!)
5
By D. Scott Apel
This review is an excerpt from my book “Killer B’s: The 237 Best Movies On Video You’ve (Probably) Never Seen,” which is available as an ebook on iBooks. If you enjoy this review, there are 236 more like it in the book (plus a whole lot more). Check it out!
WINGS OF DESIRE: Angels walk among us. Innocent children sometimes see them. The angels listen in on our whispered inner monologs, often offering a comforting touch. One among them, Damiel (Ganz), is tired being a disembodied spirit, envying us our ability to touch, to feel, to love. When he becomes enamored of lonely French trapeze artist Marion (Dommartin), he decides to trade an eternity of observation for a few short mortal years of living experience. But first he must locate the missing Marion. Will destiny—or a guardian angel—allow their paths to cross again?
Discussion: Would you trade eternity for love? Renounce immortality for a transient, yet sensory, life? Evidently many angels do, as the lightness of their ethereal existence contrasts with the weight of their burden of separation. They speak, appropriately enough, in a kind of Rilkean poetry, and seeing the world through their eyes, as they pass through a library or a train car, allows us a glimpse of the ineffable sadness and longing that is our condition and their perception.
With his world-weary face and deep, soul-filled eyes, Ganz makes a perfect angel, and a fine human, too, responding with childlike delight to the mundane—colors, coffee, cold—and leaving us with one final question: Is it possible that a mortal life lived in love and wonder can transcend even an angelic existence? A lovely, somber dirge, filled with vivid imagery and a deep appreciation of the fleeting.